Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House District 67 candidates prioritize crime, education

- STEPHEN SIMPSON

Democrat Jannie Cotton is hoping her message of mental health support and bipartisan­ship will help her unseat Republican Karilyn Brown for the state House District 67 race in the Nov. 8 general election.

Brown says her engagement in the community and track record representi­ng the district will help her fend off the challenge.

Brown is serving her fourth term in the Arkansas House and has previously served as a justice of the peace in Pulaski County.

Early voting begins Oct. 24.

House District 67 encompasse­s large parts of Jacksonvil­le and Sherwood after redistrict­ing removed stretches of North Little Rock from the district.

All 100 House districts were redrawn last year after the 2020 U.S. census. Some neighborho­ods previously represente­d by Brown were moved into other districts, while other neighborho­ods moved into the reconfigur­ed District 67.

Both candidates believe the redistrict­ing will help their chances.

“I was nervous about redistrict­ing at first because you hear all the stories about gerrymande­ring and those type of things, but when I have been out there and saw it with my own eyes I think it helps me,” Cotton said. “I am meeting people who knew me when I was providing mental health and substance abuse services, and they were excited to see I was running. I think we have a more captive audience with redistrict­ing.”

Brown, 72, said with redistrict­ing her new footprint includes voters and neighborho­ods in Jacksonvil­le that she needed to become acquainted with.

“Fortunatel­y for me, I did graduate from Jacksonvil­le High School, and I belong to the Jacksonvil­le Chamber of Commerce and still attend church, do business, and have family in Jacksonvil­le, so I have maintained a bond with Jacksonvil­le over the years,” she said. “I have lived in Sherwood for 37 years and raised my son here, so I’m encouraged to support the communitie­s I have been most engaged in during my life.”

Cotton is a retired CEO for a mental health organizati­on and is currently the chairperso­n of the Delta Presents Outreach Foundation, a nonprofit serving youth throughout Pulaski County and surroundin­g areas.

Brown is a technical writer and former financial adviser who was elected in 2015. She serves on the Legislativ­e Joint Auditing Committee, the House Insurance and Commerce Committee, the House Education Committee and the Joint Committee on Advanced Communicat­ions and Informatio­n Technology.

Cotton said she is running because throughout her career she witnessed too many people lacking services because of funding cuts.

“One of the reasons I am running is because those without a voice sometimes are not heard, or people don’t seek out their opinions, especially those who are less fortunate or feel like their vote doesn’t matter, and I want to be the one who represents them,” she said.

She said one of the top things she wants to work on is mental health services across the state.

“I want to get mental health services to our seniors and veterans,” she said. “I feel like they have paid their dues to society and we owe them. I don’t

want people to have to decide between putting food on the table or their mental health.”

Brown said that during her tenure as state representa­tive, she has continued to be a voice for the people.

“No candidate can be an expert on every topic that comes before the Legislatur­e; however, I have the experience and voting record that reflects the values of my district,” she said.

She said she is proponent of respecting parental rights and protecting the family.

“We are seeing some radical challenges to the family structure, parental rights, and protecting the innocence of our youngest and most vulnerable — challenges we have not faced in this country or throughout the history of Western civilizati­on,” she said.

CRIME

Both candidates said reducing crime would be a top priority.

“We must do everything we can to support our law enforcemen­t officers, and, although we were able to provide our law enforcemen­t officers with a $5,000 bonus to demonstrat­e our state’s appreciati­on for their sacrifices, we need to do much more to back the blue,” Brown said. “We need to keep criminals off the street.”

She said prison overcrowdi­ng, lack of educationa­l achievemen­t and inadequate job opportunit­ies for young people are contributi­ng to the level of crime on the streets.

“Crime is a big problem that must be addressed on many fronts,” she said.

Cotton said to address the crime problem around the state there must be more dialogue.

“We need to come up with plans to engage people,” she said. “It goes back to mental health and the mindset of others. When you feel like you are being talked down to or in a place of hopelessne­ss where you can’t feed your family, then you are going to do desperate things.”

She said bringing more people to the table when it comes to policy decisions can help avoid some of the unintended consequenc­es that can lead to crime.

“You can’t have legislator­s and leaders in charge and making decisions without including the people that it will affect,” she said. “I have told legislator­s before when I was a CEO that you don’t want to wait until someone comes to you door to rob you or blow out your tire, but help them before they get to that state of mind.”

EDUCATION

Cotton said education also needs to be a top priority. This starts with ensuring teachers get a raise, she said.

“Anybody that helps others — and this includes teachers, mental health profession­als, those who serve children, the less fortunate or the disabled — needs to get paid,” she said. “They already work hard, and I think they should be paid their worth.”

Brown said she has voiced her support for and voted for the House Education Committee proposal to raise all teacher salaries by $4,000, which would be provided for in the upcoming legislativ­e session.

“As the Legislatur­e has raised teacher salaries in every session since 2015, I believe we will continue to do so,” she said.

She said she favors all options when it comes to school choice because she believes the state should place their focus on students, not institutio­ns.

“We must open the doors to opportunit­y for all students,” she said. “Some students enjoy school choice because their parents can afford private or parochial schools for their children, and some parents make tremendous sacrifices to send their children to receive a private education. Other families

may move to communitie­s where the public schools are safer and have a better track record. All our schools need to provide a good education for all of our students, and every parent should have the same education opportunit­ies for their children no matter their ZIP code.”

Cotton said she is a product of public schools but believes parents have the right to choose their child’s education.

“I believe in public schools, but I also have seen where lack of funding or whatever reason has caused parents to want their children in other schools,” she said. “As a parent and a grandparen­t, if I feel like my children’s needs are not being met I should have a choice. I would rather it be public schools, but I would want public schools to be funded and have quality of care for students so families don’t have to choose another alternativ­e.”

ABORTION

Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge implemente­d earlier this year a 2019 “trigger law” that bans abortions in Arkansas, except to save the life of the mother in a medical emergency, after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion across the nation.

Act 180 of 2019 was crafted to take effect when the state attorney general certified that Roe had been overturned, returning to the state the authority to prohibit abortion.

Brown said she is pro-life from conception to natural death.

“I voted for the current law, and I do not wish to change it,” she said.

Cotton called the abortion ban inhumane.

“I am real upset because it’s so restrictiv­e,” she said. “If someone is raped or there is an instance of incest, we are telling them to just live with it. I think that is not right.”

MEDICAID EXPANSION

The state’s Medicaid expansion program ARHOME — which stands for Arkansas Health and Opportunit­y for Me — took effect this year. It replaced Arkansas Works and will end Dec. 31, 2026, under a waiver approved by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Cotton said she wants to see the program extended and expanded.

“I have seen children get more assistance because of this program,” she said. “I think it should always be an option. At some stage of your life, you are going to need some type of help even during your best of days. Something traumatic can happen in your life where you need immediate care or assistance and that help should be available.”

Brown said any changes to the program require careful study to avoid unintended consequenc­es.

“I’m not prepared to make any sweeping changes at this time, but I’m sure the system has room for improvemen­t,” she said. “I am currently on a task force to study the growing mental health problems in Arkansas. One problem facing low-income Arkansans is that the mental health reimbursem­ent rate is causing providers to turn away these patients, and many providers are moving to private practice.”

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