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Candidate Profile: Richard Batchelder

Richard Batchelder is running for position of Clerk on the Shelby Township Board of Trustees. Get to know him a little better before casting your vote.

 

Richard Batchelder, 59, is a life-long resident of Shelby Township. He has never held public office and is retired. "However, I have devoted my life to public service, and feel it is time to give back to my community by serving as Shelby Township Clerk," he said. He volunteers at Marquette Elementary. He enjoys walking his dog, Roo, in River Bends Park, building things, road trips, public radio and TV, and movies. Batchelder and wife, Elaine, belong to Bethesda Christian Church in Sterling Heights. 

1). What led you to try for the post of Clerk initially?

I love Shelby Township and I am not one who is quick to anger, but our current "board majority," which appointed our current Clerk, has its ownpolitical agenda that includes obvious ties to special interestgroups. I have watched this board majority make vicious attacks and threats against private citizens, long-time local businesses and dedicated public servants. Then after a sleepless night, I got up and said enough is enough we need to fix this. We need a Shelby Township Board that manages our tax dollars wisely and puts the wants of our citizens first over the the plans and financial goals of special interest. That same morning I felt the time was right for me to return to public service by running for the Clerk's position where I could work to right the so many wrongs the current board majority has created over the past four years.

2). What do you plan to change if elected?

I will work hard to restore the Clerk's office to a high standard of quality service. This standard will encompass a friendly service-centered atmosphere in which everyone is treated in a kind and respectful manner.  I will also work to return the voice of the people to township matters by simply listening to the voice of the people and by basing every decision on the question of "How will this decision be beneficial to the people?"  I will also restore integrity, respect, honor and professionalism back to the Shelby Township Board of Trustees by working hard to make honest and informed decisions.  Decisions that will always be representative of as well as protective of the people, their basic rights and their properties here in Shelby Township.

3). If elected, what township issues would you like to focus on?

Retaining the 41A District Court in Shelby Township for many reasons that include: added safety for Shelby residents, cost savings to our police budget, the local revenue the court with its 500 plus clients a day will generate for local businesses, and ease of access to our court system by keeping the court local. Responsible development- which means not deviating from the township's master plan and being considerate of neighbor's quality of life issues and property values when considering zoning changes. Working to maintain current services thus making Shelby a welcoming and desirable place to live.

4). What personal and professional accomplishments are you most proud of?

At a personal level by far my greatest accomplishment is the success of our children. I cannot take complete credit and have to give most of the credit for their success to Elaine, my wife of 39 years. Elaine is an outstanding mother, mentor, judge and sometimes, referee. Elaine and I worked very hard to instill qualities in our children such as honesty, a hard work ethic and respect for others. In short, both children are married, have college degrees, have very good jobs, both are homeowners and are living successful lives on their own. Other life accomplishments include: 25 years of service with the Shelby Township Fire Department where I served as a Firefighter/Medicand Director of EMS. I also served as the Fire Chief for the City of Riverview where I updated the department's operations and upgraded the department's EMS system to a paramedic system. I am a graduate of Madonna University, where I received a Bachelor of Science degree. I was also a member of Madonna's Sigma Zeta Honor Society. I am also pleased with my 17 years of volunteer service to the Shelby Township sidewalk committee where I worked with other members to build additional sidewalks, overpasses, bike and hiking trails, in an effort to make Shelby a safer, better and more walkable community.

5. Is there one person who has been the most influential in your life?

My father, Richard Sr. My father is quiet, strong, gentle and kind. My father, even at 84 years old, has a good mind that can still recall and recite clearly things he has learned even as far back as high school. My father is a devoted Christian who not only professes his strong beliefs but leads an exemplary Christian life. As an adult I now see my father not only as my father but as a friend, a mentor and, someone I can always go to for council.

6). What are key ways you would have residents make a difference locally?

I would encourage the residents to get out and vote in the August 7th Primary Election. Your vote is so powerful at the local level. One vote has the potential to make a huge difference. Also, contact your local board member as to your needs or concerns viaphone, email, mail or in person. They are your elected public servants and as a voter and resident you are their employer.

7. What do you like most about Shelby Township? Do you have a favorite spot? 

Shelby is a large community with many assets that provides residents many of the big city services such as: top services including outstanding police, fire/EMS services, parks and recreation, a library as well as outstanding school and educational services. Although Shelby is a large community it has not lost it's small town feel with many amenities such as many quiet tree lined neighborhoods, 1,000 acres plus of park land, the Clinton River watershed and 80 inland lakes and ponds. Do you have a favorite spot in Shelby? Yes, Riverbends Park.


Related Topics: August 2012 Primary Elections, Candidate Profile, Shelby Township Board of Trustees, Shelby Township Clerk, and candidate profiles

Dan Bartold

10:59 am on Friday, July 20, 2012

In reference to your statement: "work to right the so many wrongs the current board majority has created over the past four years", can you be more specific in what actions you will be working on? You did mention the retention of the District Court, but what else?

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Angela Freeman

11:15 am on Friday, July 20, 2012

Richard is truly a gentleman. He is respectful and kind. Shelby Twp would be proud to have him serve as their clerk.

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Jeffery Berz

1:44 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

Agreed Angela!
The people of Shelby will be proud to have a man like Richard Batchelder representing them. He is a true and honest gentleman.

Matt Guarnieri

11:54 am on Friday, July 20, 2012

The court will cost Shelby Taxpayers over 700,000.00 (dollars) a year to retain and the only people coming into town to visit it are people accused of crimes and if they get the probation dept. It will be worse. We will have more criminals, crime and less dollars to pay for police protection.
What about gthe public Employees defined pensions cost taxpayers millions a year, do you really think someone who already receives one of these pension will work for the taxpayers interest or for the interest of the public employees?.... Of course all the public employees support this candidate, they don't want a candidate that will really represent taxpayers. The current board, except Manzella and Wozniak have publicly committed to bringing the public pensions in line with private sector pensions..... let's keep board members committed to keep taxes low.

