Jonathan Pearson for Hamilton County Commissioner - podcast episode cover

Jonathan Pearson for Hamilton County Commissioner

Sep 20, 202420 min
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Speaker 1

On the way to work and all day in fault check in throughout the day.

Speaker 2

Fifty five KRC the talk station. Seven oh six. Here at fifty five kr CD Talk Station. I'm very happy for Friday Day to you remember fifty five kr SE dot com. Get your podcasts, get the books and the authors I interview like yesterday's Captain Elkanna Cohen with the book October seventh. He's a captain with the Israeli Defense Force. And the conversation I'm getting ready to have right now Jonathan Pearson. He's running for Hamilton County Commissioner and he

is running against Alicia Reath. Jonathan, Welcome to the fifty five KRSE Morning Shows. Nice to have you on today.

Speaker 1

Well, thank you, Brian. I appreciate he's giving me time.

Speaker 2

Happy too. And I guess I'm a little befuddled. I don't I can't find you anywhere online except that you are running for Hamilton County Commissioner. The Hamilton County Republican Party website doesn't have any profile information. I can't find a website. Do you have a website that people can go to?

Speaker 1

Hey, don't have a website. I'll have to check with the for the County down the event. I am using it through the Hamilington County Party website in that one, I need to make sure that I have that clarified. Yeah, because I my page that I didn't get that rectified.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I just because when I click on Hamilton Kunty Republicanparty dot org site for you, they have you listed as an endorsed candidate. But when I click on about the informations is candidate's qualifications for office seeking slash background and experience just as under development. So there's no substance of information there, So maybe we can get some out today. What are your qualifications for office seeking? Jonathan? Your background, part of town you from? Why are you run for

Hamilton County Commissioner? To dive through all that today, Well.

Speaker 1

I'm I'm from the Fairfax area. I live in Facts and you know, the short version of why I'm running is, I'm just tired of what we're seeing. I moved here in eighty four from Springfield, Ohio and other great city as you can see in the current news. But I was just tired of what's going on. We used to be affordable. It isn't. I don't know what happened to

this county. We went from being a modest taxes modest home prices to seven point eight sales tax to property taxes that you and I both know are both crazy right now. But my background is that I had run golf courses and then started running private estates and up in Indian Hill we subdivided a private estate that I worked for. Was a property manager and became the site

foreman for that. And after we subdivided that, I became my own businessman because I decided I wanted to run my own company and started taking care of some of

these very expensive properties. Got to meet a lot of different people that both famous not famous, but got used to working with a lot of people, a lot of different things, and working for an immense amount of money property, so should I say, And it made me understand how to manage that kind of money, sure, and that was something that I enjoyed doing.

Speaker 2

Understood business experience is important, I believe because it's real world experience.

Speaker 1

The biggest thing that I was that you know, what I learned is how you communicate with people and get people to understand what you're trying to do and you understand what they try to do and you're not sitting there arguing with them, because that's really what started this whole thing. Back last summer, if you remember, there was a meeting with the Convention Center and Alicia Reese came out saying that it was you know, racist, and it was you know, like pac Man Jones, And I was like,

what did that have to do with anything? It was just a racious trope that didn't need to be said. You know, there's a lot of money on the table the Convention Center at one hundred and twenty million. When they're arguing that point, obviously people get a little testy, and either she doesn't know that or the fact that she just wanted to make a racist trope. And that

offended me as a Hamlet County resident. It offended me because I'm expecting my elected officials to just handle the fact that when you're dealing with a lot of money, people get a little tested. I've had that happen in my own business, people like, hey, wait a minute, and sometimes the words they say aren't exactly kind. He just learned to deal with it. You don't sit there and go make a big statement and you know, Splanner somebody else. So that was really what offended me. I thought, we

need people that can deal with that. Feels a little bit better. But more importantly, we have some serious negotiation dollars coming up.

Speaker 2

Yesterday, I guess the stadium deal.

Speaker 1

Well, the stadium deal. I mean, you saw those numbers yesterday, A little, a little stiff one.

Speaker 2

Point five bill for improvements, Jonathan, you can build a.

Speaker 1

That's the budget for the county. Yeah, we're we're taking think about this. We say, you know what, Hamlin County, Let's take the entire budgets for our county and slap it on one area. That sounds like a lot of money.

Speaker 2

Yeah, before I privately owned business, effectively.

Speaker 1

For a privately owned business, because in my business, I've never had the county buy me a single piece of equipment. They've never bought any of my trucks, they've never bought any of my mowers. They've never bought any of my hand tools, none of my power tools, none of that. So based on that logic, how much are we supposed to buy for somebody else? Good point, that's really what the question comes down to, you know, put some skin into games.

