
- photography / Troy Boman
The complex drama began five months ago when Walt Shubert, Ophir mayor of 20 years, announced he was going to retire with two years left on his term. Ed St. Clair took over as acting mayor for a three-week period before Shubert decided the town still needed him.
"If I can't retire, I sure as hell am not going to resign," Shubert said, of resuming his duties as mayor. "I'm not a quitter."
Then, in October, Shubert quit -- again.
This time he resigned in a show of solidarity with the Ophir Town Council after the Lt. Governor's Office declared the seven-member council too large for a town of Ophir's size. To ensure a fair election for a new, four-member council, the entire sitting council resigned en masse.
Shubert's saga came full circle on Nov. 6 when he was re-elected as mayor by a landslide -- taking 23 of 35 total votes.
Shubert said he's comforted knowing that people think he's doing a good job as mayor. He said another reason for his second resignation was that he needed to know the residents of Ophir still wanted him to be mayor.
"It's easy to get downhearted, because you can't please everybody," he said. "It's a real challenge."
Shubert has a home in Tooele, but said his heart is with his other home in Ophir.
"My house is in Tooele, but my home is in Ophir," he said.
In the past, Shubert said there have been as many as eight town council members in Ophir to increase the chances of having a quorum present during meetings -- a difficult proposition in a town where much of the population is part-timers.
When the town was informed its council was too big, it was too late to hold a primary, so candidates who wanted to be considered for a council position told their friends and neighbors. With no names on the general election ballot, everyone became a write-in candidate.
"All positions were placed as write-ins and you had to let it be known if you were willing to accept a position, and everybody that was elected did," Shubert said. "Nobody wrote someone in just for kicks."
But one of the council positions, a four-year-term seat, remains up in the air after Scott Degelbeck and Doug Tate tied with 18 votes.
"It's unique," Shubert said of the tie. "That doesn't happen very often."
The deadlock will be broken by luck at 4 p.m. today.
Tooele County Clerk Marilyn Gillette said it's up to Ophir to decide how they want to break the tie, but options include pulling someone's name out of a hat, rolling dice or flipping a coin.
Shubert said a coin flip sounds fairest to him.
St. Clair garnered the most votes for the four-year council position with 23. Robert Johnson was the top vote-getter in the two-year-term race, with Al Isi following narrowly behind -- 19 votes to 18.
Sarah Miley: swest@tooeletranscript.com