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Dan Bartold

1:12 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

I doubt the presence of the court has an impact on our crime rate. In addition, I doubt the court brings allot of business into the area. If there was an investment / return or economy impact study done, I'd like to see it. Without the facts, you just have opinions.

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John Lang

1:28 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

You must be referring to the woman who was planted to come up at the last meeting and ask each Board member, in turn, their position on the pensions. I remember the Supervisor reading his prepared response. I also remember him asking that no politiking take place during business from the floor. The first one up was a woman that wouldn't give her name (you didn't either I noticed) and teed up a softball question for the Board to campaign on during the Board meeting.

Matt Guarnieri

2:25 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

Actually, that woman came in alone and left alone. She was truely afraid, so I doubt a plant. Unlike the Nightingale's who didn't even show up for the actual board meeting but just to comment on TV. That really says a lot about where their interest is.
Most board members especially Lisa Manzella and Paul Viar carry huge rolling suitcases full of files and prepared statements by which they read from depending on the question. In fact Lisa Manzella went to her files off camera and pulled out a prepared statement each time she spoke. How did she know someone would ask about the DDA engineering bid..... maybe because she walked in with the guy who asked the question.

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Robert Martin

4:46 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

My wife and I watched that meeting. It was nothing but a staged performance by a couple of the speakers who came down to speak in favor of Mr. Stathakis and his group. Everyone who watched that meeting could see right through these scripted speeches. Do they think that the viewers are stupid? It was an insult as was the guy sitting in the front row flashing signs for the camera.

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John Lang

11:01 am on Saturday, July 21, 2012

The Board members are their own worst enemies. They couldn't have found people to make them look worse if the opposition had paid them. You're right, most people see right through it. Were it not so sad, the guy with the signs was almost laughable.

Matt Guarnieri

2:32 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

There have been studies... and recently revised that say 725,000.00 (dollars) a year is what it will cost from General funds plus the cost of the building to keep the court.
I say higher crime because I have a nephew who is hooked on drugs who tells me as soon as he leaves his probation meeting in Mt. Clemens he looks to get high and walks around the corner the the gas station to buy cigarettes and there are usually two of three people asking if he's "looking for something" near there. He says you can't walk two blocks in any direction without some asking if he's holding or looking to buy. I spend a lot of time in Mt. Clemens, not walking and have never been approached but he says dealers all know when drug probation meetings happen and know who to target. Needless to say, I don't want then targeting probationers near my home or in our parks.

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Pamela Adcox

2:57 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

Well I work at a nearby eatery from the court. I can assure you without the court our place would be closed down. The amount of money brought into our place when the court is open is much more than on the weekends when it is closed.

There won't be any special studies because it has already been made clear that the current board doesn't want the court in Shelby. Yet Macomb is jumping all over it. Sometimes common sense speaks louder than any study.

Keep the court.

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Dan Bartold

3:16 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

Sorry, but there is still a need for facts. You noted the business is not as good on the weekend. Isn't that true for any business that caters to the lunch crowd? Are most of your diners lawyers and clients? Not sure how you would know. Also, if the court is actually a liablity to the Township, I sorry, but that is unacceptable. If the court was to close, I would hope you could find a way to recover the lost revenue using that good old American "can do" spirit. Who knows, the court building may be converted to a usage that might actually increase your buisness.....

Matt Guarnieri

4:07 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

If the court cost (according to the latest study) 725,000.00 Shelby tax dollars plus the cost of a new building to stay in Shelby Twp. Wouldn't it just be cheaper for taxpayers to just pay the eatery a 50,000.00 taxpayer funded cash check per year and still get rid of the court? How much are the homeowners expected to sacrifice to keep a local business open?
The latest study is still short, it expects current court emplyees to retire and die off at age 75 and health insurance to stay at the same cost for the next 30 years. I think most people who retire in their 50's or earlier live well into the average age of their 80's and to think health insurance will not rise above the current average of near 1700.00 is just rediculously optomistic when the average cost of health insurance has doubled in 6 years.... suppose it doubles every 6 years for the next 30 years instead of staying level as studies use in the projections.
725,000.00 in the general fund per year can help in a lot betters ways than keeping a few local eateries a float.

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Matt Guarnieri

4:16 pm on Friday, July 20, 2012

The man who did all the township studies also used to work for the auditing company that audits our township books every year, I think if there was a concrete way to improve the court situation and not just pie in the sky hopes like: start collections on people who don't pay fines or lets try to take the probation office from Mt. Clemens to Shelby. People who don't pay court fines usually can't and probation musical chairs will require approval of the Circuit Court in Mt. Clemens and I doubt if it makes money for them they will just let it go. With video arraignment the common for now we don't even need officers to leave the station to appear in court so the officer travel and cost is a mute point.
Keep trying.... if you can come up with a balanced court budget for 5 years or a profit and a good reason it should stay..... I will eat my words.

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Lucy Pavelek Goike

11:09 am on Monday, July 30, 2012

@John Lang, you are 100% right about the last meeting. I cannot tell you how outraged most of my neighborhood was about that guy sitting there with those signs and how he was actually allowed to do so. One of my neighbors owns a business in Shelby and has been a resident for over 40 years and said this current management has turned the meetings into a "circus" and he is just "disgusted" with what is happening. It truly had the opposite affect on most people I know. It was then I felt the calling to really get involved and to get to know who is running and frankly after much of my research it is becoming clear who really has Shelby's best interest at heart.

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