Speaker 2

I certainly viewed as defensive myself, but then again, I thought the building of the stadium for half a billion dollars was ridiculous and shouldn't have been the taxpayer expenditure either. But when you have the threat of the Bengals pulling the plug and leaving town, I suppose it's more important to be in NFL football town than it is to you know, take a look at what the where the money's going and why the taxpayers are being asked to keep it. But that's all been done and over with

water under the bridge. But now they're asking for more and a hell of a lot more. So that's something you're going to have to struggle with. And so where what is your position? Okay, Jonathan Pearson County Commissioner, the issue comes before you. What's your response to this request? Recognizing, of course, than under the current lease agreement, we do have contractual obligations. So what do you do as a commissioner?

Speaker 1

Well, as we both know that that was a horrible deal from the beginning, So that's that's our first problem. But you're right, we have to deal with it because there it is. But mind's simple, you know, I think from the you know, the reality is that we started in the hole, you know, so I'd like to see

the Brown family step up. You know, they can't claim they're poor because they do revenue sharing and when they bought the Bingals outright from the Sawyer family, they suddenly had two hundred million in the cage to do the deal. So it's not like they're lacking in money. And I'm not I'm not trying to say that we need to sit there and just say, hey, let's let's oviscerate the deal, because we made it and we have to honor it.

But at the same time, I think a business needs to step up and be that business for themselves, and so I would like to see a lot more skin in the game from their sides and then take an honest look at it and see what it does. Does it does the other things that they're talking about actually have value to the county residents as it helped the

downtown area. Those type of things. Are they public use areas that we can all look at and go, okay, that makes sense or is it strictly Bengal only oriented stuff exactly?

Speaker 2

And that's that new corporate office facility they're building in front of the new practice stadium that they're built, or a practice field they're building, and to the best of my knowledge, none of which benefits us generally speaking, unless, of course, they're going to make an argument that, well, everybody that works there is paying tax dollars into the kind of the coffers of the city. But I'm not quite sure that cuts it for the rest of the Hamilton County voters.

Speaker 1

Well, it doesn't because we lost Hilltop and the process of putting up some big inflatable balloons so they can practice. I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm finding that the Bengals are here. I have a problem with the fact that we kicked out a well established business. Yeah, to do that that did not benefit the Hamlin County residents by getting rid of a very large employer and taxpayer.

Speaker 2

Excellent point, you know, Jonathan Pearson. I forgot about that, but it's a great point. Let's pause from it down.

Speaker 1

We make money in this county, we don't. I'll have to keep adding taxes. Let's add businesses.

Speaker 2

Hey, there's the thought, Jonathan Bierce that hold on, We're gonna take a break right now. We'll come back with Jonathan running against Alisha Reese. You have choices this November. Let's make spart Ones. He has been endorsed by their Hamilton kind of Republican party. We'll get more from Jonathan just a moment. I want to mention twenty two three. I rout forty two between Mason and eleven of my favorite gun store. I am a customer and I have

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Speaker 1

Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2

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Speaker 3

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Brand Spence Bridge in Bend seventy four. Still okay, Chuck ingramok fifty five KRC The talk station.

Speaker 2

Seven twenty year fifty five KRST Talk station. Bryan Thoma's talking with Jonathan Pearson, running for Hamilton County Commission against Alicia Reese. All right, Jonathan, here's a quick question for you. Started off and ask you know why you're running. Everything's gotten sadam expensive in Hamilton County. No one can deny that it's obviously a problem that's pervasive in our country.

But when you look at the surrounding counties and you look at where people choose to do business, they tend to lean more Butler Warren in Claremont than Hamilton anymore. How do you level the playing field? How do you make Hamilton as attractive as apparently Butler Warren in Claremont County seem to be, And what do you think their draw is over Hamilton County.

Speaker 1

Well, the one thing that we've got to do is, as you know in the Commission's office, we can't change the tax walls. But there's nothing like a bully pulpit they get the conversation started. I mean, I'll use the sales tax alone. We added that stupid point eight percent for the busses, and you know they're also full. When you drive around town, you see the bus is completely

full being used and everything else. Because obviously that money was needed, not to mention they got a sixty two million dollar grant from the government last year too, on top of that tax, if you didn't know that. And so we're we have all this extra sales tax that's going in there, and it makes people think, geez, my product's going to be that much more expensive if I sell it within my area. Here's a crazy thing about

sales tax. I can go to Claremont County buy all my new appliances for my kitchen, and the money I'll save on sales tax will deliver them to my house. That's just stupid. We need to start reconsidering certain things. Hamlin County has a lot of very nice residents, so they vote yes on two any things, and that's the challenge. We've got to get people to rethink they're taxing themselves. As for the appropriation are the moneys for the property taxes,

that can be done by having a county auditor. Tom Brinkman is running for that that actually looks at the true value of homes instead of saying what's the maximum. We can run this too. I know there's a constitutional reality that we have to evaluate homes, but the Constitution of Ohio does not mandate that you maximize every single penny and start squeezing people out. And that is one of the big things that I think people find is that just the tax structure alone is a little tough.

