Pyles wins fifth term on BOS, but quartet falls short with loss in Wayne race

An effort by a group that ran on a platform raising issue with the handling of the 2009 Augusta County reassessment fell just short of taking a majority on the county Board of Supervisors.

Pastures District incumbent Tracy Pyles won a fifth term in Tuesday’s elections, and was joined by ticketmates Marshall Pattie in the North River District and David Karaffa in the Beverley Manor District. But the fourth member of the group, Kurt Michael, fell 125 votes short in his race against Jeff Moore in the Wayne District.

Moore, a Republican, received 53.2 percent of the vote in the race against Michael, a former Augusta County Republican Party chair.

Pyles, a Democrat, garnered 65.1 percent of the vote in his two-way race with Republican Jim Warren.

Karaffa, an indepedent and former candidate for the 20th House District GOP nomination, won by 46 votes over Republican incumbent Jeremy Shifflett. Karaffa received 51.1 percent of the vote in the race.

Pattie, a former Augusta County Democratic Party chair, received 64.6 percent of the vote in a three-way race with former Augusta Republican chair Larry Roller and independent Stephen Morris.

Larry Wills (Middle River), Michael Shull (Riverheads) and David Beyeler (South River) were all unopposed.

Chris Graham: The County Quartet

Tracy Pyles is frequently criticized for not being able to play well with others. That’s a fair observation. Also fair would be the observation that Pyles thinks the current majority on the Augusta County Board of Supervisors is taking the county in the wrong direction, and playing nice isn’t going to get things moving in the right direction.

This is what the 2011 Board of Supervisor elections will come down to, in my view. Do you like the way things are going in county government? If so, you’ve got excellent candidates to choose from in the four contested races on the ballot on Tuesday, for starters in the race for Pyles’ Pastures District seat, where he is being challenged by Jim Warren, a well-spoken small businessman.

Jeremy Shifflett is the current chair of the board and running for re-election in the Beverley Manor District against David Karaffa, one of three challengers who have aligned with Pyles. The second of that group is Marshall Pattie, a James Madison University business professor running for the North River District seat against Larry Roller and Steve Morris. The other contested race pits Kurt Michael, an educator also aligned with Pyles, against School Board representative Jeff Moore in the Wayne District.

(The incumbent in North River, Larry Howdyshell, and the incumbent in the Wayne, Wendell Coleman, are not running for re-election this year.)

Ads run in the local media paid for and authorized by the local GOP committee will tell you that the proper vote choices in the races would be Warren, Shifflett, Roller and Moore. In going with recent history in local politics, though, the ’11 elections in the county are a lot more complicated than any party ad line could spell out for you.

Pyles has been elected four times in Pastures as a Democrat, and Pattie is a former Augusta County Democratic Committee chair. Their ticketmates, Michael and Karaffa, have histories on the other side of the aisle – Michael as a sometimes-controversial former Augusta County Republican Committee chair, and Karaffa as an activist in local Republican circles who made a bid for the 2009 20th House District GOP nomination.

The County Quartet, as I’m branding them, are staking their political fortunes to the groundswell of public disfavor with the handling of the most recent county reassessments, which pushed property values up significantly (and locked them in for four years) just after the real-estate market had begun to crater. The bad situation there was made worse, in their view, by the way the Board of Supervisors responded, with a move to cut the county property-tax rate nearly 20 percent, eroding county revenues at a time when, the Quartet says, the county stands to lose millions in state funding for education and other public services due to the faulty reassessments.

I’m in a minority of one among the local news-editor set in agreeing with the perspective on county policy advanced by Pyles and his group, which means I’m also in a minority of one wanting to see a change in leadership at the Government Center in Verona. I’m OK with that, because unlike the other news entities here locally, which have had to cut jobs and outsource operations to remain afloat, I’ve actually been able to grow my business and even create a few jobs in the past couple of years, and I see the Quartet pushing a similar agenda.

Let’s get county government running well first, with a stable source of government revenues, from local sources and from the state, and then let’s turn our attention to jobs. Not that long ago, we had the interest of a major auto manufacturer that wanted to locate here in the Valley. It’s hard to believe that we turned that opportunity down, and I don’t see a Pyles-led board doing so a second time. And in the meantime, we can give the county economic-development department more resources to market county locations, including the still-practically-empty industrial park in Verona.

The good news for county voters is that if you see things differently, if you like the way county government is being run, you’ve got some solid choices among candidates who can continue the status quo.

I really think Augusta County will be in good hands whatever happens on Nov. 8. I just happen to think it will be in better hands if Pyles, Karaffa, Pattie and Michael are victorious at the end of the day.

More from Chris at www.TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com.

Chris Graham: A new order in the offing in Augusta?

