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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

NORCO: Longtime county clerk retires, reflects on favorite moments

Marie Cunningham, Doris Lombardo and Frank Flisser are names you'll rarely see in the daily newspapers. But for decades, they have been some of the spokes that keep the wheel of Northampton County government turning. But after one year into Executive John Brown tenure, more than 120 of them will be gone.

Frank Flisser's last day was Dec. 19. He left the way he operated during his 37 years as county council's sole clerk. Quietly. No parties. On his final day, as the seconds ticked away, he had just four cardboard boxes to take home with him. Occasionally, the phone would ring, and he'd say good-bye to one of the many people he worked with over the years.

QYou were born and raised on Bethlehem's Southside, and grew up with troublemakers like District Attorney John Morganelli and Bethlehem Mayor Bob Donchez. Did that experience on the Southside help?

AMy father was the pastor of St. John's Lutheran Windish Church. For 31 years, I had the honor and privilege to live on Bethlehem's Southside. I learned true old world values from people who came to this country from Yugoslavia and Hungary. It gave me a good base for my value system.

Q Who were council's best sparring partners?

I'd have to say Bill Moran and Jim Hemstreet. They loved to spar with each other, were good at it, and each was iconic.

Q In all your years as clerk, is there any single meeting that stood out as the wildest and craziest of them all?

AI'd have to say the bond hearing in 2000, when a $110 million bond issue was approved at 2 a.m.

Q That's the meeting in which Ron Angle's name plate was stolen, and found later in a urinal. Now that you're leaving, will you admit you're the thief?

ANo (laughing), I think [Jim] Hickey did it.

Q. Although you serve at the pleasure of council, you lasted 37 years. What advice would you have for your successor?

Be honest. Treat everybody the same, including members of the public. Be open and direct.

Q Having seen a home rule form of government for 37 years, do you think it's time to go back to the commissioner form of government?

AMaybe a Charter Study Commission should be convened.