make us your homepage
ADVERTISE - Alerts - Mobile - Closings - Contact
    YOUR COMMUNITY:  Caroline | Culpeper | King George | Fredericksburg | Orange | Spotsylvania | Stafford | Westmoreland

advertisement

advertisement

 

 


Tomzak wins city mayoral race



Mayor Tom Tomzak celebrates his victory over Debby Girvan Tuesday at Truluv's in Fredericksburg.


After receiving word she lost to incumbent Mayor Thomas Tomzak, mayoral candidate Debby Girvan kisses her husband, Ross, before making the announcement to her supporters at Fredericksburg Square. At right is Girvan's campaign treasurer Brian Baker. (Mike Morones/The Free Lance-Star)


Mayoral candidate Debby Girvan hugs her family after making the announcement to her supporters she lost to incumbent Mayor Thomas Tomzak. From left: son Alex, 13; husband Ross; and daughters McKenzie, 8, and Emeleigh, 11. /Photo by Mike Morones/The Free Lance-Star

Make a post about this story on FredTalk. Get a printer-friendly version of this page. E-mail this story to a friend.
Tom Tomzak wins the mayoral race in the city.

Date published: 5/6/2008


BY EMILY BATTLE


Fredericksburg voters re-elected their mayor today for the first time since 1992.

Tom Tomzak won 64 percent of the vote in his bid for four more years presiding over the City Council. The race drew 26 percent of city voters to the polls.

He faced a challenge from Councilwoman Debby Girvan, who will now vacate her at-large seat on the council at the end of June.

That seat will be filled by Planning Commissioner Mary Katherine Greenlaw. Greenlaw and Vice Mayor Kerry Devine won the two at-large seats in today's contest. They defeated 22-year-old B-J Huff.

During his campaign, Tomzak billed himself as a candidate that had been able to bring consensus to the City Council after years of divisive bickering.

He said that theory was affirmed with today's results.

"It's a sign that we have made progress," he said. "People know we have challenges, and they want to continue with a council that's working together."

Tomzak won endorsements from every member of the current council but Girvan, and most of the City Council members stopped by his post-election party at Truluv’s restaurant.

Girvan thanked her supporters at a gathering at Fredericksburg Square on Caroline Street.

"I always believed the choice of the mayor was the choice of the people in Fredericksburg, and they spoke today, so I have to feel good about that," she said. "I'll stay active, even as a non-council member."

Girvan wouldn't rule out running for council again, but she didn't have any specific plans to share last night.

Greenlaw, who has served on a wide range of city boards and commissions, said she looks forward to the next four years on council.

"I think we have a group that can have differing opinions and have a discussion and come to a consensus," she said. "I respect the other council members and the mayor. I am really looking forward to it."

Devine said voters "sent a message that they're OK with the direction we're headed in, and they trust us to do the right thing for Fredericksburg."

Huff said last night that he plans to make another run for a council seat in the 2012 ward elections.

"Fredericksburg's a city I care about, and I want to continue to stay involved," he said.

He said he plans to submit an application to fill the Planning Commission seat that Greenlaw will vacate.

Over the next four years, this council could very likely oversee the buildout of Celebrate Virginia, and will deal with decisions concerning the fire station, road improvements and other public services that development will require, as well as the effect it has on city tourism.

This council will also oversee the planning of the city's next courts facility. The council has already chosen the downtown post office site for the courts.

Emily Battle: 540/374-5413
ebattle@freelancestar.com

Check back soon for VIDEO reaction from the candidates.

Click here to see the total of votes by precinct.

--fredericksburg.com staff


Read more stories about Fredericksburg
Date published: 5/6/2008


Most recent reader comments:

Viewing all 3 comments. (Sorted in reverse order, with most recent post at the top.)

Display comments on this page. | Sort:

PLEASE READ: These reader comments are not moderated. Each user is solely responsible for any message (s)he posts here. The Free Lance-Star does not endorse the views expressed within these comments. All users who post to this Web site must agree to the terms of the FredTalk User Agreement. We rely on our readers to police themselves, and report any content that violates our User Agreement. In accordance with our User Agreement, we reserve the right to remove any post at any time for any reason, and will restrict access of registered users who repeatedly violate our terms. Any reader can report inappropriate content by clicking the "Report this post to admins" link at the bottom of each comment. You need not be registered to report a post.

The votes in the city . . . (posted by KyColonel , May 6, 2008 9:40 pm)   
. . . represent about 27% of the registered voters.

math (posted by thatguyb , May 6, 2008 9:22 pm)   
~3000 voters in a city of 20,000 (that includes non-registered voters, and folks not old enough to vote), yet it still registers ~15% of the total population. It's more voters than in last November's election. Thank goodness Tomzak won, at least his math makes sense.

Record low turnout? (posted by MrZorro , May 6, 2008 8:21 pm)   
That looks like about 10% of the entire City population actually voting. Pathetic turnout for a sunny day.

What do you think?
Enter your FredTalk username and password to post a comment on this story. If you are registered on FredTalk or another part of this site, use that login here. Otherwise, you can just REGISTER here... .

Username: Password:

Post title:


Please keep it brief: (512-character limit)
(Posts that exceed the 512-character limit will be deleted.)


By checking this box, you agree to the terms of the FredTalk User agreement.