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WEEK IN REVIEW
Wednesday


A stroke of kindness for Everett woman
Suspect arrested in Everett manhunt after shots...
New student exams, familiar results
Tuesday


Crash leaves car embedded in Everett Transit bus
County students get mixed grade from superinten...
Stevens Hospital District taxes to stay
Monday


More than a nuisance
Mukilteo's red-light camera fight on radar of ...
Renamed Keystone ferry terminal a coup for Coup...
Sunday


Snohomish County becomes a destination for airp...
You’ll need only 1 flu shot this year
Snohomish County YMCA goal: Healthy kids
Saturday


Marysville's new school getting ready for its f...
When the circus came to Everett ... in 1910
Drop in ferry ridership leveling off
Friday


New flight simulator re-creates 787 for pilots
Berkey calls for investigation into campaign ag...
Crash flips horse trailer on I-5, blocking traffic
Thursday


Heroin increasing its reach in small towns
Everett schools gain; Berkey's deficit widens
Rabbits and chickens move in as Evergreen fair ...
 

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CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, February 5, 2010

Aaron Reardon laments political sparring with council

The county executive vows to improve dealings with the County Council.

EVERETT — The “personal and destructive” tenor of local politics dominated much of Snohomish County Executive Aaron Reardon's annual speech that usually sums up the status of the local economy.

Reardon used Thursday's State of the County speech to lament that too much is at stake to allow “petty bickering and politics of personal destruction” to continue between his office and the five county councilmen.

The executive vowed to improve communication and said he took responsibility for creating some of the friction.

“From this day forward, I am willing to bend over backwards to improve the communication and relationship between our two branches,” he said. “But communication and relationship-building is a two-way street. It happens between individuals, not on the front pages of local newspapers.”

Council Chairman Dave Gossett, who was among about 100 people at the Everett Area Chamber of Commerce breakfast, agreed that better dialogue was in order.

“I do find it ironic that the executive has consistently cancelled meetings where issues could be discussed privately, and chooses a major public speech to argue we shouldn't communicate through the newspaper,” Gossett said.

In particular, Gossett said Reardon had cancelled the past two leadership meetings, which are scheduled every other week between the two branches of government. Another leadership meeting is scheduled this morning.

The council has taken recent moves to check up on Reardon's oversight in two key areas. One is the department that handles the county's computer and printing needs. Another is how Reardon reviews worker complaints of harassment and discrimination.

They also differ about the county budget.

In his speech, Reardon predicted that county leaders would have to adjust the council's $202.7 million 2010 general-fund budget. Unions have not agreed to the five unpaid days off in the council's budget. Reardon's budget included 15 furlough days for county workers.

Projections for the county's future are troubling, Gossett said.

The county's $14 million in reserves is enough to keep assets liquid and pay bills. A recent five-year forecast, however, shows that reserves could dwindle to nothing by 2015.

He cautioned that those numbers are only preliminary and could change.

Noah Haglund: 425-339-3465, nhaglund@heraldnet.com.

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