Susan Johnson of the Clallam County Auditors Office, left, reads names drawn by lot as Elections Manager Becky Pettigrew records the order that candidates will appear on the ballot during Friday’s lot draw at the Clallam County Courthouse in Port Angeles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)

Susan Johnson of the Clallam County Auditors Office, left, reads names drawn by lot as Elections Manager Becky Pettigrew records the order that candidates will appear on the ballot during Friday’s lot draw at the Clallam County Courthouse in Port Angeles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)

Election filing ends in Clallam County

PORT ANGELES — Incumbent Clallam County Commissioner Mark Ozias almost made it through filing week without drawing an opponent for the Nov. 5 general election.

But late Friday afternoon — on the last day of candidate registration — Sequim City Council member and county employee Brandon Janisse filed for Ozias’ Sequim-area District 1 position.

Janisse’s candidacy was posted on the county Auditor’s Office website at 3:34 p.m., with 56 minutes left for candidates to register in person.

Janisse was the second-to-last of 116 candidates who filed for 56 elective boards with open positions in Clallam County.

Also offering his candidacy Friday in the only countywide election was Maury A. Modine of Beaver, who filed for District 3 Port of Port Angeles commissioner.

Modine will run against one-term incumbent Connie Beauvais for the West End-Port-Angeles-area position, which has its eastern boundary between the Eighth Street bridges in Port Angeles and its western terminus in Neah Bay.

The county commissioner general election race is confined to Sequim-area District 1 voters, a restriction for all three board positions that may be reviewed in 2020 by the soon-to-be elected Charter Review Commission, longtime member Norma Turner has said.

The election slate includes six Aug. 6 primary contests that will send the top two-vote getters to the general election.

Primary ballots will be mailed to voters in little more than eight weeks, on July 17.

Forty candidates filed for 15 Charter Review Commission seats. The top five vote-getters in each of three county commissioner districts will win positions on the 15-person commission.

Eight candidates filed for three open Port Angeles City Council positions in which incumbents are not running, creating two primary contests.

They included Richard W. “Doc” Robinson, executive director of Serenity House of Clallam County, a shelter, services and and transitional housing agency for homeless individuals.

Robinson is running for Michael Merideth’s Position 5 seat against former City Council candidate Artur Wojnowski and Charlie McCaughan.

Tara Martin Lopez, Martha Cunningham and Brendan Meyer are running for Cherie Kidd’s Position 7 City Council position.

Nina Napiontek and Navarra Carr filed earlier last week for Mayor Sissi Bruch’s Position 6 seat.

County seat

Janisse, 34, a county jail control-room technician, filed as a Republican against Ozias, a one-term Democrat, for the only partisan race in the election.

“While I’d love to continue with the city, I think I could be more helpful with the county side,” the Idaho native, a Sequim resident since 1999, said Friday.

“The opioid crisis continues to spin out of control,” said Janisse, who is a foster parent with his wife, Megan.

“Homelessness is not being addressed,” he said.

“There are a lot of things that can be addressed at the county level.”

Janisse, who lost a Sequim City Council position to Pam Leonard-Ray in 2015, ran unopposed in November 2017 for the City Council Position 5 seat he has served on since January 2018.

His term ends in December 2021.

Ozias, 48 and former director of the Sequim Food Bank, is completing his first term as county commissioner.

He said Friday he had met Janisse several times and interacted with him informally on a City Council member-county commissioner level but had no idea Janisse was seeking to unseat him.

“I welcome him to the race,” Ozias said.

Ozias, a Baltimore native who grew up in the Denver area, owned two businesses with his wife, Lisa, and served on the Sequim Planning Commission in 2005 before his election in 2015. They moved to Sequim in 2004.

If re-elected, Ozias said he will focus on Integrated Managed Care, which coordinates physical and mental health with substance abuse treatment.

Ozias also would work with the county Department of Community Development on “aggressively reviewing land use planning as related to the [Olympic Discovery Trail],” he said.

Janisse said Friday that filing late Friday afternoon was a matter of economics, not pre-planning.

It had to do with the filing fee of $764.25, the highest among all but Superior Court judge among offices up for election.

“Seven-hundred sixty bucks is hard to come by,” Janisse said.

Other primary races include Warren Pierce, Nate Adkisson and Ann Marie Henninger, vying for the Hospital District 2-Olympic Medical Center seat held by John Beitzel, who is not running for re-election.

Primary contests include Mike Gilstrap, Christina E. Kohout and Danny Smith, running for the Forks City Council position held by Jon Preston, who is not seeking another term. All three candidates filed Friday.

Staci Politika and Jacob Wright filed Friday for the Port Angeles School Board position held by William Kindler, who had filed Tuesday, creating another three-way race for Aug. 6.

There’s also a primary election race for the Port Angeles-area Fire District 2 board of commissioners among incumbent Richard Rudd and challengers Keith Cortner and Steve Hopf.

Other two-way races on the November ballot are Jean Hordyk against Ted Bowen, Hospital District 2-OMC board; Katie Marks vs. Arwen Rice, Port Angeles School Board; and Jim Stoffer against Beth Smithson and Eric A. Pickens vs. Charles W. Smith III, Sequim School Board.

Incumbent Sequim-area Fire District 3 Commissioner James Barnfather is running against challenger William (Bill) Miano, Clallam Bay Fire District 5 incumbent Commissioner Karin J. Ashton is running against challenger Greg Bellamy, and Park and Recreation District 1 (Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center) incumbent Jan. L. Richardson is running against J. Mike Rudd.

Sequim-area Charter Review Commission District 1 candidates are Jim Stoffer, Ted Miller, Stephen Landess, Donald Hatler, Tony Corrado, David Lotzgesell, Gary DeKorte, Alex Fane, Sue Erzen, Candace Pratt and Judith Parker.

Port Angeles-area Charter Review Commission 2 candidates are Steven Wyall, William Kildall, Ian Nickel, Allen Coleman, Jane Vanderhoof, Mary Doherty, Nick Spaeder, Patti Morris, Diane Haffner, Kraig Kyllo, Marolee D. Smith, Wendy Clark Getzin, Jerry T. Weider, Ron Cameron, Nina Richards, Norma E. Turner, Leya Heart and Elizabeth Athair.

West End-Port-Angeles-area Charter Review Commission District 3 candidates are Port Angeles City Council member Mike French, Lisa Unger, Don Corson, Brian Hunter, Kenneth P. Reandeau, Joseph Murphy, Forks City Attorney-Planner Rod Fleck, Nina Sarmiento, Deborah (Deb) Cooke, Therese (Tree) Stokan and Andrew T. May.

The list of candidates who have filed for office is at https://tinyurl.com/PDN-ClallamCandidates.

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

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