Show STANDARD-EXAMINE- METRO EDITION R WEDNESDAY NOV 8 1989 CITY EDITOR: 0 625-422- BUSINESS OBITUARIES CLASSIFIEDS IWebeiCountv Farr West Mayor: IjJ John R Stewart 421 seats: Farr West City Council two four-yeSi 446 297 Fisher Westergard Gerlynn Josephine ar David Soelberg 309 Farr West City Council Les Jensen 419 Harrisville Mayor: sf David Andersen 427 two-ye- seat: ar Michael Parkinson 171 Ross Knight 331 Harrisville City Council: Si Michael Arave 361 sl Kendell Kennington 379 Kenneth Martin 292 Lynn Denney 1 69 Mark Knight 250 Huntsville Mayor: sl Doug Wilson 167 JR Johansen 106 seats: Huntsville City Council two four-yeef John Posnien 157 Quentin Smelzer 73 Si Leon Sorensen 1 84 Steve Songer 1 1 0 Huntsville City Council seat: stfPam Johnson 153 Rich Wilder 117 ar two-ye- ar North Ogden Mayor: Bruce Dursteler 3064 North Ogden City Council: Si Allen Christensen 2204 ef Jeff Stowe 2795 Plain City Mayor: Victoria Nielsen 302 Keith Blanch 139 Daniel Steflik 1099 Si Scott Jenkins 461 Plain City Council: Kenneth Hales 215 Dennis Lund 99 GladeCrowther212 Long-tim- Dennis Rogers 191 Pleasant View Mayor: Ron Horton 499 8i Brent Hales 807 Pleasant View City Council: LaRee Miller 837 Peary Barker 609 Brad Cragun 929 d friend Ruth Zentner consoles Lew Wangsgard as wife Patti and daughter Jan look on e Rlverdale Mayor: Standard-Examine- r SOUTH OGDEN — Brent Frost a novice running his first political race ousted Mayor Lew Wangsgard by slightly more than 600 votes but the three incumbent councilmen retained their seats Computer problems and the accidental mixing of some South Ogden ballots with those from another city kept the South Ogden candidates waiting until almost midnight Tuesday for the results g The waiting was for incumbents Jerry Johansen and Lewis Thorpe who outpolled their four challengers for the two four-yeseats But incumbent Carlyle Shaw the lone candidate for the seat calmly joked the evening away When the results were announced the excitement of the three winning candidates who ran as a team with the mayor was subdued because of nerve-wrackin- ar two-ye- ar Wangsgard’s defeat “Well guys you got a new mayor” said Wangsgard seconds after getting the final tally When his supporters crowded around him to express their regrets he said: “No problem Don’t be Johansen Thorpe Shaw if you can't sorry It’s the great American game stand losing you shouldn’t be playing “Obviously Mr Frost ran an excellent campaign He won it fair and square But it’s been a great experience” Wangsgard said of his four years as may- or Frost who was partying at his home said the win was “a very emotional high for me” “I’m very pleased at the support I got from voters It’s my first experience in politics and I didn’t know how I was doing” said Frost who beat Wangsgard 2294 to 1667 The newly elected mayor said he planned to “work hard and devote my full time to the mayor’s Rlverdale City Council: Q Bruce Burrows 915 sl Jerry DeGroot 932 job” He said he wanted to try to iron out some personnel problems of the past and raise the morale of city employees “I have some ideas but want some time to think none of the employees in the city them out better need to worry about their jobs being lost” he said "I want to bring the people of South Ogden back together and make them proud of one another and Frost a retired of the city” said the 51 -- year-old FBI agent who recently moved back to South Ogden where he was raised “I was serious in my campaign statements about wanting to open the channels of communications” Frost said "I’d like to form some citizens committees so everybody has a chance to be heard” Johansen with 1624 votes came in first in the y council seats Thorpe race for the four-yeran second with 1565 votes beating third-plac- e vote-gettSandra Wright with 1361 votes The other three candidates were Lamont Camp with 1088 votes Jim Daily with 1070 and Kenneth Warner with 662 “You taught us good” said Johansen to Wangsgard as he accepted the mayor’s congratulations on his win Thorpe said he is glad he retained his seat because there are still “some loose ends I’d like to clean up” six-wa- ar er Roy Mayor: i Kathleen Browning si Ben Jones 3537 S Roy City Council: Howard Green 2686 Si Doug Rochell 2929 834 Leon Poulsen Howard Coleman 835 outh Ogden ousts Wangsgard By PAT BEAN gfLynn Cottle 41 7 John Stevens 227 sS Thomas Miller 296 Terrance Imlay 80 1 083 Richard Tubbs 2558 Mark Wilcox 2409 gfDale Willis 3124 South Ogden Mayor: Lew Wangsgard 1 667 i Brent Frost 2294 seats: South Ogden City Council two four-yeLew Thorpe 1 565 Sandra Wright 1 361 si Jerry Johansen 1 624 Lamont Camp 088 8 ar 1 Jim Daily 1 Kenneth Warner 662 070 South Ogden City Council Carlyle Shaw 3368 Uintah Mayor: Robert Amundson 62 Uintah City Council: 8l Gordon Pringle 179 el Kenneth Stuart 207 two-ye- seat: ar Si Jay Kendell 197 Robert Vanasse 108 Washington Terrace Mayor: el Scott Coates 1206 Brad Dee 1161 Larry Lowder 138 Washington Terrace City Council: & Lois Richins 1 257 Robert Watson 750 8l Tracy Kap 989 Keith DeGroot 700 Leonard Nicholas 943 Incumbent candidates Unofficial totals until canvass Standard-Examine- graph ic r Roy’s new mayor credits win to a lot of footwork City elects its first woman to high office By AMY JOI BRYSON Standard-Examine- ' r ROY — It may have been a hands-dow- n mayoral victory for Kathleen Browning but she credits the win to a lot of footwork: The city’s next mayor — and the first woman mayor in Roy — defeated Richard Tubbs by 979 votes Tuesday She said her success was the result of "walking the 20 