Chattanooga Times Free Press

GIVE GARDENHIRE THIRD SENATE TERM

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If we could clone a citizen-legislator running for the Tennessee state Senate in this election year, it would be Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanoog­a, who is vying for a third term.

The Lookout Valley lawmaker, who is retired from a career as a financial consultant, spends his time locally and in Nashville trying to solve conundrums for his constituen­ts and his fellow Tennessean­s.

“I like to fix problems,” Gardenhire says.

Most visible of those is the nearly $1 billion he helped secure through the Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion for the current local work on Interstate­s 75 and 27, and on Highway 27. But his work goes on behind the scenes in projects such as helping obtain the land to build a new stadium for Howard School and publicly in helping pass a bill for additional bus safety measures after the tragic bus crash that killed six Woodmore Elementary School students in 2016.

Gardenhire doesn’t shy away from controvers­ial issues, either, gaining in-state tuition rates for children of undocument­ed immigrants who were born in the country. And while a strong advocate for school choice, he voted against Gov. Bill Lee’s 2019 educationa­l savings account bill, believing it was not a good measure for the state.

He’s also worked as a member of the Joint Committee on Pensions and Insurance to keep the Tennessee Consolidat­ed Retirement System strong and fought to maintain pensions for Erlanger employees when they were threatened several years ago.

If re-elected, Gardenhire wants to work on legislatio­n he and state Rep. Mike Carter began on protocols around transporti­ng patients with mental illnesses, and on definitive­ly defining who is a teacher in order that classroom teachers receive raises legislator­s intend they should get.

His opponent is Chattanoog­a assistant police chief Glenn Scruggs, who says the senator is “not very responsive” and asserts the 2015 guns-in-public parks bill he voted for is “bad practice.”

The lifelong Chattanoog­an said he would work to have public schools funded more equitably and would push for campaign finance reform because political action committees (PACs) leave the impression a candidate is open to influence.

We believe Scruggs, though earnest in his desire to serve, was given some bad advice in suggesting in fundraisin­g emails that Gardenhire was running a “dog whistle” campaign. To impugn an upright candidate with such a charge in such a volatile election year with no evidence is not the way to win friends and influence voters.

The senator, in fact, has spent his two terms working cross-culturally in trying to achieve results for all parts of his community.

We heartily recommend Gardenhire’s re-election.

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