116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
Cedar Rapids District 3 race gets ugly
Oct. 28, 2009 5:20 pm
And we thought having one City Council incumbent running against another was going to be pretty?
Turns out, District 3 incumbent Jerry McGrane assigned the City Clerk's Office to provide him with a report on the number of meetings that he and at-large council member Pat Shey missed since he and Shey began their council terms in 2006.
McGrane violated no campaign rules; he was simply seeking public records, the state's Ethics and Campaign Finance Disclosure Board noted Wednesday.
McGrane now is out with television campaign ads that say Shey, who is running for McGrane's District 3 seat, has been away from his part-time City Hall duty station more than McGrane has been.
The attendance numbers in question are bit of a fog because the City Council has a lot of meetings. The numbers, though, go to the heart of another question: What do residents expect from a part-time City Council member?
The 70-year-old McGrane is retired. Shey is 50, owns and runs two small businesses and is raising three school-age children.
The most-important council meetings are the Wednesday evening ones, which often stretch on for three or more hours. This year, the council will hold more than 45 of those. To date, Shey has missed two, McGrane three.
McGrane, though, is also counting other meetings the council has had this year, which consist of special sessions, briefings, budget meetings and brown bag luncheons - more than 85 to date. Shey has missed 21 of these additional meetings, McGrane 7, according to the City Clerk's numbers provided by McGrane's campaign.
For all of 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009, Shey has missed 12 Wednesday evening meetings, McGrane six. That's from a total of some 160 Wednesday evening meetings for the period.
In the nearly four years through Wednesday, with all types of meetings, Shey has missed 93, McGrane 31, according to the city figures.
McGrane on Wednesday said he didn't buy the notion that Shey should be expected to miss more meetings than a retiree because Shey is holding down a career and raising children.
“He (Shey) is a business owner. Don't they sort of set their own time schedules so, if you're elected, you can do what you have to do?” McGrane asked.
Shey responded: “Isn't it really the quality of the decisions we make? And at the end of the day, I'll put my votes up against Jerry's any day of the week. I think that is the important thing: What is the information you get, how do you process it and what's the decision you make?”
Thirty-four of the meetings that Shey missed in four years were “brown-bag” lunch meetings, and he noted that, as a contractor, lunch is often the time he is meeting with clients. He said the information presented at brown-bag and other special meetings comes to council members in written form, too.
Shey on Wednesday recalled the first months after the June 2008 flood when the City Council was meeting early Monday and Friday mornings as well as Wednesday nights. At one point, he sat through most of one of the morning meetings before standing up and asking what was being presented that couldn't be sent via e-mail to council members.
“They had become make-work sessions,” Shey said. “And you might remember, those morning meetings came to an end pretty darn quick after that.”
McGrane disagreed. He said most meetings are providing council members with important information, and he, a flood victim himself, said Shey missed meetings related to flood recovery.
The third candidate in the District 3 field, Kathy Potts, also is firing away.
Potts, 50, a homemaker, said she is amazed at a new McGrane campaign flyer in which McGrane says City Hall needs to stop using so many out-of-state consultants. McGrane voted for all the consultants, Potts said.
McGrane on Wednesday admitted as much but said he voted based on information “we've been fed” by the city manager who said that local experts have not be qualified to do much of the city work.
“And now I just don't believe that,” he said.
And we thought having one City Council incumbent running against another was going to be pretty?
Turns out, District 3 incumbent Jerry McGrane assigned the City Clerk's Office to provide him with a report on the number of meetings that he and at-large council member Pat Shey missed since he and Shey began their council terms in 2006.
McGrane violated no campaign rules; he was simply seeking public records, the state's Ethics and Campaign Finance Disclosure Board noted Wednesday.
McGrane now is out with television campaign ads that say Shey, who is running for McGrane's District 3 seat, has been away from his part-time City Hall duty station more than McGrane has been.
The attendance numbers in question are bit of a fog because the City Council has a lot of meetings. The numbers, though, go to the heart of another question: What do residents expect from a part-time City Council member?
The 70-year-old McGrane is retired. Shey is 50, owns and runs two small businesses and is raising three school-age children.
The most-important council meetings are the Wednesday evening ones, which often stretch on for three or more hours. This year, the council will hold more than 45 of those. To date, Shey has missed two, McGrane three.
McGrane, though, is also counting other meetings the council has had this year, which consist of special sessions, briefings, budget meetings and brown bag luncheons - more than 85 to date. Shey has missed 21 of these additional meetings, McGrane 7, according to the City Clerk's numbers provided by McGrane's campaign.
For all of 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009, Shey has missed 12 Wednesday evening meetings, McGrane six. That's from a total of some 160 Wednesday evening meetings for the period.
In the nearly four years through Wednesday, with all types of meetings, Shey has missed 93, McGrane 31, according to the city figures.
McGrane on Wednesday said he didn't buy the notion that Shey should be expected to miss more meetings than a retiree because Shey is holding down a career and raising children.
“He (Shey) is a business owner. Don't they sort of set their own time schedules so, if you're elected, you can do what you have to do?” McGrane asked.
Shey responded: “Isn't it really the quality of the decisions we make? And at the end of the day, I'll put my votes up against Jerry's any day of the week. I think that is the important thing: What is the information you get, how do you process it and what's the decision you make?”
Thirty-four of the meetings that Shey missed in four years were “brown-bag” lunch meetings, and he noted that, as a contractor, lunch is often the time he is meeting with clients. He said the information presented at brown-bag and other special meetings comes to council members in written form, too.
Shey on Wednesday recalled the first months after the June 2008 flood when the City Council was meeting early Monday and Friday mornings as well as Wednesday nights. At one point, he sat through most of one of the morning meetings before standing up and asking what was being presented that couldn't be sent via e-mail to council members.
“They had become make-work sessions,” Shey said. “And you might remember, those morning meetings came to an end pretty darn quick after that.”
McGrane disagreed. He said most meetings are providing council members with important information, and he, a flood victim himself, said Shey missed meetings related to flood recovery.
The third candidate in the District 3 field, Kathy Potts, also is firing away.
Potts, 50, a homemaker, said she is amazed at a new McGrane campaign flyer in which McGrane says City Hall needs to stop using so many out-of-state consultants. McGrane voted for all the consultants, Potts said.
McGrane on Wednesday admitted as much but said he voted based on information “we've been fed” by the city manager who said that local experts have not be qualified to do much of the city work.
“And now I just don't believe that,” he said.
Pat Shey, Kathy Potts, Jerry McGrane

Daily Newsletters