From Ballotpedia - Reading time: 6 min
| Carefree Mayor recall |
|---|
| Officeholders |
| Recall status |
| Recall election date |
| March 9, 2010 |
| See also |
| Recall overview Political recall efforts, 2010 Recalls in Arizona Arizona recall laws Mayoral recalls Recall reports |
An effort to recall David Schwan from his position as mayor of Carefree, Arizona was defeated in a vote held on March 9, 2010. Schwan was appointed to the position of mayor by fellow members of the town council in a 4-3 vote in 2009.[1]
The recall effort was led by a group called the "Recall David Schwan Political Action Committee."
Reasons given by recall supporters for their actions included an alleged "downward spin" of the town. According to committee Chairman Rod de Szendeffy, it was not acceptable for residents to wait until the next regularly-scheduled election to change direction. According to the mayor, he was the target of the recall because residents were “upset with everything about the town."[3]
Rod de Szendeffy launched the recall effort with the help of hired political consultant Ryan Ducharme.[4]
In 2007, a town zoning board said that de Szendeffy's detached garage violated Carefree's height requirements. He appealed the decision to Carefree's Board of Adjustments, and lost. Recall target Schwan was on the board, and voted against de Szendeffy's appeal.[4]
John Traynor, a retired insurance agent, ran for the seat that would have become vacant if Schwan had been recalled.[5]
Current Carefree city council members Doug Stavoe, Peter Koteas and Bob Coady endorsed Traynor's candidacy. They were each elected to Carefree's 7-member city council in 2009. If Schwan had been recalled, and Traynor elected, local pundits said that this would have given Stavoe, Koteas, Coady and Traynor a 4-vote majority bloc on the council.[5]
Traynor said that Carefree's "...financial picture is not good. The bottom line is, when you are spending consistently more money than you are bringing in, you are not being fiscally responsible." Traynor implied that he is an advocate of increasing the city's sales tax, saying that the current sales tax in the city is below what other cities charge.
The recall effort met with opposition.
Maricopa County Recorder Helen Purcell certified 380 valid signatures on the recall petition, thus solidifying the recall election for March 9, 2009. Treasurer of the Recall David Schwan committee Ryan Ducharme turned in double the amount of signatures required and, according to reports, turned them in with an invalidation rate of 6 percent.[7]
Town Clerk Betsy Wise validated 396 signatures on the recall petition. 203 signatures were required to force the recall vote.[8]
700 people signed a petition in support of the mayor as a symbolic gesture.[9][10]
| |||||||||||||