What are your top three priorities for the next legislative session?
Small Business, energy (enough with outrageously expensive gas) and reconfigure our public schools. We need 21st century education models, not 18th century. Adding George Lucas’ Edutopia and Steven Spielberg’s Shoah Foundation as programming opt-ins. Teachers colleges already use them. Shoah solves CRT.
I will protect walk-in retail from repeat offending pro vagrants by making their drug resale and panhandling lifestyles very uncomfortable.
Pro licensing for movie makers. Licenses will come with grants and asset-loans.
The chamber may see split Democrat-Republican control next year. On what issues do you see common ground with the opposite party?
Every Republican concept I have carries with it the aroma of Democrat dialogue. Common ground? Music, sports, and a new destiny for this state.
What perspective or background would you bring to the chamber that is currently missing?
It is easy to spend years in that room and lose touch with what everyone else is enduring. Some people get stuck in a time warp – just look at hairstyles.
Every day we’re capable of greatness. Why don’t we as taxpayers and voters see Greatness? Most Reps have horrible grammar and writing. I can write. It is a New Era. Cory’s here. To quote Steven Curtis Chapman, I Will Not Go Quietly.
What more can the state legislature do to ease housing costs across Colorado?
Two things. 1) Repeal, rewrite and reconsider SB 217. Amend it to include provisions whereby outside agencies may be shielded from lawsuits no matter what. At this time, it’s too totalitarian. Its authors devastated Aurora.
As for financially qualifying for homes…Better Paying Jobs located Here.
Do you support the current law on fentanyl possession and resources for treatment?
I’ve witnessed violent dealers selling drugs at the Aurora Day Shelter and its staff was relatively helpless. Aurora PD needs the fear of God restored to it.
Mandy Lindsay has not returned the questionnaire.
How candidate order was determined: A lot drawing was held at the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office on Aug. 3 to determine the general election ballot order for major and minor party candidates. Colorado law (1-5-404, C.R.S.) requires that candidates are ordered on the ballot in three tiers: major party candidates followed by minor party candidates followed by unaffiliated candidates. Within each tier, the candidates are ordered by a lot drawing with the exception of the office of Governor and Lt. Governor, which are ordered by the last name of the gubernatorial candidate.



