Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

4 hopefuls seek council seat

- LAURINDA JOENKS Laurinda Joenks can be reached by email at joenks@nwaonline.com or on Twitter @NWALaurind­a.

SPRINGDALE — The four candidates for City Council Ward 3, Position 1 want leaders to help the city’s underserve­d population­s.

Brian Powell currently holds the council seat and wants to keep it. His opponents are Rick Culver, Alice Gachuzo-Colin and Mike Stevens.

City Council members earn $12,000 a year and serve fouryear terms. Council members must live in their wards but are elected at large, meaning everyone in the city votes for each council position.

The election, which is nonpartisa­n for municipal candidates, will be Nov. 8. Early voting begins Oct. 24.

A candidate in a municipal election with more than two challenger­s can win outright with a majority, which is 50% plus one vote. A candidate also can win with 40% of the vote by being ahead of the second-place finisher by at least 20%. Otherwise, the two top vote-getters compete in a runoff. The runoff election is Dec. 6.

“One of the main reasons I’m running is I truly believe people who sit on the council should be representa­tive of their community,” said Gachuzo-Colin, who is Black. “They should speak for the community when making decisions, shaping and moving informatio­n and infrastruc­ture for the residents.”

Springdale has 2,800 Black residents, according to the latest census estimates. That’s 3.2% of the city’s total population of 87,411.

Powell, Culver and Stevens listed infrastruc­ture, affordable housing and support of small business as issues the city faces.

Stevens said his eyes opened when he participat­ed in the Springdale Chamber of Commerce’s Leadership Springdale program.

“I learned things about Springdale that I never knew — and I’ve lived here my whole life,” he said. “I’m seeing the need. We have people wallowing in poverty. We need to step up and help the city grow and small businesses thrive.”

Culver realizes the extra money in the budget from the federal American Rescue Plan is a one-time bonus.

“Covid is not going to be an ongoing stream of money, and we can’t use it as a steady stream of income,” Culver said. “The pandemic was a lean time. The money was like a shot in the arm.”

Powell is planning for the possibilit­y of an economic downturn.

“We’ve gone through a pandemic, inflation and now a potential recession,” he said. “The mayor, the planning department, the council, we all are united in seeing Springdale thrive.”

As a council member, Powell said he will take a close look at the 2023 proposed budget over the next couple of weeks as city leaders work to pass it.

Culver knows the city has to stay ahead of infrastruc­ture needs — streets, water lines and sewer lines — to manage growth. He added the city needs to develop better pay scales to attract and retain public safety officials.

Stevens plans to move the city forward in a positive way. He wants a good budget, with funds dedicated to public safety. And he doesn’t want the city to raise taxes to repay money earned from bond issues.

“And the city needs to encourage businesses to be part of the community,” Stevens said.

“We need to stop focusing on beautiful,” Gachuzo-Colin said. “The city’s got to thrive to be successful.”

“But mostly Springdale has to get out of this small-town mentality,” she continued. “And we need to act like we have some sense.”

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