A
SSOCIATED
N
EWSPAPERS OF
M
ICHIGAN
P
AGE
4
October 29, 2015
I
NKSTER
- P
LYMOUTH
01. Obituaries
02. In Memoriam
03. Cards of Thanks
04. Monuments
& Cemetery Plots
05. Personals/Announcements
06. Legal Notices
07. Attorneys
08. Entertainment
09. Lost & Found
10. Coming Events
30. Help Wanted
31. Help Wanted Sales
32. Help Wanted Drivers
33. Child Care
34. Specialized Services
35. Situations Wanted
40. Business Opportunity
42. Health and Fitness
43. Money to Loan
44. Music/Art Lessons
45. Adult Care
46. Private Schools/Instruction
47. Riding/Horses/Stables
50. Pets & Supplies
54. Rummage Sales
55. Estate Sales
56. Flea Markets
57. Antiques
58. Garage and Yard Sales
59. Auctions
60. Misc. Sales
61. Misc. Items
62. Building Supplies
63. Business and
OfficeEquipment
64. Lawn & Garden Supplies
65. Tree Service
66. Landscape / Nurseries
67. Garden Plant / Supplies
68. Garden / Produce
70. Masonry / Brickwork
72. Cleaning Services
73. Musical Merchandise
74. Sporting Goods
75. Boats / Accessories
76. Remodeling & Renovations
77. Recreation Vehicles
78. Hunting / Fishing
82. Wanted to Buy
87. Room for Rent
88. Duplexes for Rent
89. Apartments for Rent
90. Condos/Townhouses for Rent
92. Business Places for Rent
93. Banquet Halls
94. Farm Land for Rent
95. Real Estate
96. Houses for Rent
97. Cottages for Rent
98. Manufactured/Mobile Homes
99. Flats for Rent
100. Will Share
101. Wanted to Rent
102. Storage
103. Business Property for Sale
104. Farms & Acreage for Sale
105. Mobile Homes for Sale
106. Houses for Sale
107. Condos/Townhouses for Sale
108. Lake and Resort
109. Income Property
110. Lots for Sale
111. Out of State Property
112. Commercial Lease
113. Real Estate Wanted
114. Auto Accessories
115. Autos for Sale
116. Antique & Classic Cars
117. Trucks & Vans for Sale
118. Freebies
119. Auto Repairs
120. Motorcycles
121. Autos Wanted
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Council members, mayor on Inkster ballot
2 suspects in auto
parts thefts nabbed
Inkster voters will go to the
polls Nov. 3 to choose a new
mayor, council representatives
and decide on two proposals on
the ballot.
Hoping to become the new
mayor in the city are local attor-
ney Byron Nolen and Walter
Starghill, Jr.
Timothy Williams is unop-
posed in his bid for the council
seat in District 1. In District 2,
Calvin L. Hayes is opposed for
the 4-year term by Clarence
Oden, Jr.
In District 3, Lorenzo A.
Moner, Jr. and Sandra K. Watley
are each seeking the single, 4-
year term while in District 4,
Jewell Jones and William S.
Miller, are each hoping to fill the
4-year term. In District 5, Kim
Howard 26666 Lehigh and
Winston Wade are vying for vot-
ers' favor and in District 6, for-
mer City Councilwoman and
Inkster School Board member
Dee Richardson is challenging
Dennard Shaw for the 4-year
term.
Also on the ballot are 4-year
terms on the Library Board of
Directors for the city. Six posi-
tions on the board are available
and voters can choose from a
field of candidates that includes,
Brittni Abiolu, Akindele
Akinyemi, Winifred Nwankwo,
Rerhi Onomake, DeAndra
Crystal-Rikay Watley, Michael
Wells and Emmereal Shawn
Wells.
Voters will also be asked to
approve a renewal of 2 mills for
the operations of the Inkster
Parks and Recreation services
and 1 mill for 10 years for Senior
Services in the community.
General fund dollars are not
available to support these pro-
grams, officials said and the aver-
age cost to a homeowner is esti-
mated to be $32.52 and would
generate an estimated $400,000 if
a full 2.0 mills was determined to
be needed in any year
The second millage is for sen-
ior citizen services and officials
said that there is nomoney in the
general fund to continue these
services. The average cost to a
homeowner is estimated to be
$16.26 and would generate an
estimated $200,000 if a full 1.0
mills was determined to be need-
ed in any year.
