Mid-May 2016
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Jack Collins
Frank Daly
Tom Janasek
Steve Lind
Doug Parks
Slobodan Trendic
THE OCEAN PINES JOURNAL OF NEWS & COMMENTARY COVER STORY
THEY’RE OFF!
OPA Board of Directors’ candidate slate at 12 Collins seeks re-election; Trendic trying again after last summer’s third place finish; four current and former advisory committee members seek seats
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Budget and Finance Advisory Committee, where she forged a close working relationship with Thompson in annual budget preparation. She subscribes to a school of thought that says OPA reserves are under-funded and should be increased to prepare for major capital projects and the effects of inflation on the cost of replacing major assets. Another candidate to emerge on the final full week before the filing deadline is businessman Tom Janasek, who frequently attends board meetings and has been known to mix it up with Thompson. Other candidates to file include Brett C. Hill, Sharona Ezaoui, and George Simon Jr. Their resumes were not released as part of an OPA news release issued May 12 announcing the slate. Rounding out the slate include the first two candidates to file, perennial candidate Ray Unger and Larry Perrone. Thompson’s recent three-year contract extension and his five and a half years as general manager – he was given the position by the board in the fall of 2010 – probably will be an election issue this summer. Of the 12 candidates who emerged last week, Trendic says for sure that he would have voted with Director Tom Herrick to oppose the extension. Lind told the Progress in an email that he, too, would have voted against the extension. “Don’t read too much into this folks, and don’t interpret my hypothetical ‘no’ vote as an indication of any pre-determined attitude toward the General Manager’s employment status,” Lind
said, adding that he would have voted no “simply to send the message to my colleagues and to the community that I agree with director Herrick’s common sense suggestion that the board should research options to determine if this community would be better and more efficiently served by a management firm.” Daly made it clear he was not running on a campaign to replace the general manager. Both Janasek and Parks said they weren’t sure how they would have voted, saying they didn’t have enough information to form a definite opinion. Neither seems firmly entrenched in the pro-Thompson camp, however. Unger and Daly are the two candidates that, based on their comments, seem supportive of the general manager. Supik is firmly in the pro-Thompson camp, comparable in loyalty to retiring director Bill Cordwell and former director Sharyn O’Hare, who retired from the board after one term last August. Collins was one of six directors who voted for Thompson extension, but he told the Progress he was sympathetic with the reasons that Herrick voted against it. Collins said there were three options available to the directors, and extending the 2014 contract for three years seemed the least objectionable. He also said there four firm votes for an extension and that having a divisive debate trying to renegotiate the contract did not seem worthwhile. He said the contract remains “at will,” which means the board can abrogate the contract at will but must honor a nine-month severance package specified in the contract. The three seats on the board to be
Ray Unger contested this summer are held by Collins, Tom Terry and Cordwell. Terry is term-limited and can’t run for re-election under the bylaws, while Cordwell told colleagues he didn’t plan to run for re-election.
Jack Collins
“On a national level, there seems to be a deep dissatisfaction with our representative government at all levels. I believe this dissatisfaction is reflected at the Board of Directors level in Ocean Pines. What our members desire is a Board that can compromise and work harmoniously together for the welfare of all members. Not special interest groups. So do I. The members want a cooperative and open relationship between the Board and the General Manager, working together to accomplish projects that benefit all of us. So do I. “What our members want are affordable and effective budgets that address the needs of our community. So do I. “What our members want is a community that is a well maintained and respectable community that anyone would be proud to live in. So do. “During my years on the Board, I have voted for and sponsored motions
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By TOM STAUSS Publisher welve Ocean Pines property owners have filed as candidates in this summer’s race for three seats on the Board of Directors. The term is for three years. The candidate slate is the largest ever to compete for seats on the board. One incumbent director, Jack Collins, has filed for re-election. The announced slate includes one well-known candidate from last summer, Slobodan Trendic, who is seeking a rematch after placing a close third in last summer’s balloting with 1,179 votes. Also running are four candidates who are current or former members of OPA advisory committees, which sometimes has been a steppingstone to the board. Steve Lind is a former long-time member of the Clubs Advisory Committee, who was in the headlines for engaging in a contentious debate with General Manager Bob Thompson at a recent town meeting. He staked out positions often at odds with colleagues on the clubs committee, advocating for consideration of leasing out Yacht Club food and beverage operations as an alternative to in-house management. Information technology executive Doug Parks is chairman of the Bylaws and Resolutions Advisory Committee and businessman Frank Daly is a member of the Comprehensive Plan Advisory Committee, which has run into a buzzsaw of controversy of late over sluggish progress in drafting an updated comprehensive plan for Ocean Pines. Pat Supik is chair of the influential