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Image of Lakemoor rises as election issue

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LAKEMOOR – Cleaning up Lily Lake will bring economic development to Lakemoor, the challenger to the incumbent village president said.

Tina Asmus, a 12-year resident of Lakemoor, is challenging President Todd Weihofen in the April election.

“They’re going to drive down [Route] 120 and see this beautiful lake,” Asmus said. “It’s something I’m so passionate about. ... But now, it’s become a weedy mud puddle.”

It’s not the first time Asmus has taken on the village.

She successfully challenged the village’s public nuisance ordinance in court after she was fined $25 for using two toilets and a sink as flower planters.

That’s not the reason she’s running, though, she said.

“I’m a member of the community who has paid a lot of attention, and I’m concerned with what I see,” Asmus said. “I have some really great ideas, and I think I can make them happen.”

A former preschool worker and live-in nanny, Asmus became a stay-at-home mother to take care of her son, Cody, now 11, who has Asperger’s syndrome and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. She and her husband, Jeff, have two other children, Zach, 17, and Lillianna, 8.

Asmus was one of about 100 residents who received warnings not long after Weihofen took office as part of what he calls his “Broken Windows Campaign,” which takes after a theory that targeting smaller nuisances will prevent more serious crimes.

Cracking down on the enforcement of ordinances after the firing of Lakemoor’s police chief also was part of Weihofen’s effort to professionalize the police department. The village has gone through three police chiefs since then.

The changes are working, Weihofen said.

“We’re trying to rebuild the image of our town,” he said. “If we’re going to be somewhere developers want to be, it’s got to be cleaned up. It needs to be kept to a standard.”

Asmus called Weihofen’s methods “a bully campaign.” She said she’d like to start community health groups and other volunteer groups to help older or disabled residents who can’t clean up their properties on their own. “Instead of going out and ticketing these people, you go out and offer them help,” she said.

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