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This blog is published as an offering of topics that may be of interest to Ridgefield residents in the hope that it will spark some dialog about important issues that face us as a community.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Please sign my petition to get on the ballot as an un-affiliated candidate for Board of Selectmen.

This is a real exercise in grass roots democracy and I love it. I'm running as an un-affiliated candidate for Board of Selectmen by choice and, as such, I must petition to get on the ballot in Nov.

The CT Secy of State, Dept. of Elections sets the number of signatures I must gather to qualify for a position on the ballot. Those signatures must then be authenticated by the Ridgefield Town Clerk.

If I am successful in gathering the required number of signatures, I can then campaign as a candidate for the Board of Selectmen. My name will appear in 4th place, last on the ballot. 

Many people have told me that they are tired of politics-as-usual.

In response, I say the only way things have a chance of changing is if there are different people serving on the boards and I mean all of them; that is assuming you don't like the way things are being handled now.


It's up to you voters. Candidates like me (or anyone else) can only do so much. Then it's up to you. You have to sign petitions and vote. It's called democracy.


I'm told this may be an uphill battle to win a seat on the Board as an un-affiliated candidate but I am extremely excited and positive about the entire process and look forward to meeting all of you. 

Fri, July 29th 2:30-4:30 @ Farmer's Market (Garden of Ideas)
Sat, July 30th 10:00-12:00 @ Stop 'n Shop
Sat, July 30th 1:00-3:00 @ Town Hall, Main St.

Thanks.


Website: http://myridgefield.blogspot.com

Facebook: http://goo.gl/RhiIE

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Schlumberger - Another IBM fiasco? > Letter to the Editor Ridgefield Press 2011/07/21

Written by Jan Rifkinson

What's happening with the Schlumberger property?
 
It's hard to know because all relevant discussions are carried out in secret, Board of Selectmen executive sessions.

There are no minutes or recordings of these sessions. What decisions emerge, and come before the electorate, will be fait accompli.


In my opinion strategic thinking is not necessarily the hallmark of this board so will those decisions be in our best interests?


The Schlumberger situation should be important to all of us but it isn't getting any public traction.


Here's what we do know. There is a vacant corporate park, including a vacant Philip Johnson building sitting on 45 acres in the midst of Ridgefield.


Schlumberger has notified Ridgefield of it's intention to demolish the buildings and, when land values rise, they  will sell the 45 acres to.... whom.... for what? Only five people know the answers.


How will what the BoS decides about this 45 acres impact us 10-20 years from now? Or are we taking a short view?


Do we want another Casagmo? How about another Fox Hill?

Would we be willing to give Schlumberger a $214,166.80 (what they pay now) tax exemption to help preserve the space for Ridgefield going forward while we try to work out a sensible plan?

How about turning town hall into a privately owned boutique hotel & moving the entire administration to the Johnson building? How about selling the Venus building? Maybe we could save millions by moving the Police station into that complex. Or would we prefer to have 45 acres of open space with another museum?


These are all questions that I can't answer but I do think the public should be part of the discussion.


We are now living with the results of the IBM fiasco. I don't want to be part of another one. How about you?

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Rifkinson will run, seeks signatures > Ridgefield Press July 20,2011


Rifkinson will run, seeks signatures


Jan Rifkinson
Jan Rifkinson is in. He’s decided to run for a seat on the Board of Selectmen.

“I have indeed decided to make this run as an unaffiliated candidate,” said Mr. Rifkinson, a frequent critic of town government who has been seeking feedback for a couple of weeks on the idea of running for a board seat — and announced his interest in the idea in last week’s Press.

