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Divided Geneva panel recommends ban on liquor license holders serving in elected office

Geneva is poised to make a liquor license holder ineligible to serve in public office, a redo of previous votes in 2012 and 2016.

After nearly an hour of debate, alderpersons voted 4-4, with two absent, at a special Geneva Committee of the Whole meeting on Monday. Mayor Kevin Burns broke the tie in favor so it would move to the full council for consideration.

First Ward Alderperson Michael Bruno brought it forward at last week’s city council meeting.

“The issue comes down to conflict of interest,” Bruno said.

Liquor license holders are subject to undercover police stings to see if they are selling or serving underage, and council members have to vote on granting liquor licenses, Bruno said.

A liquor license holder who was serving on the council would have to recuse themselves, he said.

The state liquor code changed to allow a small downstate town to let liquor license holders serve in public office because they didn’t have enough candidates to fill seats.

But that is not the problem in Geneva, Bruno said, as some ward races had as many as three candidates.

Third Ward Alderperson Dean Kilburg took issue with bringing it up at all.

“It seems to me that it’s somewhat of an ordinance change looking for a solution to a non-existent problem,” Kilburg said.

Fifth Ward Alderperson Robert Swanson and Second Ward Alderperson Richard Marks agreed.

Marks said he would prefer to allow more candidates to run. “We are chasing a problem we don’t have,” he said.

Burns said if a liquor license holder is elected, the council would amend the ordinance to permit that person to serve.

As to recusing, Burns said it is self-governing.

“Even if there was a call for someone to recuse himself, he could very well say, ‘I choose not to.’ And there is no authority, as the council, to say, ‘Please leave the room,‘” Burns said.

The alderpersons who voted yes to reinstate the ban were Bruno, Bradley Kosirog, Amy Mayer and Martha Paschke. The ones who voted no were Kilburg, Swanson, Marks and William Malecki.

Alderpersons Anaïs Bowring and Becky Hruby were absent.

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