A changing of the guard is in order in Augusta County, where the incumbents on the Board of Supervisors have been dropping like flies of late.

At last count, four of the seven-member board have announced that they won’t be running for re-election, with Board Chair Jeremy Shifflett and Pastures Supervisor Tracy Pyles confirmed to be in the running and South River Supervisor David Beyeler either expected to announce his intention to run for another term (according to some) or join the parade of retirees (according to others).

The balance of power could be shifting in the direction of Pyles, a Democrat who has forged an interesting coalition with former Augusta County Republican Chairman Kurt Michael, former Augusta County Democratic Chairman Marshall Pattie and local Tea Party veteran David Karaffa.

Karaffa is the only member of the group who will face an incumbent, Shifflett, a Republican who narrowly won election in 2007 (by 16 votes over Democrat Lee Godfrey) in the Beverley Manor District. Pattie and Michael are both running for seats being vacated by incumbents (Pattie in North River, Michael in Wayne), and Pyles, while he has am opponent, has not seriously been challenged in his four election victories, which date back to 1995.

Pyles was the voice in the wilderness leading the charge against the controversial property reassessments in 2009 that the majority of the Board of Supervisors decided to handle by an equally controversial measure that gutted the county property-tax rate. Shifflett joined the Pyles crusade late in the game, maybe too late to sidestep criticism that he did so for political reasons. How he fares against a challenge from the right in the form of Karaffa will be one of the key storylines in the upcoming election cycle in Augusta County.

Number one on that list will be how the disparate coalition that Pyles has forged will be able to work as a team. The grouping has a better-than-even chance of forming a working majority on the Board of Supervisors come January. United as they are right now on fiscal issues, could there be room for their opponents to play a divide-and-conquer game by going all social issues on them?

Not if the quartet follows this piece of advice: Local elections, and local government, aren’t about abortion and gay marriage. To borrow from the campaign mantra that carried Bill Clinton through contentious elections in the 1990s, it’s the economy, stupid. Economic growth and balanced budgets – that’s what the voters want.

More columns at TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com.

Candidates forum set for June 15

The first in an advertised series of town-hall meetings featuring four candidates for seats on the Augusta County Board of Supervisors is set for Wednesday, June 15, at the Augusta County Government Center in Verona.

Incumbent Pastures District Supervisor Tracy Pyles will be joined by Beverley Manor candidate David Karaffa, North River candidate Marshall Pattie and Wayne candidate Kurt Michael at the 7 p.m. forum.

The public is invited to attend and ask questions.

Moving forward in Riverheads

Ground was broken on the new Riverheads fire and rescue station in August a couple of weeks before all hell started to break loose on the future of the whole volunteer fire-rescue concept that has served Augusta County for decades.

Construction crews were busy at the site Wednesday morning with quite visible signs of progress on the $1.2 million, 7,000-square-foot structure on Swartzel Shop Road north of Greenville. It’s starting to look like a fire station, and the commitment from the volunteer group that will provide the manpower to run it is that it will be fully operational 24-7 as a volunteer effort.

“That’s the commitment that we took a year ago – that it would be staffed entirely on the fire side with volunteers,” said Nancy Sorrells, who represents the Riverheads District on the Augusta County Board of Supervisors and also serves on the board of the Riverheads Volunteer Fire Department, which will staff the building along with the Staunton Augusta Rescue Squad.

The vast rural county district is currently served by a mix of emergency-services stations, including Stuarts Draft, Middlebrook and several located in neighboring Rockbridge County. Growth in the Greenville area pushed considerations of locating a station in the district.

“It was a huge hole, no doubt about it. With three interstate exits in the district, this is immediately going to be one of the top stations for fire and rescue calls in the county. It’s going to be in the top three, for sure. And with the growth in commercial activity, and the growth in residential that will take off once the economy gets its legs, this isn’t just a need now, but it’s a huge need in the near future,” Sorrells said.

At issue is the move to build a fire and rescue station with the plans that it will be staffed by volunteers 24-7 in the context of the recent headlines regarding troubles at the Preston L. Yancey Fire Department in Fishersville, which is having such difficulty maintaining adequate volunteer staffing levels that the county has been forced to scramble to try to boost coverage with additional paid county personnel.

Pastures Supervisor Tracy Pyles has long been a critic of the Riverheads station, citing long-range county plans to move its Company 10 career personnel out of the firehouse where they are now based inside the Staunton city limits to better serve underserved areas of the county.

“We are where we are. Foundations are being poured. It’s going to be a reality,” said Pyles, who has earned both supporters and critics for his blunt assessment of the future of emergency services in the county.

“Volunteers are not the future. That’s a reality,” Pyles said.

Sorrells counters with the observation that “the future is a strong volunteer system supported with career people.”