“I’m filing my papers today,” he said Tuesday. “That’s without any guarantees from anybody for anything. I have no assurance of any kind from any of the parties that they will endorse me, or cross endorse me, or side endorse me...
“I’m just going out on my own,” he said. “It’s just me.” 
Because he plans to run unaffiliated, Mr. Rifkinson has some work to do to get on the ballot.
“First thing is you get an application for a nominating petition — not part of a party — and then I get this filled out, with the help of the town clerk,” he said. “And then it gets sent off to Hartford, to the elections office.”
The state elections office then computes the number of valid signatures of registered Ridgefield voters — of any party affiliation — he’ll need to sign a petition in support of his being placed on the ballot.
“They send me a letter of acknowledgment that they’ve received my petition, and then they tell me how many names I’ll need on a petition to become a candidate.”
The number of valid signatures needed is one percent of the number of votes cast for the office of selectmen in the previous general election.
In the winter, when Maureen Kozlark petitioned to get on the special election ballot as an unaffiliated candidate after losing the Republican caucus to Marty Heiser, she needed 59 signatures — 1% of the 5,844 votes cast for selectmen in the 2007 election.
Whatever the number, Mr. Rifkinson was optimistic — 1% is [sic] a low threshold.
“It couldn’t be more than 150, because there’s only 15,000 registered voters in town,” he said.
“The entire process has to completed by Aug. 10. It all has to be in to and confirmed by the Town Clerk by Aug. 10. So, I don’t have a whole lot of time.
“I have to have an official form, and then I guess I’ll go stand somewhere and, hopefully, people will sign it,” he said.
People don’t have to plan on voting for him to sign the petition to get him on the ballot.
“I hope people will sign it just on general principle, whether they’ll support me or not. It’s an exercise in democracy,” he said.
Mr. Rifkinson said, “I continue to get comments both privately and publicly that I should run. And it seems to be from a wide swath of the community,” he said.
He has no qualms about doing it the hard way.
“I suppose the conventional thinking is that if I were to run from a party platform I would stand a better chance, and that’s probably true. But I’m just not comfortable doing it,” he said.
“I don’t want anybody calling me or saying to me ‘Don’t support that’ or ‘Do support that’ or ‘If you don’t support that, I’m not going to support you.
“People have written to me,” he added. “They say they’re tired of politics as usual.”
He may not have a party, but he does plan to make his voice heard.
“Oh, yeah, I’m going to run a campaign,” he said. “Certainly I have to sit down with people who know what they’re doing along those lines, because I’ve never been through one of these before.
“I guess, try to find a campaign manager, try to raise some cash, get my face out there, talk to people so they get to know me — and keep my fingers crossed.”
While he’s not going to run on any party’s platform, he said, he wouldn’t mind if the Independent Party, or even one of the major parties, decided to support him.
“Anybody can endorse me, that’s up to them. I’d accept anybody’s endorsement,” he said.
“All three of them can endorse me, as far as I’m concerned.
Mr. Rifkinson said he wasn’t ready to detail the topics he’d be campaigning on, but he had sense of what he wanted to talk about.
“I have a lot of thoughts about that,” he said. “I suppose open government, more transparency, more, more public meetings, more cooperation between the boards...
“I’m hoping people can come around to dealing with issues from a common sense and common good point of view, instead of a political point of view,” he said.
“It should be interesting."

Monday, July 18, 2011

Rifkinson May Run > Ridgefield Press July 16, 2011


Rifkinson may run

Jan Rifkinson
Jan Rifkinson
Time to stop throwing tomatoes and take a turn in the stocks?

Outspoken town government critic Jan Rifkinson is considering a run this fall as an unaffiliated candidate for a seat on the Board of Selectmen.

“I’m still sort of betwixt and between, but I’m really seriously thinking about it,” Mr. Rifkinson said in an interview Tuesday.  “I’m considering running unaffiliated, just plain unaffiliated,” he said.

