By Rachel Adams-Heard
Some Glasgow voters went to the polls Tuesday thinking it was time for a change from the recent friction at town council meetings.
“I think to get some good people in here to run this town right, we need more that know what they’re doing,” said resident Phyllis Keith.
But at the end of the night Tuesday, there were no new faces on the council.
Incumbents Roger Funkhouser, Mike Turner and Sonny Williams were re-elected, beating challengers R. Guy Kindle and Tom McClanahan.
Separately, in the special election to replace a fourth seat left vacant by the resignation of John Hill, previous council member Monica Dock defeated Lee Duke.
Turner attracted 148 votes. Williams followed with 143 and Funkhouser with 113. McClanahan got 80 and Kindle 48 votes. In the special election, Dock beat Duke with about 76 percent of the vote, 161 to 52.
Glasgow has only 575 eligible voters, but the town had one of the most competitive races for local office in the Rockbridge area this year.
Before the election, the Rockbridge Report spoke to all but one of the candidates. Williams could not be reached.
Candidates talk to the Rockbridge Report about issues
Candidates said the issues characterizing this election included a water project currently in the works, a future sewer project, the goal of attracting new businesses, and better communication – among council members and between council and Glasgow’s citizens. “We need to have a responsive government, not an insulated government,” said Kindle, who expressed frustration after the council dropped a public comments segment at its meetings.
“We need to have a responsive government, not an insulated government”
Special election candidate Duke agreed.
“There are things that the town government does that the town doesn’t know about,” he said, adding that he thinks several town ordinances need updating. “There’s no way to get input from the citizens into the council.”
But McClanahan said he believes there is a time and place for openness – and it’s not always necessary, he said.
“Personnel issues should be closed to the public,” said McClanahan. “There is a certain amount of privacy that has to be maintained.”
Upgrading the Glasgow infrastructure
McClanahan said the water and sewer projects are going well. He expects the water project will wrap up in the spring and the sewer project will start sometime next year.
Upgrades to the water system are costing the town about $3.3 million.
Funding comes from a $449,000 grant from the Virginia Department of Health and a $2.8-million loan from the Virginia Resource Authority, which funds local government infrastructure improvements.
The estimated cost of the sewer project is about $1 million. That would be funded by a grant and loan from Rural Development, a division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
“It’s a massive undertaking,” said special election candidate Dock, who served on the council for four years but took a break this past year.
The goal for the project is to upgrade the current infrastructure to include meters for all the town’s 1,100 residents. Dock served on the council when the project began, and she says she wants to see it through.
Bringing tourist dollars home
Dock also hopes to bring more tourism to the area with new businesses and maybe even a restaurant.
“Now that Natural Bridge has been turned into a state attraction as well, we’re hoping to have more people who are just in the area,” she said. Natural Bridge’s owners and state officials announced earlier this year that the 1,500-acre area surrounding the landmark site will become a state park, but it will likely be a few years before that happens.
Funkhouser said he isn’t sure the town holds potential for new businesses.
“There’s not a lot of opportunity for business in Glasgow,” he said. “I don’t know if there’s a lot the town can do.”
He said tourism should be the big draw, especially after creating access to the James River. “That’s going to bring a lot more people to us.”
Turner agreed that additional tax revenue is essential to the town.
“It’s a lot of retired people living on fixed income.”
He wants a new bank in town, especially after a BB&T branch closed, leaving Glasgow without a bank.
But Turner’s priority would be the sewer project, he said. A $145,000 study is currently in the works to determine the needs of the town’s sewer system.
“It’s just a mess right now,” said Turner, adding that old plumbing is wasting water.