Two vie for mayor, five run for council in busy Beavercreek city election

Oct. 20—A current city councilman and a political newcomer will vie for the seat of Beavercreek Mayor this November, and five residents, including two incumbents, have thrown their hat in the ring for three seats on city council.

Current Beavercreek mayor Bob Stone has reached his term limit, and city councilman Don Adams and Beavercreek businessman Josh Ison are competing to take the seat. Running for city council are newcomers Sunder Bhatla, Ed Maloof, and David Litteral, as well as incumbents Pete Bales and Charles Curran.

All candidates cited a sustainable source of city funding as their top issue, as well as keeping Beavercreek affordable. The city has the highest residential property tax rate in Greene County (although lower than several Montgomery County communities), but is the rare city with no city income tax. Each candidate has different ideas of how to keep the city affordable, while paying for Beavercreek's increasing number of infrastructure projects, and addressing police staffing.

Don Adams

Don Adams currently serves on Beavercreek City Council, serves as a board member of Violence Free Futures (formerly the Family Violence Prevention Center of Greene County) and is a Beavercreek Rotarian. He is also president of the Wright B. Flyer Association, and is on the executive board of Tecumseh Council, Boy Scouts of America.

Adams' top three issues are finding a sustainable source of funding for Beavercreek, training and maintaining a professional police force, and growing the city's sense of community by opening up more opportunities for dialogue with citizens.

"I enjoy being out in the community and talking to people," Adams said. "I've made this my home for over 40 years."

In Ohio, individuals pay city income taxes first to the city where they work, and then, in some cases, to where they live. U.S. Census data shows that more than 20,000 people come to work in Beavercreek who live in other cities. About 12,000 others live in Beavercreek but work elsewhere, and about 2,300 both live and work in the city.

Beavercreek residents have voted five times, three of them in the past five years, against a city income tax. Beavercreek is the largest of only three cities in the state of Ohio that doesn't have a city income tax.

Adams said if Beavercreek residents should consider an income tax again in the future, it should only be done if the city simultaneously slashes residents' property tax burden.

"If I'm mayor, I'm not going to bring (the income tax) up until I come up with an equitable way of doing this where we can lower property taxes for people."