Mr. Rifkinson, a retired television news producer, said he wasn’t interested in running as a candidate of either the Republican Party or the Democratic Party.
He was skeptical but hadn’t closed the door on a nomination by Ridgefield’s Independent Party.
In writings on his blog Mr. Rifkinson traces his unease with party affiliations to his career in the news business, where reporters, editors and producers were eager to guard their independence of thought.
Mr. Rifkinson attends most selectmen’s and some meetings of other town agencies. He speaks out for taxpayers, and is skeptical of school spending. Two years ago he rose repeatedly to speak at the annual town meeting, on a mission to make First Selectman Rudy Marconi explain the use of and need for every pick-up and dump truck in the budget.
In his blog and on various online venues he contributes to, such as The Ridgefield Forum on The Press’s Web site, Mr. Rifkinson has been asking people what they think of him seeking office.
“I’ve just been talking to people, just individually,” he said, “...to get a sense of what they think, not so much to get a sense of my running as an unaffiliated, but my running at all, in terms of my usefulness.”
It’s something he wonders about.
“The question I’m trying to evolve for myself is whether I can do more good as part of a loyal opposition, or whether or not I can be of any use were I elected to the board,” he said.
In December, when the selectmen were appointing someone to the vacancy left by Joan Plock’s resignation from the board, Mr. Rifkinson joined Republicans Marty Heiser and Maureen Kozlark in interviewing for the seat.
“I thought I was treated pretty shabbily, not because they didn’t select me, just the way they went about business,” he said.
Mr. Rifkinson sat out the subsequent Heiser-Kozlark special election.
Many people who’ve read his blogs and periodic opinion pieces in The Press have suggested he run, Mr. Rifkinson said.
He believes the public has an appetite for candidates outside the two-party politics-as-usual mainstream, and says an unaffiliated candidacy shouldn’t be dismissed as a hopeless long shot.
“I’m just not interested in wasting my time,” he said. “If I run it’s not an exercise in freedom of speech, or to make a point, it’s to win.”

Monday, July 11, 2011

Why is Jan Rifkinson thinking of running as an un-affiliated candidate for Selectman rather than as a R,D or I?

The simple answer is because I want to get away from the kind of dialog that is taking place on the Ridgefield Forum.  It's the kind of political discourse that I believe obfuscates, dilutes, detracts & confuses the issues before Ridgefield.

What we need in this town are some new ideas -- from anyone -- regardless of party affiliation. It's like adding a new ingredient to a recipe; it can change the taste but not the dish.

I think party affiliation has come to mean monolithic thinking, i.e. a Republican is conservative, a Democrat is liberal, an Independent is.... ??? When one is un-affiliated, there are no expectations except, hopefully, common sense.

I don't think political parties are intrinsically a bad thing. I'm just not comfortable with the current political climate as represented by these organizations. I also think they are useful for individuals who are interested in political advancement. I'm not interested in that. In fact, if I run for Selectman, and if I won a seat, I doubt I would run for a second term. I think new blood is good.

Also in the equation is my life experience. Most of my adult working life was spent within news organizations. In those days, publicizing political affiliations was absolutely verboten. Many of us never belonged to political parties; some even stopped voting so we couldn't be identified with one side or another.

Did you know what political party Walter Cronkite, Peter Jennings, Mike Wallace or others belonged to when they were broadcasting? I doubt it. Well, I grew up in that world so it is more natural for me to belong to no political party than to belong to one.

And finally, about splitting the vote, you have to understand that the only consequence of my possible run as an un-affiliated candidate that I considered was, not how it might affect an existing political party's chance of winning a seat, but how I would feel about myself & my ability to represent everyone to the best of my ability. 

Saturday, July 9, 2011

For my Ridgefield Friends & Neighbors


I'm thinking about running for a Selectman seat in the upcoming Ridgefield election as an un-affiliated candidate, i.e. not aligned with any political party. What do you think? I need candid reaction(s) -- from you & your circle of friends. Do you think it would be good for Ridgefield.... or not?  

You can comment here or on Facebook or privately. 

I sincerely thank you for your input, be it positive or negative.

-- 
Jan Rifkinson

169 New Rd. 
PO Box 1197
Ridgefield, CT 06877

HTel: 203-431-1691 
Email: janrif@gmail.com
Blog: http://www.myridgefield.blogspot.com