When you have your home in a community and suddenly your taxes are up an extra thousand dollars. That doesn't mean they didn't go up in Warren County in Butler County, but not to the same proportions because per land value, Hamlet County does have expensive land comparatively, and so the property taxes will be a little bit higher. But we

don't need to start taxing to that extreme. And I say that with great understanding because I live in the Merrimont School District which is one of the highest tax areas in the region.

Speaker 2

Oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1

And so believe me, my tax bill tells me you live in the Marrimont School district. And I think that those are the things that we can work on from the bully pulp that, so to speak. There the practical matter is first and foremost. Just because a dollar comes to the door doesn't mean we need to spend it, and we don't need to you know, look at everything and say oh, that's a good project, this, let's do that,

and those type of things. The first thing that Adam and I would like to do is to take a look at that budget and say what's redundant, get rid of those immediately, What do we not need to spend money on, or are we spending too much money on? Actually look at the budget instead of just saying, oh, the administrator said this is okay, and not actually look at it. I mean, that's what the commissioners are elected for,

to actually look at the budget. I'm not convicted that that's happening, that there's a true understanding what they're looking at.

Speaker 2

Well, the silence think that the silence from the Commissioner's office, generally speaking, is deafening. I rarely read anything about what the commissioners are doing and how they're approaching things. And there's a lot coming up, Like again, going back to the stadium deal, the least needs to be renegotiated. This one point twenty five billion dollar request for improvements needs to be dealt with, and I know the sheriff's departments

down on numbers that has to be dealt with. I just don't hear anything about where they are on any given issue.

Speaker 1

In the sheriff's office. Look at the sheriff's office, the largest single budget the commissioners deal with. Yeah, and we have a sheriff that I'm not sure if she knows what she's doing because she has her car stolen, a gun that is in her car. You would think that the commissioners would have something to say about that, since they're the one that appropriate the money too the sheriff's department. Nope, not a word from them. And then other things are gone.

They're they're closing part of jail because they just don't have enough deputies. They're leaving the sheriff's office. And this is something that should concern the commissioners, not just the sheriff, but should concern the commissioners along with all county residents. This is an issue that we don't talk about in mine is complete transparency. You want to walk through the building or walk into my office and take a look

at what the deputies make, I'll show you. I won't show you what individual deputies make, but I'll show you what the overall budget for all the deputies is. I have no problem as an elected official. You want to know exactly to the pinny what I make. Here's what I make. Transparency, and you know, I'm happy to stay in front of a camera or stand with you know, sit down with you once a week, just to let people know what's going on. It's their money. It's not my money to go, oh good, I have a new

money in my checking account. That's not the way the game's played, and I think people forget that. As elected officials, we see that, especially unfortunately in the Democratic side, more than we do the Republican side. But I think that that's the great danger that we're seeing right now is those type of things make people not desires to be here. What happens is more and more businesses slowly pull out,

and as those businesses pull out, people pull out. The more people you have in this fair county, and the more businesses you have in this county by giving a reasonable tax structure, suddenly we don't need new taxes. We just need more people and more businesses. Were actually making more taxes than we need.

Speaker 2

Sounds so simple to do, Jonathan Pearson.

Speaker 1

It is that that's how you work in your own home. You're saying, Hey, I don't need a brand new car this year.

Speaker 2

Right right now, I'm with it. Yes, if we ran the government like we run our households, generally speaking, we would all be in a much better place, Jonathan Pearson. As soon as you get the website up, or you get more information, get her over to the Hamilton County site so people know where to connect with you and learn more. You're welcome here on the fifty five Carson

Morning Show. I like what you're saying, Jonathan, and I'll look forward to talking with you again, and if you get elected, I will take you up on the opportunity to speak with you on a regular basis about county issues since no one seems to be doing it. Good luck to both, Good luck to you and Adam Kaylor. Thanks listeners for tuning in on that, and Jonathan, we'll talk again soon. I'm sure have a great weekend seven

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