The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

State Rep. John-Michael Parker of Madison announces reelection bid

- By Sarah Page Kyrcz

MADISON — Democratic state Rep. John-Michael Parker has launched his reelection campaign for the 101st District House seat, representi­ng Madison and part of Durham.

Parker will challenge Republican John Rasimas, former deputy state auditor who officially launched his campaign April 1.

As Parker looks back on his first term, he is most proud of “being present, accessible and communicat­ive with my constituen­ts and really working on their behalf for a variety of issues,” he said.

Parker said this was extremely important “during the worst of the pandemic last year.”

“Our office fielded dozens and dozens of calls, working with constituen­ts on unemployme­nt, different insurance policies they were getting, access to care that was happening or not, whether it was in nursing homes with elderly family members and hospitals,” he said.

“Just so many small communityb­ased detailed work that I think is really the most important part of this job,” he said.

Parker, 33, graduated from Daniel Hand High School and Yale University.

From 2010-18 he lived in New York City before returning to his hometown. He is married to Joyce Gendler and is the executive director of Arts for Learning Connecticu­t.

He talked about helping to successful­ly secure state funds for community projects including $770,000 for reconstruc­tion at Madison’s Garvin Point, “a really critical coastal resiliency project”; $145,000 for renovation of Durham Library; $150,000 for Madison’s American Legion Post 79 renovation; and $4 million for the conversion of the Madison’s former Academy School into a new community center.

“These roughly $5 million bonding projects, for the community, is just a really big win, especially knowing what has and hasn’t happened over the last couple of years,” he said.

In Hartford, Parker serves on the Public Health Committee, Environmen­t Committee and Education Committee.

He also is involved with Arts Culture & Tourism and leads the Future Caucus, “a bipartisan effort of younger legislator­s that are thinking about issues important to the next generation and how we can get those represente­d in the Capitol.”

Parker is most passionate when he talks about his work with public health.

“I am grateful to have had the chance to work on this issue this year, which is the opioid epidemic and crisis that we’ve all living through and dealing with and that has really hurt so many individual­s and so many communitie­s,” he said.

“I’m committed to continuing this work in the future, really listening to the folks living with opioid use disorder and the families that have been affected, especially by loss,” he added.

One of the biggest surprises about working in the Capitol, during his first term, was “to see just how bipartisan the work is in the legislatur­e.”

He said when reading the news and following social media, “sometimes the partisan divide can be a little bit amplified.”

“I think there’s a lot more working together and goodwill than, I think, people might think from the outside,” he said. “That’s been really refreshing.”

Heading into the election, Parker said he believes the state is “in a strong position right now.”

“I think we have been resilient through COVID,” he said. “We’ve responded well to the best that we could.”

“I think we’ve put the state in a strong financial position, paying down billions of dollars in debt, running strong surpluses and using those both to pay down debt and invest responsibl­y in programs that are really supporting our community,” he added. “I think Connecticu­t is in a strong position.”

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