“I don’t think you’re going to go forward as a county – our county is so diverse and so different – I think you’ve got to find the right solution for each area. Fishersville is a different community. It’s a more transient community. You have a lot of commuters, a lot of retirees, a lot of people who don’t have roots for a couple of generations. Riverheads is the only magisterial district where it’s the name of the district and the name of the schools and the name of everything that we do. There’s a feeling of pride to be Riverheads that maybe doesn’t carry over to other districts. The school has a chant: Pride, Red Pride. You don’t see that everywhere, but Riverheads is different that way,” Sorrells said.

Offering a quick tour of the station in development, Sorrells detailed the success of volunteer recruitment efforts, with a roster of 20 volunteers ready to staff the station at its projected opening date later this year, and the plans in the works to work with the county school system to develop a junior volunteer program at Riverheads High School to get the next generation of volunteers in line.

“Maybe down the road it’s going to be hard to do this 24-7 with volunteers. But if a few years down the road we have to re-examine that, what do we have here? We still have this fire station as an asset. And there’s no question that we’re serving a big need here,” Sorrells said.
 
 

Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Augusta: Developing a new model for fire, rescue

It was sometime around 2000 or 2001 when I realized that the way we’ve always done things in Augusta County relative to the provision of fire and rescue service, with the bulk of the work done by volunteers, was no longer sufficient to get the job done.

I had invited myself out on a Saturday morning to help members of the Stuarts Draft Rescue Squad raise money by standing out in the middle of the intersection of U.S. 340 and Route 608. It didn’t take long for the realization to hit.

Cars and trucks were whizzing by; I could feel the road moving, as Darrell Waltrip might say, beneath my feet.

What sense does it make, I thought, the ground swaying under me, that we not only rely on volunteers to go into burning houses and go out to car wrecks on backroads and interstates in the middle of the night, and all the rest, but we make them stand out in the middle of the road to beg people for the money that it takes to do what they do?

Fast forward about a decade, to the situation being faced by the county with regard to its volunteer fire department in Fishersville, Preston L. Yancey, which serves a rapidly growing area of residences, commercial properties and the region’s medical district, with an ever-declining base of volunteers straining at the gills to not only answer calls but also raise money and keep up with training requirements.

The immediate issue being faced down by county leaders is what to do to address a low insurance-industry rating given to the Yancey fire company that is pushing up insurance costs for Fishersville-area residents.

The response, and the jury is out on what it will do, but it’s what we have, will add another paid firefighter to the Yancey rolls, shift some coverage areas for nearby volunteer companies and also engage the county’s 24-7 station in Staunton.

That’s the short-term fix. The bigger question now being looked at by local leaders – what about that model of emergency-service delivery that we’ve had in place for time immemorial? Can we continue to rely as we have and as we do on volunteers to provide the bulk of the work?
 

Change in direction

“The time has come where this is a new world in fire-rescue, and we’ve got to think of things differently, and I think the answer of, This is the way we’ve always done it, is no longer an acceptable answer,” said Nancy Sorrells, who represents the Riverheads District on the Augusta County Board of Supervisors, and who has been successful in her effort to have the county partner in the launch of a new volunteer fire-rescue station that will serve the Greenville area.

“We need to recognize, and we already know, that volunteers aren’t our future. They’re a glorious part of our past, they’re an important part of our present, but they’re not our future,” said Tracy Pyles, who represents the Pastures District on the Board, and has been sharply critical of fellow Board members for what he feels is a head-in-the-sand attitude toward the issues with emergency services that have come to public scrutiny with the goings-on with Yancey.

“It has bothered me a lot to hear them say, Oh, gosh. Now we know we’ve got a problem. This is a good wakeup call. That’s absolute nonsense. We’ve known of this problem for a long time,” Pyles said.

Wayne District Supervisor Wendell Coleman, whose district is based in Fishersville, seems to acknowledge this. “I’m personally of the opinion that it’s time, and some might be of the opinion that it’s beyond time, to look at our entire delivery system, how it is we do what we do,” said Coleman, who also seems to acknowledge the crtiicism of Pyles in offering that it’s “time to look past politics” and focus instead on crafting a solution to the long-term issues.

Consensus, indeed, seems to be building among Board members toward some sort of formal review of service-delivery options. Coleman favors having the county engage an outside consultant “that doesn’t have a quote ‘dog in the fight’” to assist in the review; Sorrells leans toward the formation of a task force including members of the Board, county fire chief Carson Holloway, representatives of the volunteer emergency-services community and leaders from Waynesboro and Staunton and a professional facilitator.

“We’ve come up with a good solution for a short-term fix. The long term is, we’ve got a system that’s really beyond our control at this point. We can’t keep putting Band-Aids on it,” said Sorrells, who feels Board members need to be willing to “put everything on the table” to work toward a solution to the issue.

