From Deseret News archives:

First female to lead Ogden?

Race between council member, Godfrey close

Published: Sunday, Oct. 21, 2007 12:20 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
OGDEN — Could Ogden have its first-ever woman mayor?

Any way you look at the Ogden mayoral race, which pits incumbent Matthew Godfrey against Councilwoman Susan Van Hooser, either candidate could win.

Godfrey received 207 more votes in the primary than Van Hooser. However, there were almost 1,600 votes logged in the primary that went to neither of the two advancing candidates. Plus, a larger voter turnout is expected for the Nov. 6 general election. Ogden has almost 45,000 registered voters.

If Van Hooser wins, it would be a historic day in Ogden government — she would become the city's first female mayor.

"I think it's an exciting time for women in politics," Van Hooser said. "Women can do just as well as men in an open environment."

She said many Ogden residents are concerned about the city's faltering infrastructure and vanishing open space, and she's ready to address those issues as mayor.

Those have been neglected during the past seven years, she feels.

Why should Ogdenites vote for her? "Because I want sensible, open, unified leadership," she said.

She pledged to listen to all sides before making decisions.

Story continues below
Van Hooser also said she'll work hard to market Ogden and partner with Weber County, the state, Weber State University and the applied technology college to create new opportunities for jobs and growth.

Among her other goals would be sensible spending. She said that means decreasing, not increasing Ogden's debt and opening the city's finances to public scrutiny — while avoiding channeling money though semi-private foundations.

If re-elected, it would be Godfrey's third term.

Why should Ogden re-elect Godfrey?

To continue making the changes he's heard the people of Ogden requesting, he states on his Web site.

"Crime is down 23 percent in the past seven years," he told the Deseret Morning News. "We have lowered property taxes three times, and we have recruited more than 7,000 jobs to Ogden. We have completed more than 60 acres of redevelopment in downtown Ogden and have another 120 acres currently under way. This has generated more than $1 billion of private investment that will go a long way in providing more tax relief to homeowners. Ogden is undergoing a major renaissance, and we would like a chance to finish what we started."

If re-elected, Godfrey said his goals are to finish the 120 acres of downtown redevelopment, lower crime by another 10 percent and to attract another 4,000 jobs to Ogden.

Recent comments

I will vote for Mayor Godfrey, That's it in a nut shell, I would...

Mar;yetta O'Brien | Oct. 23, 2007 at 9:43 a.m.

Godfrey's plan to continue downtown development means enriching his...

Ogden Lover | Oct. 23, 2007 at 9:41 a.m.

I find Ms Van Hooser to be very sincere and honest, a couple of...

Van Hooser supporter | Oct. 23, 2007 at 8:46 a.m.

Image

Susan E. Van Hooser

previousnext

Latest comments

Apostle's wife felt comfort in attack

I'm curious why the quotes in the article have been changed since it was...

Just to get this straight, your brilliant idea is to drop one of the only...

Letters: Sodom and Gomorrah

Mr. Wharton's views are unacceptably bigoted.

I am a big UNGA fan, not just the athletes, the entire family. Harvey has...

Win in New Mexico good for Y?

New Mexico is terrible and BYU barely won. REALITY!!! TCU will kill this team...

The obvious one is Boise State. Then I would add SMU which is a real rivalry...

Several reasons why this shouldn't, or couldn't work. Conferences are not...

MWC expand? Get rid of deadweight

Expanding is good. I love when people go back to wac expansion. Smu,rice, la...

BYU happy to escape with victory

Done with Bronco ball. This program gets worse every year...can't stand this...

Bennett at center of GOP storm

To "Get Real" 18 years in the Senate going for 24, I see that as a...

Advertisements
Advertisement