Ernest N. Sochin (incumbent)
• Age: 76
• Occupation: Sales manager at Master Distributors, a national electronics distribution company.
• Education: Associate’s degree in electronic engineering, Wentworth Institute of Technology, Boston.
• Other: Former president of Whispering Pines Civic Association.
Ed Wolmers
• Age: 50
• Occupation: Owner of American Lenders Service Company of Miami, a towing and recovery company.
• Education: Associate’s degree in electronics engineering, National Education Center.
• Other: Member of original Cutler Bay charter committee and Cutler Bay charter revision committee.
Cutler Bay Vice Mayor Ernie Sochin faces a challenge from activist Ed Wolmers in the town’s Nov. 6 election.
The vice mayor’s race will be the only one on the town ballot. Council member Sue Ellen Loyzelle was automatically reelected because no one ran against her. The other three council seats don’t expire until 2014.
The vice mayor’s salary is $604.67 per month.
Sochin, 76, is a sales manager at Master Distributors, a national electronics distribution company. He has served on the Town Council since Cutler Bay incorporated in 2006. He represented Seat 2 on the council until 2008, when he became vice mayor. If he is reelected, he will have to leave the council when his term expires in 2016 because of term limits.
Wolmers, 50, a Cutler Bay resident since 1997, owns a franchise of a national towing and recovery business called American Lenders Service Co. of Miami. Although he was against incorporation, he is an active community member who served on the original town charter committee during incorporation and on the charter revision commission from late 2011 to mid-2012.
This is not Wolmers’ first campaign for a seat on the Town Council. In 2010 he ran against current mayor Ed MacDougall and in 2006 he ran for a seat on the council after incorporation.
In his bid for reelection, Sochin said the most important issues are education and what he calls “new urbanism.” To him, this means integrating more stores and recreational facilities into residential areas, specifically along Old Cutler Road.
“I love the idea of people being able to live and play and work in their own hometown without having to drive away,” Sochin said.
He also plans to get community businesses, such as the local Mercedes dealership, involved with high school students to offer apprenticeships for those willing to learn a trade.
“There are jobs but not people prepared to fill them,” Sochin said.
Wolmers said he wants to improve transparency and communication between the Town Council and the community.
“The council has the responsibility to respond to the community,” he said. “What can I do differently? Honestly, just stand up and fight for the people.”
Wolmers said he is running against Sochin because he believes he can play a more active role on the council.
“In the last year, I felt that he’s been asleep at the wheel,” Wolmers said. “He has not been 100 percent awake and fought for the people.”
He said he would also make it a priority to prevent bickering amongst council members and maintain decorum at meetings.
Background checks revealed little of note for either candidate, except Wolmers filed for bankruptcy protection in 1999 and was discharged three months later. Wolmers said the bankruptcy came after a long struggle with finances that were sparked by a 1991 boating accident that claimed the lives of his daughter and niece, both 4, and his 28-year-old brother.
Financial reports show that Sochin has raised $10,736 in contributions, $5,000 of which he loaned himself. Wolmers has raised $300, $200 of which he loaned himself.
Wolmers said he is not seeking contributions from residents due to the state of the economy.
“People are hurting right now,” he said.
A series of amendments to the town charter — the town’s constitution — have been proposed by the town’s Charter Revision Commission and will be included on the Nov. 6 ballot. Voters will be asked whether to:
Cutler Bay residents must choose a vice mayor and decide on more than a dozen changes to the Town Charter.
Council members cancelled plans for a tax increase, opting to spend more of the town’s savings instead.
Ten years ago, residents voted to incorporate the village of Palmetto Bay. Many positive changes have occurred, including improved quality of life, the sixth-lowest tax rate in Miami-Dade County, a AA bond rating and a $9 million reserve fund. However, it is election time and a new, politically motivated committee is creating an ugly atmosphere.