Letter to the editor: Writer’s allegations require clarification
In response to Tom Spencer’s letter to the editor on Oct. 12, 2012: First, I served as a member of the Woodbury City Council from 1995-2000.
In response to Tom Spencer’s letter to the editor on Oct. 12, 2012: First, I served as a member of the Woodbury City Council from 1995-2000. State Farm closed its Woodbury campus in 2004, four years after I retired from the Woodbury City Council position. No formal proposal to redevelop the State Farm property has come before the Woodbury Planning Commission since I have been chairperson.
Spencer’s letter to the editor stated: “Sadly, the most devastating economic loss for Washington County over the past seven years was the closure of State Farm’s Woodbury operations and the 1,500 jobs that went with it. During that same period, Ms. Remakle, while serving as a member of the Woodbury City Council and the Woodbury Planning Commission, has failed to advance even one idea that would result in the development of the still-shackled State Farm complex.”
Second, in response to the Mr. Spencer’s statement “she would raise county taxes to develop public transit along the I-94 corridor and to improve the county library system.” I have never stated that I would raise taxes to develop public transit along the I-94 corridor.
Third, I did say I would support raising taxes to keep the libraries open for one year until a more practical solution was found. The citizens of Washington County have paid for a multimillion dollar library system that has been closed for two full days per week for an entire year. This is approximately a 25 percent reduction in the use of and access to our library facilities.
We must get more out of our tax dollars, and we must develop and implement strategic planning to accomplish our goals.
Nancy Remakel – Woodbury
Tags: letters to the editor, opinion, elections, updates
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