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Crisler, Norwood Tops in Senate 28 Election

— Not surprisingly, yesterday's Senate District 28 special election resulted in a runoff.

Former Jackson City Council President and community college administrator Marshand Crisler will face former Jackson Public Schools board member Sollie Norwood in a Feb. 26 runoff election. There were nine candidates, including four women and five men.

Crisler received 25 percent of the 2,789 votes cast; Norwood received 22.5 percent of the votes. The winner will take over the seat vacated by Sen. Alice Harden's death.

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Marshand Crisler

Crisler, director of adult education at Hinds Community College, is already well known to a lot of Jacksonians as a former Jackson City Council president who ran for mayor in 2009. He believes his experience holding public office will enable him to hit the ground running.

Fully funding public education according to Mississippi Adequate Education Program formula could help lower Mississippi's 1-to-27 teacher-student ratio (the national average is 1-to-16), and help pay the state's teachers more inviting wages, he said.

"I certainly think that none of us could do any of the things we do without teachers," Crisler said. "I know we say that all the time, but the way we compensate them says something differently."

In terms of economic development, he's excited that the city is breathing new life into Metrocenter Mall by moving some offices there, but would like to see more retailers in the mall, which would contribute to Jackson's tax base. Crisler likes the idea of a local option sales tax, a temporary levy that would let cities fund certain capital improvement projects if a majority of the citizens approve the tax.

Improving Jackson's crumbling roads and water system would help attract new businesses to Jackson and encourage businesses already operating in the city to hang around. He posits: "Who would leave a city that has great infrastructure, that's safe and is well-educated? Nobody."

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Norwood wants to spend his time in the Senate encouraging parental involvement by fining parents who miss parent-teacher conferences.

"We should hold parents accountable and not let them lackadaisically not go (to conferences)," Norwood said.

Norwood said he would not have voted for the Senate charter-school bill. "You're going to further diminish the public schools because everyone isn't going to be fortunate enough to go to a charter school," he said. "We have many successful students that have come from public schools."

Gov. Phil Bryant's plan to introduce a merit pay system to give teachers raises based how well their students perform on tests "leaves too much room for subjectivity," Norwood said. He would not back the plan.

Norwood would fight Bryant's attempt to halt expansion of Medicaid, and said the state could shift spending priorities to accommodate adding 330,00 more people to the rolls. Budget experts predict that expanding Medicaid would create up to 9,000 jobs.

Calling expanded health-care coverage a sanctity-of-life issue, Norwood said: "We have people who are literally dying every day because of lack of health care. A person shouldn't have to worry about whether they've got food (or health insurance). This is America. I don't think that's something we should have to worry about."

Comments

justjess 11 years, 2 months ago

Has the issue of reported missing votes been settled? I heard a news report last week that questioned the validity of the election for Senate Seat 28.

Both of these gentlemen have similar platforms; however, I am giving Mr. Crisler my support because Mr. Norwood stated that he will impose a punishment/fine on parents who do not attend parent teacher conferences.

This position is another example of: Shoot, Aim, Ready.

There are sooooo many issues involved in the WHY of parents not attending these conferences. I have heard a more proactive strategy from Crisler. It involves the assembly of a team of people, to include volunteers, to aid in Institutional (School) Parenting.

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