POCATELLO — A Democratic challenger is running against an incumbent Republican state representative for legislative District 28, Seat B.
The seat has a two-year term. District 28 encompasses parts of Pocatello and Chubbuck and Bannock, Power and Franklin counties.
Dan Garner currently holds the seat. Details about his campaign are available here.
Jayson Meline is running to replace him. Garner did not provide responses to EastIdahoNews.com.
EastIdahoNews.com sent the same eight questions to each county candidate. Their responses, listed below, were required to be 250 words or less. EastIdahoNews.com is publishing the answers in their entirety, without any grammatical or style editing.
The general election is Nov. 5.
Meline: I am a father, grandfather, uncle, and son in a great family. I completed my education in Pocatello School District 25, Brigham Young University-Provo, Monterey Institute of International Studies, Arizona State University, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico. My educational background consisted of finance, international relations, judicial interpretation-translation, forensic linguistics, public administration. I have worked for corporations, in government, the non profit sector, and small business. At present, I work in the insurance industry. I have never sought or held public office.
Meline: My platform is to be a listener first to those in my district with an open and independent mindset; and less ideology to build constructive consensus across various interests.
I support the legislature’s role to effectively manage and be true stewards over growth including resources to preserve Idaho’s autonomy regarding management of water resources.
I want the legislature to preserve; not infringe upon local control whether it be libraries, housing, managing growth.
I will advocate for education, particularly for parents with special needs children and the schools’ ability to meet their IEP needs.
Meline: Overall, inflation combined with population growth to include affordable housing over recent years and the ability to preserve a rural way of life they can sustain as well as provide education in a time of accelerated disruption and change that best prepares their children.
There are conflicts on land use with local government councils and planning & zoning commissions that affects private property rights, environmental impact, and population density. There are questions on land ownership, acquisition by out-of-state legal entities and what their intentions are with the land they are acquiring.
Meline: Yes. Too many to count due to fanaticism, zealotry, and ideology within the legislature.
How would you work to correct these errors?
I would apply less polarizing ideology in setting the legislature’s priorities and approaches to the issues we face.
The infamous library bill that included private right of action violated local control. The law demonstrates lack of trust of local communities and the individual to address concerns regarding materials from patrons. It encourages litigation with associated costs as opposed to mediated solutions at the local level. In the end it was an approved solution looking for a problem. A perfect example of zealous ideology being applied as opposed to balance and practicality. The law needs repealed.
Meline: Education will always be a constant investment. Vocational rehabilitation needs a strong review and potential increase given the reported 4.5 million shortfall reported at the end of the legislative session.
There can always be opportunity for cuts and savings in a budget regardless of revenue projections or departments. Legislative oversight over State budgets across departments and agencies with an expectation of gaining at least 10% operational efficiency annually can go a long way to limiting spending even with inflation or for a growing State such as Idaho
Meline: I support the initiative. There is nothing in either the State or US Constitution that requires membership in a party to vote.
The right of political association is not greater than the right of the individual to vote regardless of their party membership, or decision to be non-affiliated.
We need greater and open competition where the voters truly pick the candidates and parties; not the parties and candidates picking who they want as voters under closed primaries.
Good and balanced representation comes from more participation and constructive competition from a greater pool of candidates voters can choose in an open format, not a closed one.
Meline: In terms of ISP being trained on signs of human smuggling and trafficking interdiction combined with the ancillary issue of effective narcotics trafficking, I see that as productive use of resources to help ISP be more effective.
However, I do view sending the ISP did nothing to bolster security at the southern border and served more as political symbolism to appease a specific ideology with the governor’s own party than tacit protection of the border.
Immigration, illegal or legal, has multi-faceted impact in District 28. Many employers rely upon migrant labor to operate industry with no viable means to obtain in a timely, cost effective, and efficient manner H1A/H1B visas for their workers based on limited cuotas set at the federal level.
Many rural communities throughout District 28 have maintained populations in large part due to migrants, both legal and illegal, that have started businesses and raised families over a long period of time in rural areas of District 28.
Schools can be impacted with limited to non-proficient learners of the English language. Fortunately, many school districts within District 28 have well established bilingual programs incorporated into their schools to enhance learning; that do not create an impediment for all learners.
There is a consensus within migrant populations as well as the general population to follow the law, including immigration. However, given the federal government’s inability to respond in a comprehensive way to immigration, there is a tremendous amount of contradiction everyone can see within District 28 in terms of illegal immigration as far as its impact and potential solutions.
Meline: The deadline set by Governor Little for irrigation and water districts is coming up right at the time of the election. It will be interesting to see what the stakeholders with the Department of Water Resources propose. The legislature will want to give all attention to the outcome of their negotations over the last several months in forming plans of action within the role of the legislature and be prepared with appropriation and needed legislation to support hopefully a consensus driven solution. One issue that needs addressed is not determining curtailment after crops are planted to prevent the issues this past spring with strategic long term approaches driven by objective data not political ideology.
The post Democrat Jayson Meline running against incumbent Republican Dan Garner to represent Legislative District 28 appeared first on East Idaho News.
Can’t. Stop. Dancing. | Image: Wonderwheel Recordings Shout out to subscriber N_Gorski for today's pick.…
Many Chichester residents carved out their whole Saturday to participate in a marathon-length town meeting,…
Nathan Fillion’s big Firefly tease has been revealed as a new animated series set between…
He might have realized he’s about to lose a lot of money. | Image: Cath…
If you've got strong creative instincts, the ability to authentically portray emotion, and are capable…
Meta has confirmed it will permanently remove end-to-end encryption (E2EE) support from Instagram direct messages,…
This website uses cookies.