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Glendale: Clerk post up for grabs for first time in 75 years

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  • Glendale: Clerk post up for grabs for first time in 75 years

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    Nov 24 2004

    Clerk post up for grabs for first time in 75 years

    Ardashes Kassakhian plans run for city clerk position in the first
    open race for the job since 1929. Election is in April.

    By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press and Leader

    GLENDALE CITY HALL -- Glendale could have a competitive election in
    April to determine the city's chief election official for the first
    time in more than 75 years. Now, that race has its first competitor.

    Ardashes Kassakhian, executive director of the Armenian National
    Committee's Western Region, announced that he will run for City Clerk,
    a position that will be vacated in April when Doris Twedt retires at
    the end of her term.

    "I've always had a passion for public service," Kassakhian, 28, said.
    "It's a noble calling. If you really want to be an active citizen and
    participant, you have to take on challenges and you have to address
    them head on."

    Kassakhian should have some competition, although nobody else has
    entered the race. Candidates do not have to file any paperwork to
    run for City Clerk until January. The job's salary alone -- $105,000
    per year, minimum -- will likely draw out candidates to make the
    race competitive.

    The winner of the election will be the Glendale's first city clerk
    to initially take office by election since 1929, when G.E. Chapman
    was elected to the post. Ever since, Glendale's city clerk has been
    a hand-me-down position, with clerks taking office as a mid-term
    replacement appointed by the City Council instead of by election.

    The council appointed John Walters in 1959 when Chapman died, and
    Walters served until 1971. When he retired, the council appointed
    Frank Usher. The cycle continued, with Merle Hagemeyer (appointed in
    1976) followed by Aileen Boyle (appointed in 1989) followed by Twedt
    (appointed in 2000). During those 75 years, no appointed city clerk
    has lost a reelection bid.

    By appointing mid-term replacements, the city has avoided politicizing
    the position that oversees the city's elections and record-keeping.

    "There's a good argument to be made that any political office
    overseeing elections should be nonpartisan, and maybe should be
    an appointed position rather than beholden to an electorate," said
    Tom Hogen-Esch, a political science professor at California State
    University Northridge. "The best reason is that there is no appearance
    of political motivation behind whatever decision is under scrutiny."

    As an officer for the Armenian National Committee, Kassakhian is
    a community activist who has lobbied the federal government for
    recognition of the Armenian genocide and urged Glendale's Armenian
    community to vote.

    If elected, he said he would focus on increasing voter turnout and
    advancing the technology inside the clerk's office.

    "He's a very capable individual, and he knows very well what the
    job entails and how to handle it," said Councilman Rafi Manoukian,
    who received support from the Armenian National Committee in his
    reelection bid.

    "Having come from a community activism background, that gives him
    better insight into the operations of the city clerk.

    "It is incumbent on all individuals who will participate in or be a
    candidate for City Clerk to recognize the fact that, although it is
    an elected position, it should not be a political thing."
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