Martinsburg Elects First Woman Mayor In Its 241-Year History

The city of Martinsburg elected its first female mayor this week.

Harriet Johnson, a Democrat, received 564 votes – a little more than 35 percent of the vote, according to unofficial election results.

Johnson is the first woman mayor, since Martinsburg was established in October 1778. Prior to her win, the seat was held by George Karos, also a Democrat, for 20 years.

On her Facebook page, Johnson said, as mayor, she will strive to make the city a destination to “live, work, play and shop.”

“My goal as your mayor will be to take our City of Martinsburg to the next level. I want to be transparent and help our citizens see the work that we are doing each day to make our community better,” Johnson said in a post. “I want to encourage economic development for good jobs for our citizens … I want to make our city the best town in the State of West Virginia.”

Other mayoral candidates included James W. Dailey II, a Republican, with 378 votes Dan Dulyea, a Republican, with 291 votes; Misty Francis, a Republican, with 184 votes; Robert “Rob” L. Lowe II, a Republican, with 126 votes; and Luke Loy, who did not include a party affiliation in his candidacy filing, with 54 votes. 

City officials said absentee ballots are still being counted, but don’t anticipate a change in results.

Johnson enters the office of mayor after spending four years on the Martinsburg City Council as a council member at large.

She officially takes office Aug. 5.

West Virginia Mayor Sues City Council for Removing Him

The mayor of a West Virginia town has sued the city council for putting him on paid administrative leave and preventing him from doing his job while he is being investigated by state auditors.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports Richwood Mayor Bob Henry Baber filed the lawsuit on Monday. The city council had previously asked Baber to resign because of some undocumented purchases found on his government credit card. Baber refused, and the council voted to remove him.

Baber’s lawsuit says the council did not have the authority to remove him as mayor. It also says the council broke the law when they asked him to resign during a meeting that was closed to the public.

Councilman Charles Toussieng told the newspaper the council did not do anything wrong.

Marmet Council to Choose New Mayor After Ex-Mayor's removal

Officials in the Kanawha County town of Marmet will select a new mayor next month after a judicial panel removed the former mayor from office earlier this year for violating city election laws.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports that the town council held a special meeting Thursday to set the dates for selecting the new mayor.

Officials say they will meet May 12 to select the mayor after reviewing applications submitted by Wednesday evening.

A three-judge panel removed Bill Pauley from office in February after Pauley signed a conciliation agreement in September. Pauley said he knowingly violated city election laws by encouraging voters from outside of town to vote and providing them with a list of candidates to vote for.

Town recorder Tammy Kersey has been serving as the interim mayor.

Three Nominated for Parkersburg Interim Mayor

Three people have been nominated to serve as interim mayor in Parkersburg.

The Wood County Democratic Executive Committee released the names Thursday night. They are committee chair Jane Burdette, former Parkersburg Mayor Jimmy Colombo and Pleasants County Chamber of Commerce executive director Jody Murphy.

The nominations now go before Parkersburg’s City Council, which will choose one of them to serve until the 2016 election.

Mayor Robert Newell retired last week ahead of a hearing on petitions to remove him from office.

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