Republican primary next Tuesday for a handful of positions

AMENIA — This coming Tuesday, Sept. 15, three Republican primaries will be held between the towns of Amenia and North East. In both towns, the position of town justice is being contested. In the town of Amenia, incumbent Supervisor Wayne Euvrard is being challenged for the Republican nomination by newcomer Gary Bonds. The Millerton News sat down with both candidates last week to speak about the upcoming vote, which will be held at Town Hall on Sept. 15 from noon to 9 p.m.

Incumbent banks on

experience and a tight

budget watch

Wayne Euvrard has nearly 20 years of holding political office in Amenia under his belt. At the age of 62, he has been town supervisor since 2007, a councilman on the Town Board for the 10 years prior to that, and a member of the Zoning Board of Appeals for eight years before that, including two years as chairman.

Euvrard is retired now and lives with his wife, Cami, but he was previously a New York state corrections officer in Beacon, and has owned two local businesses.

“Owning a business, it gives you experience,� Euvrard said. “Because really, running the town is like running a small business with a $4 million budget.�

Euvrard explained that in his mind, the three most important issues in town for the upcoming year are moving Town Hall into the Amenia Elementary School building, continuing to work toward a wastewater district and finding a feasible property for the town’s highway garage and salt shed.

With Town Hall, Euvrard reiterated a point he’s made often throughout the year: The space currently being used is cramped and the school building, which has been offered for the price of $1 by the Webutuck Central School District, is too much of a historic building (and a bargain) to pass up.

When asked about his accomplishments during his term, Euvrard said the biggest thing is that he’s controlled spending.

“I think I’m the first superintendent ever to reduce the town’s general fund [line] by $100,000,� he said. Euvrard also pointed out that tax exemption for veterans has “basically doubled� during his time as supervisor, and that he felt he had a hand in keeping the Silo Ridge Resort Community project in town.

What would the town of Amenia look like in September 2011 if Euvrard were reelected?

“In 2011, I’m pretty sure we’ll be working on the sewer district,� he said. “We’ll have moved into the new Town Hall and have extra space rented out for extra income. And I believe Silo Ridge will be under construction, which will create a lot of jobs in this town and will help the whole local economy.�

New to politics,

not so new to town issues

This will be Gary Bonds’ first foray into politics, but he’s well versed in what’s been happening in Amenia. For the last eight years, he has served as the audio visual technician for the town of Amenia. And for 13 years, from 1994 to 2007, he held the position of Amenia water treatment operator.

“I’ve worked and been at every Town Board meeting since 1994,� he said. “I’m as well-tuned into the town as any experienced board member.�

Bonds, who is 72, is married to Town Clerk Maureen Bonds. He’s been a Republican “since day one, when I was eligible at the age of 21.�

One of the reasons Bonds decided to run against Euvrard was that he heard the Democratic party wouldn’t be submitting a candidate. “The people need a choice,� he explained.

The three most important town issues for Bonds are the Amenia Elementary School acquisition, getting a salt shed for the highway department and resolving the Amenia landfill issue.

Getting a new Town Hall “isn’t a bad idea,� Bonds said, “but I would prefer that we wait until we get all the issues and reports and they’re resolved.� He argued that the town shouldn’t be taking over the building until at least after this winter, and said he was concerned about the financial cost of the building as well as the impact on the town’s fire department.

Above all, Bonds said he would like the town to have a three- to five-year plan moving forward, and he would like to have more unity and cooperation between the parties in town.

“For the last four administrations, this town has been totally fragmented and broken apart,� he said. “I would consider myself a neutral, coming in to say, ‘Let’s get together and work things out.’�

If elected, Bond guaranteed that the  salt shed issue would be resolved within the first year.

“I mean everything: We’ll wrap it up one way or another,� he said.

If elected, Bonds said that by September 2011 (the end of his term) he hoped “people on all sides would be talking to each other. We would have Town Board meetings that not only the old but the young would participate in, and that we would all talk civilly to each other.�

A supervisor “must lead and not control the board,� Bonds added. “All the supervisors in the past have legitimately wanted the best for the community, but they’ve never pulled everybody together. You have to have an open mind and be flexible.�

Amenia and North East will also vote for Republican town justice

There are two other primaries to be held on Sept. 15. Also in Amenia, incumbent Jim Devine will be running against Mike DeLango.

“The last four years [the length of one term] have been a very wonderful time in my life,� said Devine, who has previously held positions on the Town Board, Planning Board and Zoning Board of Appeals. “There are good parts and there are bad parts. You see the worst of the community, but there is also the opportunity to say the right words and give the right encouragement. I tell people not to be afraid. I’m there to protect the accused.�

DeLango, who is cross-endorsed by the Democratic party, has run unsuccessfully for town justice two previous times.

“I think I could do a lot of good from the justice position for the younger people in town,� DeLango said. “There’s no structure in their families and in their lives, and I’m hoping I can be a figure to give them that structure.�

In North East and Millerton, Republicans will be also be voting for their nomination for town justice. Incumbent Richard Joannides will be facing Jack Thomas.

“I like to think of myself as an honest, consistent and respectful individual. It would be an honor to serve the community in this position and I would appreciate the support of the community,� Thomas said.

Joannides could not be reached by this paper’s early deadline. Voting will be held for both town and village districts at the NorthEast-Millerton Free Library from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.

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