Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Dinniman planning to form PAC

- By Jen Samuel jsamuel@dailylocal.com @jenpoetess on Twitter

WEST CHESTER » The ability for a person to create transforma­tive change for a better community is everyone’s responsibi­lity.

That’s according to retiring state Sen. Andy Dinniman, D19th, of West Whiteland. He did not run for reelection in 2020. His current term in the State Senate ends in December.

“I am not retiring from my effort to create change,” Dinniman said.

The senator told the Daily Local News that he plans to create change after retiring from the State Senate as an advocate for “transforma­tive” education.

Dinniman said he is forming a Political Action Committee (super PAC) for education advocacy. He said he plans to officially launch the PAC this winter beginning in December. His term in the senate

ends Monday.

“One has a responsibi­lity, all of one’s life, to make things better for your community,” Dinniman said.

It will be a nonpartisa­n PAC, Dinniman said.

Dinniman has served in government as an elected official for more than 30 years. He spent 14 years as a Chester County Commission­er prior to becoming an elected state senator in 2006.

Further, Dinniman has launched a weekly podcast on education to continue his advocacy work. It is available on Spotify and via other digital platforms.

He said the hope is for the issues PAC to advance solutions in education for students in Pennsylvan­ia. The PAC will work together to collaborat­e on solutions and present its findings to the State Legislatur­e and the governor.

“Education today is facing the worst crisis in over 100 years,” Dinniman said. “Many students, especially in poorer areas, just are not learning online.”

These students were already vulnerable prior to the pandemic and “we have increased their vulnerabil­ity,” he said, noting many students, living in poverty, have not been in a classroom setting since March.

“There’s always things to make things better,” he said. “You’re talking about a generation of students.”

Civil service

While reflecting on his tenure in the State Senate, Dinniman said he’s received more than 200 thank-you letters from constituen­ts.

During his 15 years as a senator and 14 years as a county commission­er from 1992 until 2004, Dinniman has received more than 80 awards and recognitio­ns from community, regional, state and national organizati­ons.

In 2020, some of his most recent honors include winning the Citizen of the Year from the Chester County Chamber of Business and Industry and awards from the Humane Society, the Chester County Associatio­n of Township Officials (CATO), the Chester County Developmen­t Council, and the Chester and Delaware County Farm Bureau, Main Line Mentoring, Movement Community Developmen­t Corporatio­n, the Chester County Chamber of Commerce and the Pennsylvan­ia Horse Breeders Associatio­n.

Additional honors include winning the President’s Medal for Service from West Chester University in 2015 and the Elected State Official of the Year from Pennsylvan­ia Citizens for Better Libraries in 2007.

Recently, his Democratic colleagues in the State Senate recently gave him an award too, which reads:

“Thank you for your effective, compassion­ate and dedicated service to the Commonweal­th.”

When Dinniman began his career in the Pennsylvan­ia Senate after winning the 2006 special election senate race as a newcomer to the state legislatur­e, he became the first elected Democratic state senator to represent Chester County in Harrisburg since the 19th Century.

Dinniman, 75, won the special election 15 years ago to fill the vacancy created by the death of state Sen. Bob Thompson. He then won reelection on three more occasions over Republican challenger­s in 2008, 2012 and 2016.

In 2020, he announced his retirement instead of running for re-election as an incumbent senator again.

Dinniman began his political career in education as an elected official of the Downing Area School Board.

“There is no more right fundamenta­l to opportunit­y than a quality education,” Dinniman said, “and there are so many in Pennsylvan­ia who aren’t receiving it.”

The senator added, “Each one of us should never retire from our obligation­s to help one another.”

As a state legislator, Dinniman has advocated for seniors and small business enterprise­s and for equality of opportunit­y in education. He holds a doctorate degree in education from Penn State University.

“I wanted to stand up for those who couldn’t stand up for themselves,” Dinniman said while reflecting on his tenure in Harrisburg.

In 2006, the State Senate appointed Dinniman to its Senate Education Committee in Harrisburg where he will retire this winter as its minority chairperso­n.

Transforma­tive change

“We are in the fastest era of change in all of human history,” Dinniman told the

Daily Local News back in July. “Bar none.”

The senator said the combinatio­n of change and chaos can either create the total breakdown of the society, an inability to function, or it can be a catalyst for a transforma­tive renaissanc­e that creates something good.

“Having talked about change and globalizat­ion all these years, having seen the destructio­n that social media has brought about, understand that we are also entering a new age of robotics and artificial intelligen­ce, our educationa­l system is going to have to produce new skills for people,” he said. “This is going to happen very quickly.”

Dinniman said, “Change comes about in a combinatio­n of chaos and a degree of hope. You have to have hope. What we need is elected officials who are not afraid of change but also give people hope that you can persevere, in terms of change, and create a new society.”

 ?? SUMBITTED PHOTO ?? State Sen. Andy Dinniman, D-19th, of West Whiteland plans on launching a nonpartisa­n super PAC to advocate for education reform in Pennsylvan­ia upon his retirement from the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e on Nov. 30.
SUMBITTED PHOTO State Sen. Andy Dinniman, D-19th, of West Whiteland plans on launching a nonpartisa­n super PAC to advocate for education reform in Pennsylvan­ia upon his retirement from the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e on Nov. 30.

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