Dayton Daily News

200 protest plan to sell aquifer water to Toledo-area suburbs

- By Tom Henry

A boisterous PIONEER — crowd of 200 people showed extreme displeasur­e Monday night with Pioneer Mayor Ed Kidston’s plan to sell Michindoh Aquifer water to Toledo-area suburbs, first with a protest outside the Pioneer Community Center and then inside it during the village’s monthly meeting.

The mayor, once most people had left, went so far as to describe the large group of attendees as an angry “mob,” saying he has no plans to stop his project.

His plan is to have his company, Artesian of Pioneer, sell Perrysburg, Maumee, Sylvania and other communitie­s between Lucas and Williams counties water it either draws from wells or pays farmers to do so. The aquifer in question serves several Ohio, Michigan and Indiana counties. It lies almost exclusivel­y beneath Williams County.

Dozens of people — some from Michigan and Indiana — implored Kidston, who has been in office the past 19 years, to end negotiatio­ns.

Many held signs that said things such as “Save Our Water,” “Greed is a Sin,” and “Mr. Kidston Needs to Stop.” One type of sign, held by several people, portrayed an image of Kidston’s face on a “Wanted” poster.

“How do we get subsidized for the natural resources that are about to be taken away from us?” asked Lee Clymer, a Williams County resident since 1940 and one of several speakers who addressed the mayor.

A resolution calling for an end to the project, passed by Bryan, West Unity, Edgerton, Edon and other communitie­s, died for a lack of a second. The motion was brought by Councilman Albert Kwader, who later in the meeting asked for Kidston’s resignatio­n. He declined. Similar resolution­s have failed not only in Pioneer but also Montpelier and Holiday City.

“Nobody shop in this town. Nobody buy anything,” an angry Josh Nichols, who has organized weekly rallies around Bryan’s Courthouse Square the past few Sundays, yelled on his way out of the building.

One Pioneer businessma­n, Jim Fee, owner of Jim’s Gym and Jim’s Barbershop, said during the meeting and during a follow-up interview that Kidston’s plan is hurting Pioneer’s wholesome image.

“This has cast a very dark cloud over our town,” Fee said. “People are confused and very scared.”

Chris Nafziger is a Pioneer resident who said he is trying to give Kidston the benefit of the doubt — and hear him out instead of becoming emotional.

He expressed concern about reports of harassment against the mayor and his family, but then chastised Kidston for refusing to let Dan Nicely of Fayette speak simply because Nicely hadn’t arrived in time to sign a sheet that was circulated before the meeting.

“I’m not as quick to bash you just because I think you have a dumb idea,” Nafziger said. “Don’t forget to listen to people who want to be heard.”

Kidston initially refused to take questions. But after most people left, he had a lot to say.

“Don’t be scared to death by a lot of people running around without facts,” he said. “Wait for the facts before you pass judgment on me and my family.”

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