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Reporter's Notebook: Scenes from Tuesday's Mental Health Board vote

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Someone at yesterday's McHenry County Board meeting publicly said the word I've heard said privately for weeks when the Mental Health Board has been brought up – audit.

As I wrote in today's paper, the subject of auditing the Mental Health Board came up after Tuesday morning's County Board vote that in essence denied reappointment to embattled Mental Health Board President Lee Ellis. The Mental Health Board is annually audited as part of the annual audit of county government, but proponents are now seeking an independent outside look at the board's finances.

While I touched in print on the main points from yesterday's debate, which ended a six-week drama resulting in Ellis' ouster, there were other issues that I could not fit into my story.

• KOEHLER'S GRIEVANCES:
Ken Koehler, R-Crystal Lake, had a total of four problems with the Mental Health Board nominees recommended by the Public Health and Human Services Committee. I fit the two main ones in my story:

1) The committee was not transparent when it came to narrowing down the 12 candidates.

2) Nominee Robert Routzahn has too much on his plate already.

The other two issues were:

3) Committee member John Hammerand got to vote on this despite being out of town for all 12 candidate interviews.

4) Ellis got enough votes during the whittling down process to have advanced farther than he did.

Hammerand, R-Wonder Lake, had been out of state Feb. 13 and 15 when the committee interviewed the candidates and made its first vote. But he got to vote last Wednesday when the committee was forced to do a revote out of concerns that Koehler had – and respected by new Chairwoman Tina Hill – with Open Meetings Act compliance (read more about that issue here).

Hammerand responded to Koehler's issue the same way he did before the committee last Wednesday – he had listened to all nine hours of candidate interviews and was more than confident in his ability to make an informed decision.

• EXAMINING THE TALLY: Koehler examined the sheets that the committee used to narrow down the 12 candidates, and said Ellis should not have been eliminated. Ellis made the first round, but not the second (my story on the vote can be found here).

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About the Author

Kevin Craver

Senior reporter

Northwest Herald

Crystal Lake, IL

kcraver@shawmedia.com

Kevin has worked at the Northwest Herald since 2000. The Illinois Associated Press awarded his blog this year as the best news blog in the state for medium-sized newspapers. He has won more than 70 state and national journalism awards.

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