Tag Archive | "Linda Graham"

Clean Sweep: It’s Tobler, Woodbury and Leavitt


Councilpersons-elect Peggy Leavitt and Rod Woodbury watch election returns Tuesday night at the Boulder Dam Hotel. Woodbury received votes from nearly 60 percent of the voters and Leavitt was supported by 54 percent of the voters. Photo by Steve Andrascik.

By Jack Johnson, Boulder City Review

Mayor Roger Tobler won his bid for re-election in Tuesday’s primary and two City Council candidates also received enough votes to win their seats outright.

This is the first time since 1999, when the mayor’s job was changed from an appointed to an elected position, that a mayor has captured the seat in a primary election.

The two Council positions went to Rod Woodbury and Peggy Leavitt.

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Big money helps pave way to City Hall


By Arnold M. Knightly, Boulder City Review

The voters overwhelmingly threw their support behind the current mayor and two new faces on election night.

This election, the candidates with the best ability to raise money for their campaign won out Tuesday night.

Mayor Roger Tobler, left, and City Councilpersons-elect Peggy Leavitt and Rod Woodbury, on right, pose for a picture Tuesday night at the Boulder Dam Hotel. The three raised and spent the most money during their successful bids. Council candidate Rose Ann Rabiola Miele, middle, raised the fourth most money but was far behind the other three in cash and votes. Photo by Steve Andrascik.

It should cautioned however, that raising and spending money doesn’t always translate to victory.

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All reports in: A first look at the candidates’ campaign finance reports


By Arnold M. Knightly, Boulder City Review

Note: This story was updated Thursday evening.

The campaign finance reports for the city’s upcoming elections show a wide gap between some of the candidates’ ability to raise and spend money during the primary election.

Tuesday will show if the dollars will translate to victories in the primary election, or if some candidates will have to push forward to the general election in June.

In the mayor’s race, Mayor Roger Tobler raised $25,392, including $5,000 from local resident Robert Draney, $2,500 from both the Woodbury Family Trust and the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtor.

Tobler spent $16,609 in the period, $14,892 of which went to advertising.

Mayoral candidate and City Councilwoman Linda Strickland raised $5,175 and spent $4,733.

Her largest contributors were a few $500 donations.

Mayoral candidate and handyman Zach Inman raised $1,300 and spent $1,543 with $728 going to advertising.

City Council candidate Rod Woodbury has raised more money than any candidate in either race. He has also spent more to win in the Council primary than did the other four Council candidates combined.

Woodbury raised $52,970 and spent $26,875 in the first reporting period, which ran from Jan. 1 to March 24.

Woodbury’s biggest donation was $5,000 from his mother, Rose Woodbury, and $5,000 from South Point hotel-casino in Las Vegas.

He also received $4,000 from Mike Ensign, a former gaming executive and father of U.S. Sen. John Ensign.

Woodbury also received a $5,000 loan from his father, former County Commissioner Bruce Woodbury.

Nearly $33,000 of the raised money came from individuals and businesses based outside Boulder City. However, some of the donors have business interests around the city, such as Ensign, whose family has an ownership stake in the Hacienda hotel-casino.

Of the $26,875 Woodbury spent, $18,510 went to advertising including signs, shirts and print advertising.

City Council Peggy Leavitt raised $23,890 and spent $13,705 during the period.

Leavitt, a retired social services administrator, received $2,500 donations from the Woodbury Family Trust, the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtor and the Hacienda hotel-casino.

Leavitt spent $12,158 on advertising and printing costs.

Council candidate Rose Ann Rabiola Miele raised $5,849 in the first period with $1,950 coming from Boulder City Disposal Inc., operator of the landfill on Utah Street.

She received four large contributions from entities based outside Boulder City totaling $1,300.

Miele, the former city public information officer, spent $4,220 during the period, $2,952 going to advertising.

Council candidate and writer Lynn Goya has raised $4,929 during the campaign. However, $3,004 came from the political action committee for the Plumbers & Pipefitters Union Local 525 in Las Vegas.

Goya, who was unsuccessful in her run for State Assembly last year, has spent $2,099 on advertising mostly related to printing cost.

Council candidate Linda Graham raised $1,109 and spent $657 in advertising. Graham, who is married to a minister at Grace Community Church, gathered contributions from individual donations around Boulder City.

The mayor has an annual salary of $13,894 and the City Council pays $11,211.

The reports cover contributions and expenses from Jan. 1 through March 24.

Early voting ends Friday with the primary election on Tuesday.

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Editor’s Desk: Campaign finance reports are in, online


By Arnold M. Knightly, Editor’s Desk

The campaign finance reports started arriving at the City Clerk’s office on Tuesday, the deadline for the first reporting period.

However, Mayor Roger Tobler and City Council candidate Rod Woodbury sent their reports by certified mail and weren’t expected to arrive until Wednesday afternoon after this newspaper goes to press.

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Council candidates keep it cordial


By Joan Patterson, Boulder City Review

All five candidates vying for the two City Council seats offered their take on what they see as the city’s most pressing issues during a debate at the Recreation Center on March 16.

The event was sponsored by the Boulder City Chamber of Commerce and Boulder City Review, and followed a similar forum held for the city’s mayoral candidates earlier that evening.

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County quick to fix election blunder: Letter sent by county Election Department says vote for only one candidate in race


By Arnold M. Knightly, Boulder City Review

A mistake by the Clark County Election Department had Boulder City officials scrambling Monday to make sure 477 local recipients of mail-in ballots were not left disenfranchised or confused.

A letter mistakenly sent by the county stated that only one candidate in each contest could be voted for and ballots with votes for more than one “will not be counted.”

The letter was intended for voters in areas of Henderson and Las Vegas where City Council seats are elected by wards. In Boulder City candidates run citywide for open seats, such as this year where five candidates contend for two open seats.

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Candidates discuss, debate issues facing city


By Jack Johnson, Boulder City Review

City Council and mayoral candidates convened at the Boulder City Library on March 10 for the Boulder City Police Protective Association’s Public Safety Meet the Candidates Night.

The association represents every full-time officer below the rank of lieutenant.

The event, which drew about 50 people, gave candidates the opportunity to answer four public-safety related questions given to them the day before the event, and one randomly selected question from an audience member.

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Five candidates vie for two seats: Incumbents not seeking re-election


By Jack Johnson, Boulder City Review

Five candidates are aiming for the seats being vacated by City Council members Linda Strickland and Travis Chandler, and will face off in an April 5 primary election.

Lynn Goya, a writer who ran unsuccessfully for state Assembly last November, is the most recent to file her intentions to run for City Council among the group of five challengers. She will join the other candidates on the April ballot, with final election results whittling the field down by one. The general election will take place on June 7.

Strickland, it was learned last week, will be running for mayor while Chandler has decided not to seek re-election.

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Rattner pulls out of City Council race


The last candidate in is the first one to leave.

Local activist Sherman Rattner filed papers with the Boulder City clerk’s office today to withdraw from the City Council race.

The race for two open council seats will now be between five candidates; real estate attorney Rod Woodbury, former city PIO Rose Ann Rabiola Miele, writer and producer Lynn Goya, retired social servant Peggy Leavitt and preacher’s wife Linda Graham.

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