Todd Winters
Mayor of Gardner. The deciding figure on the Council vote.
Email Mayor WintersIn order. Each takes a few minutes.
A signed petition is a public record of opposition. It takes 30 seconds and gives the Council one more concrete data point.
Each card opens your email app with a short, neutral message already filled in. Edit a sentence so it sounds like you, then send. Two minutes per rep.
Mayor of Gardner. The deciding figure on the Council vote.
Email Mayor WintersMember of the City Council that votes on the rezoning.
Email Council Pres. BaldwinMember of the City Council that votes on the rezoning.
Email Council VP DeatonMember of the City Council that votes on the rezoning.
Email Council Member JohnsonMember of the City Council that votes on the rezoning.
Email Council Member McNeerMember of the City Council that votes on the rezoning.
Email Council Member WiehnYour County Commissioner if you live in unincorporated Johnson County. Cannot vote on Gardner zoning, but can speak publicly on impacts to county residents.
Find Commissioner contactFor the full list including the Planning Commission, see the Representatives page.
Public officials count seats. Showing up — even quietly — is one of the highest-impact things a resident can do.
More meetings are coming — May 15 (public meeting #2), May 26 (Planning Commission hearing), and June 15 (City Council vote). See the full timeline →