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Thank you for responding to this questionnaire, which is for use by Statesman Journal
Editorial Board members in evaluating candidates for potential endorsements. Your
answers also will be shared with reporters, may be published in the print newspaper and
will be posted on StatesmanJournal.com.
Deadline: Please return the questionnaire by 9 a.m. Monday, Sept. 13. Earlier is even
better. E-mail it to: dhughes@StatesmanJournal.com.
Age: 63
(We want to be accurate. So if you have a birthday between now and the election, please
indicate when your birthday is so that we can get your age right.)
Please list all public offices to which you’ve been elected, and when:
Monmouth City Council, 1980’s
Polk County Fire District #1 (First Board Chair)
Please list any unsuccessful candidacies for public office, and when:
State Representative, HD 23 2004
How the public can reach your campaign (remember that this information will be public):
Fax: 503-623-2764
How much will your general election campaign cost? (Please be specific about your
campaign budget, not “as much as we can raise.”) Budgeted at $45,000
Who are your top campaign contributors/lenders? (Please list at least the current top five
and their total dollar amounts.)
Oregon Healthcare Assn. $2500
Nike $2000
Oregon Med. Assn. $1500
Oregon Loggers $1500
Pacific Source $1500
Who are your key political advisers? (Please identify at least your top three.)
Rick Thomas
Jonathan Thompson
Key endorsements you’ve received:
Oregon Seed Council
Oregon Farm Bureau Federation
Oregon Small Business Association
AG-PAC
Oregon AFSCME Council 75
Associated Oregon Industries
Oregon Nurses Association
Oregon Forest Industries Council
Oregon State Police Officers
Oregon Family Farm Assn.
Assoc. of Oregon Loggers
For each of the following questions, please limit your answer to about 75 words.
1. Have you ever been convicted of a crime, been disciplined by a professional licensing
board/organization or had an ethics violation filed against you? If so, please give the
details. No
2. Have you ever filed for bankruptcy, been delinquent on your taxes or other major
accounts, or been sued personally or professionally? If so, please give the details.
No
4. What specific steps will you take to make government more open and accessible to the
public?
5. Why should people vote for you? What separates you from your opponent(s)?
I have a record of working across party lines for my district and sponsoring bills that
create jobs. I know nothing about my opponent.
6. What specific steps would you advocate to improve Oregon’s economy and create
jobs?
Putting our natural resources back in the forefront to create renewable energy and family
wage jobs. I have sponsored bi-partisan legislation to turn forest biomass into green
power. The bill will create jobs for loggers, truck drivers and mill workers.
7. What changes, if any, would you advocate in the tax provisions created by Measures
66/67?
I would repeal 66 and 67 because they have failed — having some of the highest
marginal income tax rates in the country is not a good way to attract family wage jobs to
Oregon.
8. What specific revenue changes, if any, would you advocate to balance the 2011-13
budget?
Control state spending and live within our means. We will have more general fund
revenue in the upcoming biennium that we do in the current budget. We have no
business asking struggling Oregon families to send more money to Salem.
9. What specific spending reductions, if any, would you advocate to balance the 2011-13
budget?
Across the board reductions in middle management positions while protecting the line
employees that directly serve the public.
10. Which of Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s “resetting government” proposals do you support?
They are all worthy of study and should be considered by the legislature. The Governor
correctly states that 3 of every 4 general fund dollars go to employee compensation. We
must engage state workers in any solution but we cannot balance this budget without
changes to the state’s compensation structure or the number of employees.
11. What changes, if any, would you advocate in the structure, scope or role of state
government?
12. What changes, if any, do you favor making in state employee compensation? Why?
Employee compensation seems to be relatively in line but we need to reduce the number
of middle management employees. Employees should be focused on serving the public
not pushing paper.
They are worthy of study. I oppose increased state mandates on local school districts and
we should make sure our education dollars are getting to the classroom where they do the
most good for our children.
14. What “social issues,” if any, should the 2011 Legislature address?
The 2011 legislature needs to focus on control of state spending and putting Oregonians
back to work.
15. How should the Legislature and state government respond to illegal immigration?
16. What are the three most important issues you would address if elected? How? (Up to
75 words for each issue.)
A. Jobs – we must get our manufacturing and natural resource industries moving again.
B. State spending – we must live within our means. We cannot expect strong employers
to be built in a place with an unstable state fiscal picture.
Until we get Oregon’s economy back on track that should be the only major issue we deal
with.
18. Any skeletons in your closet or other potentially embarrassing information that you
want to disclose before it comes up in the campaign? No
Thank you for completing this questionnaire and returning it by 9 a.m. Monday, Sept. 13 by e-mail to
dhughes@StatesmanJournal.com