The Day

Conley, Gauthier face off in 40th District virtual debate

League of Women Voters of Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t and Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticu­t co-sponsor event

- By ERICA MOSER Day Staff Writer e.moser@theday.com

In a virtual debate Monday evening, 40th House District candidates state Rep. Christine Conley, D- Groton, and Republican challenger Lauren Gauthier differed on the police accountabi­lity bill, tolls and marijuana legalizati­on but found some common ground on policy and spending around elections, tourism, telehealth and the Connecticu­t Bottle Bill.

The League of Women Voters of Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t and the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticu­t co-sponsored the debate, which was livestream­ed on Facebook and can still be viewed on the chamber’s Facebook page.

“I have been, as your representa­tive, a champion of health care rights, and a champion of education, getting funds from Hartford to both Groton and Ledyard,” said Conley, who said she’s seeking election to a third two- year term because “there is still more work to do.”

Twice in the debate, Conley pointed to delivering $147 million in state funding for school constructi­on projects in Groton and Ledyard, $500,000 in Mashantuck­et Pequot/Mohegan Fund grants to Ledyard, and an additional $ 477,000 in Alliance District funding to Groton.

Gauthier said in her opening statement, “As a millennial trying to start a life in Connecticu­t, I feel abandoned by the powers that be in Hartford.” She believes the “one-party rule” of Democrats in Hartford “is what’s stagnating our economy” and criticized Conley for voting with the majority of Democrats 100% of the time in 2019.

Gauthier said if elected, her first priority would be reducing Connecticu­t’s structural debt, “to start fighting that head-on instead of spreading out payments over the long term.” She thinks there can be savings from making state contracts more competitiv­e and putting more “results-based accountabi­lity” into contracts.

Her second priority would be bringing innovative businesses into Connecticu­t, citing data storage centers as an example.

Conley said her top two priorities would be moving online gaming forward and increasing accessibil­ity to health care. But she noted it was hard to narrow her priorities down to two and that she was working on 30 bills when the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down the Capitol in March.

Police accountabi­lity bill

Conley defended her vote on the controvers­ial police accountabi­lity bill over the summer, saying it “does a lot of great things that police department­s across the state approve of,” such as $4 million for body cameras, anti-bias training and “the duty to intervene if someone’s constituti­onal rights are being violated.”

“The state does require many profession­s to be licensed and held accountabl­e, and that includes doctors, nurses, teachers and many others,” Conley said.

Gauthier criticized the Connecticu­t General Assembly for not defining some standards in the bill more clearly in the second special session in the fall. She also criticized the legislatur­e for not taking up any racial health equity bills and for not increasing Medicare reimbursem­ents to nursing home staff in either of the special sessions.

The first session did address telehealth, which both Conley and Gauthier support expanding

They also both support increasing state investment in tourism marketing, expanding the Connecticu­t Bottle Bill to include nips bottles, and early voting and no-excuse absentee voting. Gauthier said she would “encourage some provisions being changed” on early voting and no-excuse absentee voting bills, though, to ensure elections are secure.

Both are advocates of the Citizens’ Election Program, which allows for state funding of campaigns. But Gauthier would like to see some reforms, such as allowing ranked choice voting and randomized ballot orders, and providing benefits to minor-party candidates.

On the topic of tolls, Gauthier called tolls a “regressive tax” and said the state needs a different plan than tolls on tractor- trailers, which Conley has supported, as that has “already failed in courts.”

Pointing to the half-billion dollars needed to repair the Gold Star Bridge, Conley said we “need to seriously talk about how to fund our roads and bridges, and it might be bonding.”

The candidates differed on the legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana. Gauthier said she doesn’t support widespread legalizati­on, primarily for health and safety reasons but also because she’s not sure how realistic revenue projection­s would be. She also said she’s not willing to risk losing federal defense contracts or employees.

Conley said she supports legalizing recreation­al marijuana for those 21 and older, saying people are using marijuana and the state needs to regulate that, and “the state could certainly use the revenue.”

She said the Judiciary Committee, of which she is a member, is working on ways to make sure people aren’t intoxicate­d while working, driving or using heavy machinery.

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