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Uploaded: Thursday, November 8, 2012, 8:03 AM
Mueller, Carlton elected to Menlo Park council
Hotel tax increase passes easily
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by Sandy Brundage
Almanac Staff
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| The streets of downtown Menlo Park were nearly empty late Tuesday afternoon -- perhaps people were still waiting in line to vote; some residents reported what seemed like record turnout at the polls.
A lone woman on a corner of Alameda de las Pulgas waved a sign for Romney 2012/Catherine Carlton/Yes on Prop 32. She got to celebrate only one of those outcomes.
Ray Mueller and Carlton will join the Menlo Park City Council next year, unless there's a shocking twist as the final vote counts trickle in. With 4,126 and 3,996 votes respectively, the newcomers shut out incumbent Kelly Fergusson, who had 3,748 votes by the end of last night, according to the county.
"I'm excited but cautiously optimistic," Mueller said earlier in the evening as he headed for an election night party at Trellis. "If things stay the way they're trending, I'm really excited."
Asked about the high point and low point of campaigning, Mueller said he'd reached both in the space of 24 hours, when he received an email from someone who had voted for him, but told him she regretted it after hearing about some of his comments on issues facing the city.
He said that left him feeling sad. "There's one thing, when you're campaigning you start to realize that the issues facing the city can be so complex, that people really want to reduce them down to sound bites and they're not."
After sending an email in response and then talking to the voter this morning, Mueller said the two found accord. "That was the high point, because it confirmed for me that I'll have the patience to listen to people and work through the issues."
He praised the campaign for staying civil. Unlike past elections, no hit pieces turned up in the mail and if there were shenanigans, most did not reach the ears of the Almanac.
Also celebrating at Trellis was Carlton. "Well, I think it's too early to tell... I feel like I can't get too excited yet. Like they say, it's not over until the fat lady sings."
She too enjoyed her time campaigning. "It's very exciting to me to talk to someone about ideas and have that person get so excited that they start donating their time to help out, knocking on doors and walking." Carlton said she also appreciated what she learned about the city, which presented an orientation for candidates that introduced the role of each department, an experience she'd like to bring to all residents of Menlo Park.
Fergusson, who was seeking a third term on the council, said she had called the winners on Wednesday morning to congratulate them.
"I really appreciate their vision for future of Menlo Park," she said. "I feel like I'm leaving the city in very good hands, and I've had 10 great years of community service and have really enjoyed working with the public."
When asked whether she would manage the campaign differently in retrospect, Fergusson said she has no regrets. "I have a full-time job. I ran the campaign on my evenings and weekends -- I wish I could have knocked on 200 more doors."
Belle Haven resident and Housing Commissioner Carolyn Clarke was in fourth with 2,406 votes, leaving firefighter Dave Bragg in fifth place with 2,036.
Clarke took a break from pizza at High 5 Star in Belle Haven to share her perspective from the campaign trail. "I was in training, right?" she said with a laugh. "My biggest lesson is if you fail to plan, you plan to fail."
Look for her to return to the ballot, this time starting to plan a campaign 12 months ahead and making sure to line up enough donations to get the word out about her candidacy. Still, she said, it was a "first step towards unifying Menlo Park. But the work is just beginning."
The fate of Measure K, the city's proposal to raise the hotel tax from 10 to 12 percent, was easier to call than the council race -- the yes votes remained about 73.63 percent of the total from start to finish.
Those tallies include mail ballots and early votes.Are you receiving Express, our free daily e-mail edition? See a sample and sign-up for Express.
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| Comments
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Posted by Anne, a resident of Atherton, on Nov 8, 2012 at 1:34 pm I thought Kelly lost votes because of the flap over the Brown Act when she wanted to be Mayor in 2010.
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