districts talking to voters and the tireless support of campaign workers” the only political contender in Roy who did not show up at city hall when the votes were counted late Tuesday The other candidates and their families munched on cookies and crackers while awaiting results Browning said she spent the evening putting “thank you” signs on her campaign signs throughout the city I did this before the “I didn't know the results ’tallies came in Win or lose that’s the way I do Browning 56 was 1 1 things" she said When the totals came in at 11:30 pm it was Browning 3537 and Tubbs 2558 Tubbs 59 left while city officials were waiting for results to come in from four straggling districts out of Roy’s 20 He declined to comment on the race The Roy elections also returned incumbent Dale council seat and landed a seat Willis to a four-yefor C Doug Rochell a former captain with the city's police department Willis 39 picked up the most votes of any of the city council contenders 3124 The production control scheduler at Hill Air Force Base said he was pleased but a bit surprised at the outcome ar Toward that end South Ogden wants a penalty does if per year to Cities still battling ofnot$12500 complete the work on time and it wants moratorium on building in the upper Country over storm drain for Hills Drive area until the storm drainage system completed Clifford Goff told the South Hills Ogden Mayor Drive Country that a moratorium be assessed Ogden a is L is unacceptable Council Ogden and that his city wants designation of a one-tim- e By PAT BEAN Standard Exammsr SOUTH OGDEN — After 2 Vi years of planning and talking about a joint agreement concerning a storm dram system down Country Hills Drive Ogden and South Ogden officials arc still of different minds South Ogden wants guarantees that the storm system to be installed by Ogden will be completed by a designated time schedule — which in various proposals has been from 1992 to 1995 — and that Ogden will not send more flood waters rolling downhill into South Ogden t “I thought with the number of voters who would turn out that it could have been anyone It could have swayed it” he said Rochell also echoed pleasure in his victory adding that he was “looking forward to accomplishing some of the objectives I’ve listed” Rochell 59 is a political newcomer who campaigned among other things for improvements in providing emergency medical services to the west end of the city ' Early results from four districts had Rochell votes At the trailing W Howard Green Jr by end Rochell had picked up 2929 votes to Green's 2686 Mark Wilcox was third with 2409 Roy like other cities throughout Utah experienced exceptionally high voter turnout for an penalty fee of $12500 instead of an annual fee He said Ogden is building the drain and South Ogden will benefit South Ogden Mayor Lew Wangsgard said Ogden however is creating the problem The cities are also in disagreement about which will accept what percentages of current storm flows down Country Hills Drive So far said South Ogden city engineer Scott Nelson during a break in the meeting there have been seven different proposals but none have See DRAIN on 8C off-ye- ar election Janet Shelton an election judge for District 19 said more than 50 percent of the registered voters showed up at Midland Elementary to cast ballots “I was really surprised because we had such lousy turnout on the (October) primary” she said By 9:35 pm 16 of the Roy districts had turned in results to be ferried by Roy police to the Radis-so- n Suite Hotel where the Weber County votes were counted Candidates and city officials were still waiting for the results from District 4 at 10 Anne RaupStandard-Examme- r Beth Ellen Miya 7 appears bored with the job of mayor while waiting for results pm two hours after the polls had dosed Amid jokes and smiles one city official said the delay was due to long lines a history of being late and the fact that there was some confusion over finding city hall In the end the highest voter turnout in Roy came from District I which had 685 percent of its registered voters show up at the polls Overall Roy had 61 percent turnout Davis school board member raps lack of special education funding By LISA CARRICABURU Standard-Examine- r Davit Bureau FARMINGTON — A Davis school board member says requiring school districts to provide federally mandated programs without sending them the funding is like giving someone $5 and ordering them to gq to the store to buy 100 pounds of sugar Loucnda Downs joined her colleagues and other Davis district officials Tuesday in lobbving for more special education funding They say the current allocation is inadequate ' Superintendent Richard Kendell said the dilemma mas be more critical in the Davis district than in smaller districts but he said the problem is not unique to Das is Counts special-educatio- n r That’s because federal law requires that school s districts provide minimum services to students but neither the federal government nor the state Legislature is willing to provide the money to fully fund those programs For example Kendell said federal funds account for onls 7 percent of funds currently available to the district “I think we need to realize that the threat of lawsuits stemming from this problem is great" Downs told the board Diane Masnes a Fruit Heights woman with a spcual-nccd- s child said she knows several parents who are threatening lawsuits because they feel their children aren’t receiving the special education scr- See SPECIAL on SC special-need- special-educatio- n t |