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Cole excited to be South Lake Tahoe’s new mayor


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By Kathryn Reed

South Lake Tahoe has a new mayor of sorts – Hal Cole. He had the position during his first tenure on the council, so he knows what he is getting into. He was mayor in 1998, 2001 and 2006.

Claire Fortier, the top vote getter in the November election, was unanimously appointed by her colleagues to be mayor pro tem.

Hal Cole is ready to lead South Lake Tahoe into a new era. Photos/Kathryn Reed

Hal Cole is ready to lead South Lake Tahoe into a new era. Photos/Kathryn Reed

Councilman Bruce Grego was on teleconference for only this part of the meeting.

Fortier, Tom Davis and Angela Swanson were sworn in Nov. 14. Prior this happening, outgoing members Bill Crawford, Jerry Birdwell and Kathay Lovell each said a few words as they were about to resume their lives as non-elected persons. None of them chose to run for re-election.

Also sworn in on Tuesday were City Treasurer Dave Olivo and City Clerk Suzie Alessi.

The morning was filled with moments of levity – Crawford saying the reason he did not want a plaque is because he found his last one in the garage behind some canned goods.

The morning was filled with tears – Lovell tried to maintain her composure, but was overcome with emotion in her goodbyes. The packed room gave her a standing ovation.

The morning was filled with the continued acrimony between Crawford and Lovell – she not turning to shake his hand as he walked back to his seat after everyone else had.

The morning was filled with promises of things to change.

Cole, as mayor, expressed how this policy making body is a “we” and not an “I” – to which his colleagues later expressed their same desire to work as a team.

Cole acknowledged the hard financial times the state and country are in, and that South Lake Tahoe is right there with those bodies.

“We are at the point where we may have to look at how we deliver services,” Cole said in reference to having balanced recent budgets with reserves. But he also pointed out how the town is resilient as is the staff. “We have a rare opportunity to reinvent our organization.”

Part of the reinvention will be with establishing work sessions outside the council meetings for one or two issues to be hashed out prior to a vote needing to be taken. All of these will be open to the public. The schedule is being worked out.

(Click on photos to enlarge.)

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Comments (5)
  1. steve says - Posted: December 14, 2010

    Yea Hal, the staff is definitely resilient, especially your Fire Department. How are you gonna keep them happy?

  2. Parker says - Posted: December 15, 2010

    This ought to be good-The man who helped create the Stateline hole in the ground, the man who fought really hard to keep the Council’s dealings behind closed doors, the man who backed the PD Chief even after a Grand Jury rebuked him, the man who always backed Jinkens every time he couldn’t reply to a question with a simple, straightforward, honest answer (which was all the time), the man who backed Grego in his shady sticking the City with his legal bill, the man who went along with whatever Lovell wanted, the man who always goes along with the financial demands of the City Employee Unions, the man who himself was part of what a Grand Jury called “Bush League” conduct; Hal Cole, is going to change how business is done? This is going to be Real Good to watch!!!

  3. dryclean says - Posted: December 15, 2010

    Off to a good start council. You were smart enough to keep Grego out of the mayor and mayor pro tem positions. Bruce, who loves ya baby?

  4. Alex Campbell says - Posted: December 16, 2010

    The old Machine Hacks keep Hackin over and over.

  5. tahogal says - Posted: December 17, 2010

    Hal we are waiting to see what you are going to do with your “hole in the ground” that you helped “install”. If there was an institutional memory in thie town, and the Chamber wasn’t making all of the “appointments” to the Council, we would never elect the same people who had done the deed.