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Grafton supervisor, foes lay blame for legal battles, dysfunction

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Primary challenger Marty Waitzman and independent candidate Jim Kearns also weren’t shy about the lack of leadership in the township. Both said they decided to run for supervisor because they were tired of endless legal costs and childish behavior between Moore and the trustees.

Waitzman, an attorney who has accounting experience, criticized Moore’s managerial skills when answering a question about the level of commitment needed to run a township.

Waitzman said that based on accounting reports he has seen, Moore could be spending less time trying to balance the township finances if she knew what she was doing.

“It’s a garbage in, garbage out concept,” he said. “If you put in bad information, then you are going to get bad information coming out, and it’s going to take twice as long to fix it. I don’t have that problem.”

All four supervisor candidates spent nearly 90 minutes answering questions about the Grafton dysfunction, township services and ideas for new programs.

Sun City resident and moderator Dave Rosenfeldt at one point had to remind the candidates to keep their answers concise.

He even entered the debate when he prevented Moore from answering a Sun City resident. The resident wanted clarification on what she called Moore’s “scare tactics” in trying to lower a board-approved property tax levy that the resident considered appropriate.

“If you want to attack any one of [the candidates] personally, get their number and call them up,” Rosenfeldt said. “We want to go forward in this township and not backward.”

Moore will face Fender and Waitzman in the Feb. 26 Republican primary. The winner will face Kearns in the April 9 election.

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