Voters will also be asked to
approve the non-Homestead
millage proposal which is levied
against commercial, business
and industrial property in the
City of Inkster. This is a renewal
of the existing tax and does not
affect residential property.
Polls will be open from 7 a.m.
until 8 p.m. Nov. 3. Questions
should be referred to the office of
the city clerk, 26215 Trowbridge
St, Inkster, MI 48141, (313) 563-
4232.
Two men have been arrested
for the theft of tires and rims
from a local vehicle rental busi-
ness inPlymouthTownship.
A township police officer
stopped a small pickup truck
that was traveling eastbound on
Ann Arbor Road near I-275 at
about 2:30 a.m. last Thursday,
Oct. 22. The officer observed
that the vehicle appeared to be
heavily weighted down with
cement cinder blocks as well as
four brand new tires and rims,
according to police reports of the
incident.
Officer Dane Haskin was
aware of numerous recent thefts
of tires and rims in many
Western Wayne Communities, a
police spokesperson said, and
questioned both the driver and
passenger in the vehicle. The
driver, a 25-year-old Southfield
resident, was arrested at the
scene for driving on a suspended
license. The passenger, a 38-year-
old Detroit resident, was arrest-
ed for a parole violation.
A few hours later, officers
responded to Enterprise Leasing
at 510 Ann Arbor Road in the
City of Plymouth where employ-
ees discovered a Ford
Expedition with four tires miss-
ing, resting on cinder blocks, sim-
ilar to the blocks found in the
vehicle the suspect was driving,
police said.
Township officers referred
the case to city investigators for
further prosecution.
he had made a unilateral deci-
sion in hiring Cox and wanted to
know when the township
changed law firms.
“Page 70 Legal Services for
legal expenses going toMikeCox.
Mike Cox is a friend of yours, you
used towork in his office. There's
nothing wrong with hiring a
friend, but you need to stay away
from the line. You should have
notified the board. You crossed a
line when you didn't notify the
board,” Doroshewitz said. “The
problem is you were hiring legal
counsel when we already had
counsel. That was redundant,”
Doroshewitz said.
“When did we talk about hir-
ing Mike Cox Law Firm?” he
asked.
Cox,
a
high-ranking
Republican Party leader and
Price are known political associ-
ates.
Mike and Laura Cox attended
their first-ever Plymouth
Township Board of Trustees
meeting last April to congratu-
late Price after his controversial
appointment to the supervisor's
job, replacing Richard Reaume,
who retiredmid-termandmoved
toFlorida.
The Price-Cox alliance goes
back to 2002 when Price worked
for Cox during his political cam-
paign against Democratic candi-
date Gary Peters. Price then
worked in Cox' office under polit-
ical director Stu Sandler and
later for Attorney General Bill
Schuette. He remained in that
job until he was elected to the
Wayne County Commission seat
in 2012.
“He's a former attorney gener-
al,” Price said in response to
Doroshewitz.
Edwards responded that he
orchestrated theCox contract.
“I…reached out to Mike Cox
last October. I talked to Richard
Reaume,”Edwards said.
“So you made this decision?”
Doroshewitz pressed.
Edwards responded that
there was nothing in the town-
ship purchasing policy that stipu-
lated he, Conzelman or Price
have to “reachout to the board.”
Curmi said there were no
invoices or detail for the legal
services from the Cox firm pro-
vided to the trustees.
The Eagle obtained copies of
the actual invoices showing the
detailed hourly billings. The
charges were incurred during
the month of September 2015,
with the exception of $3,225 list-
ed as a previous balance for
work on the fire department
retiree issue.
One $200 entry read, “Call
with Mr. Richard Reaume
regarding fire services agree-
ment, health care costs contract
language, and outstanding
issues.”
Another $100 fee was
described as: “Meeting with
Michael Cox to discuss Kevin
Bennett's Court of Appeals brief.”
The dispute between the city
and the township centers on
retirement costs the township
claims the city owes as a result of
the joint fire department agree-
ment which was disbanded in
2012. Township officials claim
the city owes about $1.3 million
in health care retirement costs.
City officials have questioned the
accuracy of the amount claimed
by the township. The invoice
fromCox' office includes costs for
“correspondence from Mr. Price
on cheatsheet for meeting with
city” and “drafting discussion
points” for Sept. 9 “meeting with
City of Plymouth.”
Plymouth officials said the
city has never been involved in a
direct civil action of this type.
Bills
FROM PAGE 1
Employees at Enterprise
Leasing in the City of Plymouth
discovered the rims and tires
missing from this Ford
Expedition last week.