Finance Committee Chair Andy Steinberg
Andy Steinberg
is first to announce his candidacy for the five member Amherst Select Board, our executive branch of government. As an
entrenched insider -- i.e. Town Meeting and Finance Committee -- Steinberg, a retired lawyer, is a slam dunk for one of two open seats.
Especially since he touts "collaboration and
transparency" on a shortlist of his priorities. Who can argue with those?
And as a Town Meeting member he voted
in favor of flying the commemorative American flags
every 9/11. Well okay, maybe that one will cost him a few votes.
Interestingly enough, he's probably the
only North Amherst/Cushman homeowner who does
not have a "Stop The Retreat" lawn sign prominently displayed in his yard. So yeah, that too may cost him a few votes since NIMBYs usually patronize the ballot box.
If they really possessed political power, however, they would not have been so unceremoniously blown out of the water at the last
Town Meeting.
It's been a while since two incumbents both decided to retire from their Select Board seats, thus the field this coming election (March 25) is pretty wide open. Fitting I suppose, since Stephanie O'Keeffe and Diana Stein both won their seats almost six years ago in a strongly contested election (5 candidates) but at the election three years ago neither had competition.
The odd thing about an election with two open seats is a voter gets two votes. Thus like-minded candidates usually form an unofficial team, quietly telling their ardent supporters to throw their second vote to candidate B.
Theoretically Candidate A can have only 750 entrenched supporters as does Candidate B; but with each telling their supporters where to throw their second vote both candidates end up with a whopping 1,500 votes.
Thus making it tough on lone-wolf Candidate C, an outsider who tells their voters to "bullet vote" (don't cast second vote) with a respectable 1,000 supporters, but still ends up coming in a distant third.
Whereas if voters were only allowed
one vote, Candidate C would have come in first.
Since there's no Proposition 2.5 Override or change-our-antiquated-form-of-town-government Charter issue on the ballot, voter turnout will be in the usual range ... dismal.
Over the past five years annual spring town elections averaged a pathetic 15% turnout (with an Override question on the ballot, 2010 had a 32% turnout) while the 2012 November Presidential election garnered a 69% turnout.
In addition to the two Select Board seats other town wide contests for three years seats include one seat on Jones Library Trustees, one seat on Amherst School Committee, one seat each (for five year term) on Amherst Housing Authority and Amherst Redevelopment Authority (that did not meet once in the past year).
As usual the Town Meeting Moderator position is up (although Jim Pistrang has a 20 year lease). And Town Meeting will have the usual rotation of eight seats per Precinct up for three year terms (80 total) and a dozen other shorter term seats contested.
Amherst currently has 17,851 registered voters.