The Day

Candidates for EL, Salem House seat differ on tolls, more

Cheeseman, McKenney have distinct positions

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

Voters in East Lyme and Salem’s 37th House District have a distinct choice when they go to the polls next month to select a state representa­tive.

The incumbent, Republican Holly Cheeseman of East Lyme, is focused on improving the state’s business climate and looking to tax reform rather than relying on new revenue from tolls or the legalizati­on of marijuana. She said she prefers to see money allocated for road improvemen­ts than to further subsidize the state’s rail system.

Challenger Hugh McKenney, a Democrat from Salem, said he supports legalizing marijuana for recreation­al use — provided there are ways to keep it out of the hands of children — and installing tolls for tractor-trailers at the entrances to major highways, including interstate­s 95, 91, 395 and 84. McKenney also is in favor of legalizing sports betting. He agrees that roads need attention but said he supports improving the rail system.

Cheeseman, 63, is executive director of the Children’s Museum of Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t.

“If you have a vibrant economy, businesses (in order) to compete will have to pay higher wages and offer family leave,” Cheeseman said during an interview at The Day in late September.

Cheeseman said the state can’t continue to hemorrhage people and jobs. She said bills that were presented

in the General Assembly to raise the minimum wage to $15 and make Family and Medical Leave Insurance available to employees would have put employees and employers on the hook after state funding would run out in a couple of years.

“There is no such thing as a free lunch,” she said.

McKenney, 56, is a recently retired nuclear engineer who worked at the Dominion Millstone Nuclear Power Station for 20 years. He’s served on his town’s Planning and Zoning Commission for more than 10 years. He said he doesn’t want to raise the state’s income tax and is leery of increasing property taxes. He’s interested in a plan proposed by the Com-

mission on Economic Stability and Sustainabi­lity that would authorize regional councils of government to implement a program where municipali­ties could create local sales taxes of up to half of one percent.

“The lack of a constant revenue stream has been absolute murder on communitie­s,” McKenney said.

Cheeseman said during her first term she had a chance to “see how the sausage is made” in Hartford. She was elected in 2016 to fill the seat of 12-year-incumbent Ed Jutila, a Democrat. She served on the Finance, Revenue and Bonding; Energy and Technology; and Higher Education and Employment Advancemen­t committees.

Cheeseman said she worked in the energy committee and on the House floor to ensure that legislator­s allow the Dominion Millstone Nuclear Power Plant, one of the region’s top employers and supplier of about 50 percent of the state’s electricit­y, to compete in a zero-carbon energy auction in the coming years.

‘One-stop shopping’ bill

She said she was proud to have introduced a bill, which was signed into law, that sets up a website providing “onestop shopping” for students and their parents as they consider attending a state college or university. Modeled after a program in Texas and currently in the implementa­tion stage in Connecticu­t, the site will enable students and their parents to look at schools, compare their costs, programs and financial aid offerings and learn what they could expect to earn after graduation.

She said she is working with the Eastern Workforce Investment Board to create a workforce pipeline of well-trained employees.

Cheeseman will be celebrated at a Connecticu­t Coalition Against Domestic Violence breakfast next month for work she did on behalf of survivors of domestic violence. She was nominated by Safe Futures, the New London-based agency that provides support to domestic violence survivors in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t. She supported a law that will take effect on Jan. 1, 2019, that authorizes police to arrest only the primary aggressor in a domestic violence incident involving intimate partners.

Cheeseman said that during the past budget season she worked to restore Medicaid funding and rental rebates to elderly residents after spending time with residents of Niantic’s AHEPA housing. She said she supports making schools safer and that East Lyme would be applying for a share of the $10 million approved by the State Bonding Commission for hardening schools against violent intruders by installing security cameras and metal detectors. More crucial, though, is to improve the response to those with mental health issues, since a classmate is more likely to take his own life, Cheeseman said.

McKenney, who considers Cheeseman to be “on the far right,” said it would be important for legislator­s to engage in a collaborat­ive effect to create new revenue streams and reduce the state budget. He suggested the state might look at adding another tier to its pension system so that new employees would not increase the state’s unfunded pension burden.

He said there are efficienci­es that can be gained in state government, but that in general he does not endorse subcontrac­ting services out to the private sector. He said he supports gradual implementa­tion of the $15 an hour minimum wage.

“No one working 40 hours a week should have to live in poverty,” McKenney said. “That’s just wrong. A livable wage of $15 an hour is something we absolutely have to strive for.”

McKenney said family leave legislatio­n could be implemente­d under a collaborat­ive effort between the employer and the state. “I can tell you there are times in peoples’ lives where you absolutely have to be there for your family — for a spouse who’s sick, children who are critically ill, senior parents.”

He said the state needs to come up with a way to stop large out-of-state manufactur­ers and retailers from employing people on a part-time basis to avoid paying them benefits.

 ??  ?? Holly Cheeseman, Republican incumbent for 37th District State Representa­tive.
Holly Cheeseman, Republican incumbent for 37th District State Representa­tive.
 ??  ?? Hugh McKenney, Democratic candidate for 37th District State Representa­tive.
Hugh McKenney, Democratic candidate for 37th District State Representa­tive.

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