Siloam Springs Herald Leader

West Siloam Springs Mayor Elaine Carr plans to retire

- By Marc Hayot Staff Writer mhayot@nwadg.com Q

WEST SILOAM SPRINGS, Okla. — Mayor Elaine Carr announced Feb. 8 that she has decided not to seek reelection for the position of Ward Four trustee and mayor of West Siloam Springs.

Carr, who has served as Ward Four trustee since 1998 and as mayor since 2003, is the longest serving board member in Oklahoma, Carr said. Carr said she was stepping down after 23 years of service because it was time. Her last meeting will be March 15.

“I just thought it was time to spend time for me now,” Carr said.

West Siloam Springs’ town government runs as a board of trustees and the five board members pick the mayor and vice mayor every two years, Carr said. The town of West Siloam Springs has three positions up for election this year.

Ward Two and Ward Four trustees are up for election to four-year terms expiring in 2025, according to a press release from the Delaware County Board of Elections.

There also is a vacant position to fill the unexpired term of town clerk/treasurer expiring in 2023, the release states. Previous town Clerk/treasurer Carolyn Butts resigned in July of last year without giving a reason or notice.

No one has filed to run for Carr’s position or the position of town clerk/treasurer during the open filing period the week of Feb. 1, according to Crystal January, secretary of the Delaware

County Election Board Secretary. Since no one has filed for the position, the board will have to appoint a mayor and town clerk or call for a special election during the April town meeting in West Siloam Springs, Carr said.

Early years

Carr was born in 1960 in Ventura, Calif. Carr does not remember when she moved to Stilwell, Okla., but believes it was between 1961-1963. She graduated from Stilwell High School in 1979. Carr worked at Stilwell Foods Inc. while still in high school, working there two years, she said.

The same year Carr graduated from high school she went to work at Walmart. She stayed there for nine years. Carr met her future husband Rodney Carr around 1987 and married him a year later before moving to West Siloam Springs to help her husband with his night club, she said.

Around 1989 or 1990 the couple turned it into the Golden Cue Recreation Center. In 1997 Carr went to work for the post office and in 1998 her husband convinced her to run for the Ward Four seat.

Serving WSS

Carr did not talk about her experience as a trustee but said a lot about her time as mayor.

During her time as mayor, she helped bring in businesses like Dollar General, Godfather’s Pizza, La Hacienda and Love’s.

“I think she goes above and beyond trying to help everyone in the community,” said Code Enforcemen­t Officer Waylon Chandler. “She tries to help everyone and do good by the town.”

She helped ensure that town employees had benefits and her fellow trustees received payment for meetings. Current trustees make $50 per meeting, the vice mayor makes $75 per meeting and the mayor makes $150 per meeting, Carr said.

Carr also worked with the Cherokee Nation to help fund the town’s ambulance service and to get a new fire truck and worked with the state to widen U.S. Highway 412, she said. Under Carr’s watch, the Cherokee Nation also funded and dedicated a new water tower to West Siloam Springs.

During Carr’s tenure, she helped to move the town’s park from Pine Street to the lot adjacent to town hall and bring in natural gas to West Siloam Springs, she said.

Carr worked with the South Delaware County Regional Water Authority (SDCRWA) to ensure West Siloam Springs could have its own water service, Chandler said.

As a big supporter of West Siloam Springs’ police department, Carr helped ensure no officer would have to work a shift by themselves, according to Police Chief Larry Barnett.

When Barnett arrived 12 years earlier, only one officer was patrolling West Siloam Springs per shift, he said. Carr helped increase the budget so now two officers are on patrol at one time.

“She was really involved in the town,” Barnett said.

Carr also created a code enforcemen­t position for the town and brought a pound for animals to the town, Barnett said.

Approximat­ely two years ago, Carr helped Auto Flight raise money for veterans to visit Washington D.C.

Carr worked to increase sales tax for medical marijuana and online shopping as well as fighting to make sure the town did not lose the state’s grocery tax.

“A lot of people don’t understand sales tax is earmarked for different services,” Carr said.

One issue Carr did not get to solve was to secure a zip code for West Siloam Springs, she said. Depending on where a person lives in West Siloam Springs, a person’s address will either be in Colcord or Watts, Carr said.

Along with the issue of a zip code, she is also working on a grant to put in a walking trail for the town’s park.

Carr did want to thank many of the mayors, vice mayors and town clerks who helped educate her on what she needed to do to get the job done. Carr did not name anyone because she was afraid she would forget someone, she said.

During her tenure, Carr won Mayor of the Year in 2009 for a population under 5,000. In 2017, Carr was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame for City and Town Officials.

Carr wanted to remind anyone with a desire to run is that this is not an 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. job. She said there were times she received calls around 2 a.m.

Post service

After she wraps up her time as mayor, Carr intends to slow down a bit. She plans to continue working with the post office and will stay in the loop with various state contacts like State Rep. David Hardin (R-86) and State Sen. Kim David (R-18) as well as U.S. Rep. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) and report her findings to the board of trustees, she said.

This would not be an official position, just Carr working on the sidelines to help her town, she said. West Siloam Springs is also looking at creating a four-lane highway to Sallisaw, Okla.

Carr is also looking to take time for her hobbies like hiking, playing piano and working with arts and crafts.

Looking back, Carr said she enjoyed her time as mayor. She has worked with numerous mayors across the state as well as working with Siloam Springs. Carr also said she shook hands with former Vice President Mike Pence and former White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who recently announced she is running for governor in Arkansas.

“I really enjoyed it and I’ve met a lot of people,” Carr said.

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 ?? Herald-Leader file photo ?? Oklahoma State Rep. David Hardin (R-District 86), right, presents West Siloam Springs Mayor Elaine Carr, left, with a proclamati­on recognizin­g the city’s 50th anniversar­y during a celebratio­n in July of 2019.
Herald-Leader file photo Oklahoma State Rep. David Hardin (R-District 86), right, presents West Siloam Springs Mayor Elaine Carr, left, with a proclamati­on recognizin­g the city’s 50th anniversar­y during a celebratio­n in July of 2019.

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