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Meet the Candidates

Michael D. McIntosh, county board candidate,
District 6         
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My wife, Penny, and I have been married for over 20 years. We have lived in Lincoln for almost 15 years with our three children, Ashley, Reid and Kenton. Penny is a registered nurse with Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital. She works in the Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation Unit. Our daughter, Ashley, is a student at ISU in Bloomington. Our older son, Reid, is a freshman at Lincoln High School. Our youngest, Kenton, is a seventh-grader at Lincoln Junior High. Our family also consists of two Siamese cats and two very spoiled basset hounds. My family and I are all members of local Christian churches. My sons, Penny and I are members of Jefferson Street Christian Church. My daughter is a member of Lincoln Christian Church.

Shortly after graduating from high school I joined the Marine Corps. I was honorably discharged from the Marines after severing for four years. I attended college on the GI Bill, earning a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Olivet Nazarene University in Kankakee. I applied to be a trooper with the Illinois State Police approximately two years after graduating from college. Upon acceptance I attended the State Police Academy. Once commissioned as a trooper, I was assigned to the toll road in the Chicago area. I worked on the toll road as a road trooper for the next two years.

In the late '80s, I decided to go back to college. I took a leave of absence from the state police to attend law school at Northern Illinois University, College of Law. During my sabbatical from the state police, I was transferred to the Illinois State Police District 7 office in Rock Island County. I graduated from law school in 2 1/2 years and returned to the state police. After returning to work I served in District 7 as a road trooper until the results of the bar exam were posted. Upon passing the bar exam and being sworn as a licensed attorney, I was reassigned to the state police legal office in Springfield.

I have worked in the state police's legal office for more than 10 years. While in the legal office, I completed a graduate law degree at The John Marshall Law School. The actual degree is an LL.M. in information technology. I left the legal office as the deputy chief legal counsel and transferred to the department's Medicaid Fraud Control Bureau, where I commanded a unit of investigators and support staff for more than 3 1/2 years. This bureau's cases are generally white-collar crimes and cases involving criminal abuse of residents in long-term care facilities. I supervised approximately 40 personnel, most of whom were investigators. Approximately eight months ago, I was transferred back to headquarters to work as an attorney.

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The following are some of the reasons I'm seeking a position on the county board. I have been concerned about the manner in which the animal shelter has been handling their responsibilities. The shelter's hours are not amenable to working families being able to go there to adopt the pets. It is only open a few hours during weekdays, which are the same hours that most people work. The shelter has not been keeping these animals alive long enough to have a reasonable chance at being adopted. My concerns prompted me to attend a meeting at Einstein's a couple months ago regarding the animal control issue. Pat O'Neill was there. Someone at the meeting told the crowd something like, if you disagree with how things are going run, for a seat yourself, and went on to indicate that there was still time to get the petitions completed to put a candidate's name on the ballot. The next day I picked up petitions.

The recent letter to the editor in The Courier by Dr. Hepler demonstrates the problem. He found a dog and turned it into the shelter. When he called back the next day to check on the dog, it had already been put down. According to Dr. Hepler the dog was fine when he dropped it off at the shelter. I know others have disputed the health of the dog, but they are the ones who killed it and have a vested interest in saying the dog was sick. Now there is no way of knowing whether the dog was sick or not, because it is dead.

Animal control is not the only issue. It seems to me, the Logan County Board promised to do a great deal for Sysco Corporation to entice them to move to Logan County. As an outside observer, it appears that what the public was led to believe regarding the number of jobs to be created in Logan County and the salary level of those jobs was different from what we are being told about those jobs now. Now we are trying to entice another business to locate an ethanol plant in Logan County. At some level, the feasibility of this proposed ethanol plant being located in Logan County depends on an adequate road being constructed between the interstate and the plant site. However, the county board has obligated a great deal of the money to the Sysco deal, to the point of running a deficit budget, and there appears to be no money for building this needed road.

I believe in family values, fiscal responsibility and honesty. I believe that it is extremely important for people in the government to be honest with the people they serve. I think governmental transparency is one of the best means of guaranteeing honesty and integrity on the part of government officials.

I believe I am well-qualified to be on the county board. I am a dedicated public servant. I have served my country as a Marine and my state as a police officer. I am a licensed attorney with a great deal of experience in applying the law to public policy and government. When the Illinois State Police transferred me to Springfield almost 15 years ago, my family and I chose to live in Logan County. We do not regret the decision to live here in any way.

[Michael D. McIntosh]

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