|
|
|
Uploaded: Monday, November 5, 2012, 8:53 AM
Atherton: Lewis biggest spender in council race
|
By Barbara Wood
Special to the Almanac
Atherton City Council candidate Elizabeth Lewis had spent at least twice as much as each of her three opponents had by Oct. 20, the end of the latest state-mandated campaign-spending reporting period, with expenditures to that date totaling $16,526.
Ms. Lewis, the only incumbent in the race for two open seats, and Cary Wiest also each had $3,884 spent on their behalf by the Atherton Police Officers Association Political Action Committee.
Spending totals for the other candidates' campaigns through Oct. 20 are: Cary Wiest, $7,423.45; Greg Conlon, $6,089.23; and Denise Kupperman, $2,958.47. The police officers' PAC spent its contributions for Ms. Lewis and Mr. Wiest on mailers, advertising and automated calls, according to the campaign-spending report it submitted.
Ms. Lewis' campaign spending was just slightly less than her to-date contributions of $16,571. Her major contributors during the reporting period of Oct. 1 to 20 include the following $500 donors: Florence Goldby, an investment banker at Venrock; Tod Spieker of Spieker Co. real estate; Charles T. Munger Jr., a self-employed physicist from Palo Alto; Jeffrey Wise, a developer with Wise Building Co.; and the Lincoln Club of Northern California in Sacramento. All but the Lincoln Club and Mr. Munger are from Atherton.
Payments made by the Lewis campaign included: $6,408 to Craftsmen Printing of San Jose, for campaign materials; $1,080 to the Daily Post for print advertising; $1,415 to the Almanac for print advertising; $1,540 to the US Post office for postage; and $716 to Wilmes Company, Inc of San Francisco for lawn signs.
Mr. Wiest's major contributors during the same reporting period included $1,000 contributors Peter Grassi, an investment manager with Grassi Investment Management LLC, and John Worthing, a partner in Worthing Capital. He also had $500 contributions from E. James Hannay, president of Rector Porsche Audi, and from Steven & Florence Goldby, a venture capitalist with Venrock. All are from Atherton.
Donations during the first three weeks of October to Mr. Wiest totaled $3,646; with earlier contributions and loans of $3,877, the Wiest campaign had raised $11,117 by Oct. 20.
A total of $1,645.35 was spent during the reporting period for signs, printing cards/handouts, and newspaper advertisements by Mr. Wiest.
Greg Conlon's campaign had raised $7,912.93 through Oct. 20, including $3,712.93 in loans.
Major contributions during the reporting period included $1,000 from David G. Arscott of Compass Technology Partners, from Atherton. Also, Mr. Conlon received $500 contributions from Boyd C. Smith, an investor with WSJ properties from Palo Alto; the Lincoln Club of Northern California PAC, Sacramento; Charles T. Munger Jr. of Palo Alto, a physicist; and Dennis O'Brien, Foster City, a homebuilder with the O'Brien Group.
Mr. Conlon also has loaned his campaign a total of $3,712.93.
His campaign has spent $959.10 at Degnan Printers of Redwood City on campaign paraphernalia; $3,720.57 at Spaulding Printers, Inc., Santa Rosa for literature and mailings; and $290 at Homeytel of San Diego, a phone bank.
Denise Kupperman's campaign had raised $3,750 during the first three weeks of October, for a total of $6,500, including $250 in loans. Major donors during the reporting period included $1,000 donor Paul Wythes, founder of Sutter Hill Ventures; and $500 contributors Marion Oster, homemaker, Daryl Lillie, retired, and Marylue Timpson, president of Timpson Enterprises. All are from Atherton.
Much of the money owed by the Kupperman campaign appears to be owed to her husband, Roger Schwab of Atherton. Those expenses, which had not been paid by Oct. 20, include $1,130.38 for postage, delivery and messenger services; $394.52 for a fundraising event and beverages; $140.05 for campaign paraphernalia and miscellaneous; and $198.24 for office expenses. The campaign also reported it had spent $857 for advertising in the Almanac.
Are you receiving Express, our free daily e-mail edition? See a sample and sign-up for Express.
|
|
| Comments
|
Posted by Anne McNertney, a resident of the Atherton: other neighborhood, on Nov 5, 2012 at 10:54 am Dear Ms. Wood,
Your second paragraph in this article makes it sound like Lewis & Wiest had the APOA do their bidding when they merely answered a questionaire! Ms. Lewis has posted her responses to the questionaire for all to see & stated that she did not pay them for an endorsement. I don't know how you can be more transparent than that. This is exactly the kind of biased reporting I mentioned earlier. Again I agree with mark Twain.
|
|
Posted by Cops buying election, a resident of the Atherton: other neighborhood, on Nov 5, 2012 at 11:03 am Talk about union influence. The Atherton cops are determined to buy this election through their bidders/candidates Elizabeth Lewis and Cary Wiest. A major negotiation is coming up, and the union (the Teamsters) is determined to buy the result they are looking for: the trifecta of Wiest, Carlson and Lewis not subjecting the Atherton cops to the same salary, benefit and pension reductions that every other cop in California and the United States has had to endure during the Great Recession.
The Almanac's reporting is highly biased in favor of Lewis, Wiest, and the APOA. In the Almanac's defense, I know members of these blogs have threatened to pull advertising on these blogs, and if I were the Almanac, I'd be scared too.
|
|
Posted by Campaign Finances, a resident of the Atherton: other neighborhood, on Nov 5, 2012 at 11:20 am Question: Were the Yard Signs and mailings of Denise Kupperman reported?
The APOA's issue is Outsourcing. Immediately after Widmer was elected in 2010, Mayor McKeithen had outsourcing on the Council Agenda. In 2011, the Building and Public Works Deptartments were outsourced.
Widmer has said he wants to Sunset the Parcel Tax, but has not said not he wants to make up the $1.8M in revenue.
Only way is to outsource the police. So the police are letting the residents know of this plan.
Sine Widmer is thinking higher office, he can say he cut taxes without reducing public safety.
|
|
Posted by Cops buying election, a resident of the Atherton: other neighborhood, on Nov 5, 2012 at 12:01 pm "The APOA's issue is Outsourcing"
If you read the APOA's own website, you'll find they also have salaries, benefits and pensions on their mind. They are declaring that if Atherton doesn't pay high wages to cops, cops will leave and that will cost the town money (I disagree, but that's what they are saying).
You are lying by saying the APOA's issue is (only) outsourcing, to try to make the union purchase of Wiest and Lewis seem more politically acceptable to Atherton residents who don't want outsourcing, The truth is, the APOA is all about getting their members the most money, as all unions are.
The police union has bought Cary Wiest and Elizabeth Lewis. They own them.
|
|
|
| |
|