One of the main goals of my campaign for Campbell County Judge-Executive is looking for ways to make government more efficient in order to save money and avoid tax increases. Often, this can be achieved by combining services. However there are also examples of how our county’s current leadership has allowed the combining of government services without little oversight, which has led to massive fee increases. The chief example of this has been Sanitation District 1. SD1 should be providing savings since they took over most of Northern Kentucky’s sewer drainage, yet their fees have climbed exponentially in recent years.
In fact, SD1 rates climbed 15 percent in 2008, 20 percent in 2009, and are due to rise 15 percent this year and another 15 percent in 2011. The problem here is that the Board of Directors at SD1 aren’t elected, yet they can raise our sewer fees anytime they please. So where is the accountability to the citizen?
In an article in The Kentucky Enquirer on February 22nd, an attorney for Sanitation District 1 was quoted as saying “Our budgets are approved annually by the judges-executive (of the three counties).” In fact, the judges-executive make the appointments to the Board of Directors too.
It is deeply troubling to me that our current judge-executive could have been a part of the solution to protect us against these massive fee increases, but was instead was part of the problem. The problem is so unchecked that SD1 is even charging fees to Campbell County residents who don’t have SD1 sewer access in rural parts of the county.
Some have suggested that SD1 should be placed under the authority of the Kentucky Public Service Commission to approve proposed rate increases. However I believe we don’t need another group of Frankfort bureaucrats telling Northern Kentucky what to do. After all, I want to limit more government by having due diligence at the local level. The key to solving this problem is having a Judge-Executive whose board appointees won’t tax us every chance they get.
It’s not just SD1 either. The Transit Authority of Northern Kentucky (TANK), the Northern Kentucky Water District, and others all need board appointments from a Judge-Executive willing to void the status quo and do the right thing.
The consolidation of government services shouldn’t happen in order to create a bigger government bureaucracy that can raise taxes higher than ever before on unsuspecting homeowners. I believe that it should happen to make government more accountable to the citizens they serve and to provide the service at a lower cost.
If I am elected Campbell County Judge-Executive, I would make board appointments to SD1, TANK, and others who would value the public opinion against these fee increases. Unlike my opponent, I would welcome more oversight on these quasi-governmental agencies. Finally, I would look to all areas of county government for ways to combine government services that serve your needs over county government’s needs.
Kevin Sell
Republican Candidate
Campbell County Judge-Executive 2010
(859) 743-6363
kevins@one.net
This article was sent to the Recorder and the Enquirer on March 5, 2010.

