BREAKOUT:
Official job requirements for the mayor of Fort Collins:
-Sign legal documents
-Lead and participate in ceremonial duties
-Serve as the face of the community
-Head city council
Subhead: Friends and peers believe in mayor’s promises
By Courtney Riley
JTC 320: Final Story
Karen Weitkunat
The recently elected mayor of Fort Collins, Karen Weitkunat, has disappointed many residents of Fort Collins within just a few weeks of holding her position.
In an article in the Coloradoan titled, “Weitkunat wants to be clear on role,” the mayor said serving as mayor was not meant to be a full-time job, which caused a stir from many readers.
Fifty-seven comments were posted on the Coloradoan’s website in regards to the article.
Some readers defended Weitkunat, saying people were taking her words out of context and didn’t fully understand the true job description of the mayor of Fort Collins.
But many were outraged, including a reader who said, “Slow clap, people. Our new mayor. God help us.”
When asked how she responded to the negative comments, Weitkunat said she generally doesn’t comment about criticism.
“You have to have thick skin,” she said. “You take it with a grain of salt and file it for future reference.”
She said bickering online doesn’t help the community at all.
“The article never said that I was not going to do the job as mayor,” she said. “My past history proves that I will. I was just saying we need to ask, ‘What is the role of the mayor?’”
In the city of Fort Collins, the mayor is responsible for signing legal documents, participating in ceremonies, serving as the face of the community and leading city council.
“Each person who becomes mayor kind of decides what else they want to do,” she said. “It’s not really clearly defined, which is why I want to have a discussion with council to see exactly what we want the mayor’s role to be.”
Fort Collins resident Julie Sanders said she interprets Weitkunat’s comments as a sign of laziness.
“This is like an employee getting hired and then saying they can’t fulfill their availability,” she said. “I’m pretty sure a logical boss would fire that employee.”
Weitkunat said this topic is an issue of governance as a whole in Fort Collins, and a lot of people don’t actually realize the mayor is only one vote out of seven.
“The job is misunderstood by a lot of people,” she said. “If city council wants the mayor to do more, I need to discuss that with them.”
Fort Collins resident David McClellan said he understands where Weitkunat is coming from. He said she isn’t trying to back out of a commitment or take any type of short cut by asking council members to do more work.
“Fort Collins is a big, growing city,” he said. “Residents expect a full-time commitment when the job isn’t even required to be full-time.”
Eric Sutherland, who lost to Weitkunat in the election, said this governance issue can be blamed mostly on city council as a whole.
“They just don’t do their business as efficiently as they could be doing it,” he said.
The city manager, Darin Atteberry, he said, needs to take more responsibility and alter the system if it has kinks in it.
“It’s really Atteberry’s continued allowance of poor process,” he said.
The former mayor of Fort Collins, Doug Hutchinson, said he usually worked 30 to 40 hours per week when he held the position, but the workload occasionally reached up to 80 hours.
“I can’t believe anyone would really expect the mayor to work 80 hours in a week,” Weitkunat said.
Hutchinson, who has known Weitkunat personally for years, said he has no doubts that she will work hard in her position and make the people of Fort Collins proud.
“She has a lot of good ideas,” he said. “I think she’ll successfully continue the work we’ve been doing and take it to new levels.”
While campaigning before the election, Weitkunat emphasized that she wanted to follow the same path Hutchinson and the city council members had set.
She plans to focus heavily on the role of businesses in the community because they are the underlying strength the city needs to rely on in order to move forward, she said.
“My goals aren’t different from Doug’s, and I plan to work as hard as he did to keep Fort Collins as one of the best places to live in America,” she said.
Weitkunat also plans to maintain and preserve parks, trails and open space, as well as restructure North and South College Avenue, improve the city’s transportation system and focus on using clean energy.
Promoting multiculturalism is another area of focus, which she plans to achieve by supporting all that Old Town has to offer and growing business in the area to increase the city’s economic stability.
“Old Town is such a unique place that is full of diversity. It’s such an artistic place full of different people and cultures,” she said. “It’s definitely an asset to Fort Collins.”
Lisa Poppaw, who was recently elected to serve a second term as city council member for District 2, said, like Hutchinson, that she has faith in Weitkunat’s work ethic and abilities.
“We’ve done so much good work over the past couple of years,” she said. “There is no way that is going to stop. We have a good team, and we’ll keep moving forward.”
Sue Pawlak, who lost to Poppaw in the election, agreed, saying Weitkunat knows the right direction Fort Collins needs to go in.
Pawlak is a personal friend of Weitkunat’s and ran for council member of District 2 because Weitkunat encouraged her to, she said.
“When Karen won and I didn’t, it was a bittersweet moment for me,” Pawlak said. “Of course I was excited for her, but I was a little disappointed that we wouldn’t be able to work together.”
She said she shares the same vision for the future of Fort Collins as Weitkunat and believes that vision will come true.
Like Weitkunat, Pawlak supports the idea of focusing on expanding business in Fort Collins.
“Bringing jobs here is important,” she said. “Too often I see graduates from CSU who want to stay in Fort Collins but have to move to another city to find a job. It shouldn’t be like that.”
Weitkunat has more than a sufficient amount of business experience, Pawlak said, because she owned a motel for 23 years on North College Avenue.
She currently serves as a member of both the Colorado State Housing Board and the Larimer County Planning Commission. She has also been a city council member for District 2 for eight years in the past.
“She’s more than qualified for the job,” Pawlak said. “Accusations questioning her work ethic just don’t make sense.”
Sidebar:
Karen Weitkunat has been a Fort Collins resident for 35 years.
“I moved here to build a life, a home and a future,” she said.
She owned a motel located on North College Avenue for 23 years, which she said taught her all about the city of Fort Collins because her job was essentially to sell the city to her customers.
“I just thought it was a natural fit for me to run for mayor and be the public face of the community,” she said.
Weitkunat won the mayoral election on April 7 with 45 percent of the votes, triumphing over her fellow candidates, Rose Cunniff and Eric Sutherland.