An open letter to Fayette County Citizens:
Hello, I am Jack Smith, your Fayette County Commission Chairman and a Certified Public Accountant. I am running for re-election to Post 4 (an at-large seat) in the July 20 Republican primary election, and I ask for your vote and support. Your vote for me can be cast now in early voting or on July 20th - either way it is a vote for sanity in managing your tax resources. There are four groups of people who
may read this
letter: 1. those who know me and know I have selflessly performed a lifetime of honest, ethical, trustworthy and dedicated service to the community; 2.those who know my opponent
and know
his method of building himself up is by tearing others down with his
inappropriate twisting of facts to achieve his goal of controlling your
mind
and your vote - and promoting the one thing most important to him –
himself; 3.those who subscribe to conspiracy theories and believe anything, without verification or questioning, as long as it fits their purpose – their purpose being oft times hidden from the public’s view; 4.those knowing neither of us and reading this newspaper hoping for some unbiased insight into each candidate so an informed decision can be made when voting. This letter is intended for Group 4. I hope it causes you to think and possibly research each of the candidates before you decide which way to cast your vote. First, let me say that each of us Post 4 candidates has a record that can be easily researched (mine on the County Commission website under annual reports and his by searching the City of Peachtree City website, but more importantly searching his incessant letters to the editor of this newspaper over the past 6-8 years (earlier letters give you a better understanding of his actual positions on issues more so than his currently penned words which are designed solely to cast aspersions where none exist).
I am well qualified to serve and here are some of those qualifications:
I am a native Georgian; have lived in Fayette County since 1982; earned a
degree in accounting from the University of Georgia in 1973 and earned my CPA
certificate shortly thereafter. I have many years of governmental experience as
an independent auditor of numerous cities, counties, government grantees and other
government entities. I obtain annual continuing education, and my public
accounting practice is subject to peer review on a regular and ongoing basis.
Every peer review completed to date has resulted in an acknowledgement of
adherence to rigorous professional standards set by state and national
regulatory bodies for CPA’s. I still work managing the successful public accounting
firm I cofounded in 1990. In 2009, I completed additional training
and became an Advanced Certified County Commissioner, the highest level of
certification available to County Commissioners in Georgia. I am the first
County Commissioner from Fayette County to ever achieve this pinnacle and one
of only about 200 in the entire state to ever earn this advanced designation
issued jointly by the Association of County Commissioners of Georgia and the
University of Georgia. In 2009, I was secretly
nominated and then selected as recipient of the Georgia Society of CPA’s Public
Service Award for my many years of service to better my community.
Here are a few of the accomplishments that your Board of Commissioners (which I am honored to Chair) has accomplished in the last three and one-half years:
In the past three years, Fayette has also achieved some notable recognitions under my watch: the metro Atlanta media recognized our 911 dispatch center as the only one in metro Atlanta meeting national standards for dispatch performance; our Fire and Emergency Services group was recognized for care of heart attack victims, resulting in our being the only EMS in metro Atlanta having authority to directly admit a cardiac patient to Piedmont Hospital-Atlanta’s Cardiac Cath Lab without the patient being seen by an emergency room physician; and our Storm Water Management expertise was recognized by the Federal Flood Insurance Program, resulting in improved ratings and as much as 15% savings on flood insurance costs for those who qualify.
There are a myriad of other accomplishments that, quite frankly, are too numerous to list here, but can be found in the County’s annual reports online at fayettecountyga.gov. Notwithstanding these, the greatest accomplishment of the last three years is clearly management of ever dwindling resources. Fayette is one of a few counties who foresaw the impending economic crunch and took proactive steps in the face of this approaching economic disaster. As a result, service levels remained stable while budgeted expenditures decreased over $6,000,000.00 - with no tax increases. (As I write this, the proposed budget for next year had its first public hearing and shows another $1,000,000 reduction in expenditures – with no decline in service levels and no tax increases planned). This is a testament to the elected officials and the employees who dedicate themselves to ensuring Fayette citizens obtain the exemplary quality of service that draws people to our area. I think you also need to be aware of what the County is facing in these troubling economic times. With good leadership, both elected and employed, Fayette has managed declining sales tax, declining property tax, and declining fees from services quite remarkably without any reduction in service levels. This was accomplished with sound budgetary controls, reductions in expenditures, management of normal attrition of retiring or voluntarily departing personnel and, more importantly, without mass terminations or furloughing of personnel, which would have added to the increasing unemployment burden in our community.
But the six million dollar reduction in budget does not get us out of the woods; it only shows we have managed the problem thus far. Economic indicators tell us that the next major property devaluation will be in the commercial sector. This was easy to foresee with increasing vacancies in retail space and virtually no new markets for the vacant industrial and office space also available in our community. To deal with this impending reduction, your Board of Commissioners slowed County spending three years ago and has successfully accumulated slightly over $5,000,000 in reserves during the last three fiscal years to cushion the impact of this expected decline in commercial tax revenue (and, yes, that is in addition to the $6,000,000 reduction in budget over the same period). Our concern is whether this is enough to carry us through one, two or more years of expected declines.
These budget challenges are certainly the “elephant in the room” that we have been preparing for over the last few years. Fayette Citizens should find solace in knowing the business of running Fayette County government is in the hands of capable businessmen who have demonstrated over the last three years their ability to manage in a declining environment, make provisions for the unexpected and plan for the future.
Now is not the
time to hand the reigns of Fayette County government to those groups who have
little experience in managing an active business with some 700 plus employees
and whose sole experience of the past few years is to cast aspersions on those
who are good managers from the comfort of their computer room without appearing
at a County Commission meeting, a workshop meeting or any committee meeting to
participate in the business of governing during any time in the last three and
one-half years.
Finally, I will
comment on the frenzy of Group 2 and their blindly following Brown through the
twisted facts and innuendos that fit his and their agenda.
I am confident
when you weigh the true facts and not the distorted ones you will see an
overwhelming difference in my getting things done and my opponent tearing
things down. I again ask for your vote for Jack Smith and your support in the
July 20 Republican Primary or in early voting going on now.
|