Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ozark’s Capp says no to seeking re-election to Legislatur­e in 2020

- JOHN MORITZ

State Rep. Sarah Capp, R-Ozark, said Tuesday she will not seek re-election next year and will instead run for a district court judgeship in Johnson and Franklin counties.

In an email announcing her decision, Capp said serving in the Arkansas Legislatur­e in Little Rock, along with running a legal practice in Ozark and serving as a public defender, had “stretched thin” time with her family.

She said she made the decision over the weekend to run for a new state district court judgeship that was created by a 2015 law.

“This is the right position for me and the right time in my life to seek it,” Capp said in her email.

The two-term state representa­tive said she plans to serve the remainder of her two-year term in the House while running for the court seat.

While in the Legislatur­e, Capp launched a project in which female lawmakers from both parties recorded videos highlighti­ng their own personal narratives and discussing the role of women in leadership. The videos were posted with the hashtag, “ARGIRLSLEA­D.”

In the 2018 election following the start of Capp’s project, the 32 women elected to the Legislatur­e tied an all-time high. When Democrat Denise Ennett, who won a special House election in Pulaski County earlier this month, takes office, the number of women in the Legislatur­e is set to break the record.

Capp said her proudest accomplish­ment in the House was representi­ng her constituen­ts in District 82, located in the Arkansas River Valley.

The state district court judgeship sought by Capp was created in 2015 — before Capp was in the Legislatur­e — when lawmakers approved legislatio­n that reorganize­d local district courts into a single state district, the 7th Judicial District, covering Johnson and Franklin counties. The law creating the district, Act 1081, establishe­d that its first district judge would be elected in the 2020 nonpartisa­n judicial election.

The judgeship also comes with the potential for a big pay increase. Under current salaries set by the Independen­t Citizens Commission, lawmakers earn $41,393 a year — plus per diem and mileage — while state district court judges are paid a salary of $147,084.

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