Election 2014: Krebs earns decisive win in sheriff’s race

In a first-ever bid for public office, deputy Ron Krebs grabbed an insurmountable lead in a hotly contested 2014 sheriff's race. Krebs, an eight-year veteran of the force and former deputy guild president, collected 3,372 votes of 5,244 ballots tallied on election night, earning 64 percent of the Nov. 4 early election returns.

Elections are often about change.

San Juan County voters demonstrated an eagerness for it, in the administration of their Sheriff’s office.

In a first-ever bid for public office, deputy Ron Krebs grabbed an insurmountable lead in a hotly contested 2014 sheriff’s race. Krebs, an eight-year veteran of the force and former deputy guild president, collected 3,372 votes of 5,244 ballots tallied on election night, earning 64 percent of the Nov. 4 early election returns.

The election night ballot count equals a voter-turnout of roughly 47 percent of 11,985 registered voters. An estimated 2,000 ballots will be tallied over the next several days, according to the county Elections department.

The ballots yet to be counted are not expected to change the outcome of the sheriff’s race, according to Auditor Milene Henley.

“It’s an unbeatable lead,” she said.

For first-term incumbent Rob Nou, the election night results signal a reversal of fortune in four years time. In 2010, Nou drew 66 percent of the vote to become the county’s first new sheriff in more than two decades on the heels of that landslide victory at the ballot box.

Rob NouFour years later, Krebs made leadership and communication, or the lack of it, the centerpiece of his campaign. He vowed to mend and to restore lines of communication within the department and with other agencies that regularly deal with the sheriff’s office. He pledged to create a stronger bond between the department and the public it serves as well.

The department’s rank-and-file rallied around their fellow deputy’s run for office, with the guild backing the Krebs campaign in an unprecedented and near unanimous endorsement of his election bid.

The sheriff oversees a department of about 35 employees and a yearly budget of $4.9 million, including $2.7 million for department operations, $1 million for dispatch, $800,00 for Emergency Management and nearly $400,000 for the jail. At full staffing, the department consists of 21 deputies, detectives and field corrections officers, nine dispatch employees, and four other employees.

An elected, non-partisan position, the sheriff earns an annual salary of $103,595.

As a first-term incumbent, Nou came into the campaign with a record to run on, or against, but also carrying a long list of law enforcement credentials as well. A graduate of the FBI academy, he joined the sheriff’s department as a Lopez-Island based deputy in 2008 and with 33 years of law enforcement experience in tow, including four years as police chief in Burns, Ore., and long tenure as an administrative sergeant in Oregon’s Yamhill County.