“We need to keep in mind that it may take a revamping of the entire system. A couple hundred volunteers, fortysome paid people, thirtysome stations – how do you make that all work as a team? It’s probably going to take some reorganization,” Sorrells said.

Coleman is in agreement in principle with Sorrells on that point. “By policy,” Coleman said, “we’ve never pushed paid people on the volunteers. The volunteers, by policy, had to come to that decision on their own and petition the Board of Supervisors for help. This Board, and previous Boards, have stepped up and provided what has been asked for. But the bottom line is, we have a legal responsibility to protect life and property, and if the volunteers can’t do it, they need to come to grips with that and say they can’t. Because we have no choice but to do it.”

The criticism of Pyles on the newfound sense of urgency on the part of fellow Board members, to be fair, is at least partly political. “Somebody needs to stand up and tell people that the county isn’t being led in the right direction,” says Pyles, who so often clashes with other Board members that he has become the 1 in a long series of 6-1 votes.

But Pyles does make a good case that county leaders may have dropped the ball, and that the zeal to devise a new way of doing business could lead to as much harm as good.

“There’s been a master plan put in place that would allow us to start evolving, but instead of following that master plan, the board has taken things totally in a different direction,” Pyles said. “We know that volunteers are a problem, so what’s the biggest investment we’ve made in fire and rescue lately? In a volunteer station. One-point-six million dollars in a station that’s going to be run by volunteers. We have paid for our own land mine and put it on the path. This can’t work. It won’t work long term.”
 

Writing on the wall

The political give-and-take being what it is, the issue is out there for discussion, and there’s really no easy answer that doesn’t involve dollars and cents. And when it comes to dollars and cents being involved, of course, the answers get even more complex.

“I’ve heard people say, I don’t mind paying the taxes. Well, some people don’t, and some people do,” Holloway said.

Which is to say, even recognizing that a shift from a volunteer-based system to a system that has as its backbone paid firefighters and rescue personnel is upcoming, it’s not going to be enough to just throw money at the problem and hope that it goes away.

“The solutions that we come up with today are going to have to take into consideration what we need tomorrow,” Holloway said. “The dynamics are changing. We have to look at the future here. I’m not saying we go out and hire firefighters to staff us up to 20 years down the road, but we need to be prepared for today and be planning for tomorrow.”

“The budget is a key issue here,” Sorrells agrees. “But just throwing money at it isn’t going to solve anything. We’ve got to look at the system overall and the long-term trends.”

And the long-term trends aren’t good. A system that relied on volunteers to provide the bulk of the labor worked well when more people worked close to where they lived and had the flexibility in their work schedules to leave on a moment’s notice to answer the fire bell. Augusta County isn’t that place anymore, and hasn’t been for years. The Stuarts Draft-Fishersville-Verona-Weyers Cave corridor is becoming more and more an urban corridor with every passing year, with an increasing number of people moving in from other areas attracted by the growing economy and natural beauty of the area and working jobs in regional economic centers in Charlottesville and Harrisonburg.

The county is also aging on the aggregate, with a hole in the twenty- and thirtysomething set that for generations had provided the manpower for volunteer emergency-services units.

“When you hit 40 years old, there are still a lot of valuable 40-year-olds out there who can do a lot of stuff, but interior firefighting is just a young person’s game, the physically fit’s game,” Holloway said. “What used to happen was the younger generation moved up, and their parents, aunts, uncles, whoever brought them into it, they went on and became the administrative people, ran the engines, did the management part. We’re not replenishing the frontline firefighters nearly as quickly as we used to.”

Couple those trends with the increased demands from the state in terms of training required of volunteers, and you have what we have now as a logical outcome.

“It’s to a point where other than having a gun, we just do about anything emergency service-related, from a car wreck to a structure collapse, to explosions, to confined-space rescue in industry. The 120 hours that we spend in Firefighter I and 120 hours that we spend in EMT, that’s just the tip of the iceberg to become proficient in every demand that’s out there,” Holloway said.

“It’s almost impossible for a volunteer to do it. Not that we don’t have some. We have a lot that are very good. But we talk about 500 hours of training. To get to things like tactical rescue, hazardous-materials response, and we’re fortunate we don’t have many issues with hazardous materials, but with Interstate 81 and 64 intersecting in the middle of the county, we have potential, and we have to be trained and ready to handle whatever might come,” Holloway said.
 
 

Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Did Pyles initiate the conversation on religion?

“I did not initiate the call nor the question.” That comment might lead you to think that Tracy Pyles was simply responding to a question from News Leader reporter Trevor Brown on the issue that Pyles had raised privately with 20th District Democratic Party nominee Erik Curren three months ago about how Curren’s mix of Buddhist and Christian religious beliefs would go over with voters in the 20th. Read more