5 Candidates
Five
Candidates Seek Republican Nomination for Tennessee House District
32 Open Seat
tennesseestar.com-Five Republicans are seeking the nomination for the Tennessee House District 32 open seat, created by the retirement of five-term State Representative Kent Calfee (R-Kingston).
The winner of
the Republican primary on August 4 will face off against Democrat
Jan Hahn, who is running unopposed in the primary, to represent
citizens of Roane and a small portion of Loudon County. The district
includes not only the city of Oak Ridge, but the Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, production site of the Manhattan Project’s atomic bomb,
as well as the Y-12 National Security Complex.
The Roane
County portion of the district is dominated by Republicans, where
the Trump/Pence ticket won over Democrat nominees Biden/Harris with
76 percent of the vote in the November 2020 election.
All six
candidates were featured in a Roane Chamber of Commerce Voter Forum
held on June 28 at the Roane State Community College’s O’Brien
Theater, an event moderated by WIVK personality Kent Stephens.
Over the
course of about an hour, attendees heard from all six candidates
three times to introduce themselves, talk about their first 100 days
in office as it relates to four topics important to voters –
economic development, infrastructure, education and substance misuse
– and finally a closing statement in alternating alphabetical and
reverse-alphabetical order.
Keaton Bowman,
a late-twenties Roane County native who is a bail bondsman with Hill
Bonding in Kingston, said he struggled with the decision after
attending college at Eastern Tennessee State University as to
whether to come home. He concluded, “I don’t shy away from a
challenge,” regarding his decision to return to Roane County after
graduation.
In his first
100 days, Bowman said he would work on education bills, specifically
pushing for more vocational education in response to the demand for
electricians, plumbers, and brick masons.
Bowman spoke
further on business development and said he favored not just
existing but the expansion of PILOT – payment in lieu of taxes –
property tax incentive programs to bring more business to the
district.
Wanting to be
a public servant and not a politician, Bowman said he is taking time
away from his job to run for the office. He emphasized working
together and committed himself to honesty and working tirelessly. At
the end of his term when he decides to come home, Bowman said of his
time in Nashville, “My biggest goal is to say that I left it better
than when I come out here.”
Randy Childs,
a security officer at the Oak Ridge Y-12 plant and member of the
Kingston City Council since 2014, described himself as the
lesser-educated and simplest person there. What he learned from
working on farms with his grandfather was, he said, listening to
people, which Childs considers to be his biggest strength. He also
has experience in production, manufacturing, law enforcement, and
working with other cities and counties.
Childs, not
taking credit individually for the accomplishments, said that the
Kingston council got more done by working together over the last
four or five years than at any time in the past. He emphasized
working together and getting everyone’s opinion.
Choosing
economic development as the issue he identifies with most, Childs
said the district is blessed to have Oak Ridge, where many of them
work. With not everyone wanting to work there, however, Childs said
there needs to be more business, and expressed concern about the
ability of the Roane County education system to produce the
qualifications needed.
Monty Fritts,
a Roane County native, is a U.S. Army veteran of the War in Iraq,
where he initially served from 1983 to 1993 and then re-enlisted in
2003, earning numerous awards. He holds a B.S. in business and
chemistry, M.A. in theological studies from Liberty University, and
an M.B.A. from University of Tennessee, and completed a certificate
program with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He spent
most of his career in nuclear manufacturing including a position in
the U.S. Department of Energy after Donald Trump’s election.
“Blessed is
the nation whose God is the Lord,” is the quote Fritts used to open
his introduction after which he referenced the upcoming 4th of July
holiday and the Declaration of Independence.
Fritts
expressed concern that low taxes and the fiscal posture of the state
obscures a full assessment of the complete health of the state when
it comes to issues like drugs and crime.
Apparently
drawing a contrast between the other candidates, Fritts said of his
first 100 days in the state legislature, “It’s going to be important
not to get coffee for those that we meet there and not just pal
around with the good old boys and good old girls.” He stressed the
importance of a confident stance on issues and that “genuine leaders
are not searchers of consensus, but molders of consensus.”
Fritts raised
the issue of a responsive electrical supply that doesn’t just barely
produce the resources consumed each day, a practice that will cause
industry to diminish. Fritts pointed out the inconsistent messaging
of utility providers saying to raise thermostats while others advise
the public to buy an electric Hummer.
Fritts said in
his first 100 days he would work to repeal T.C.A. 58-2-107, the
state’s Emergency Powers Act, which he said is in direct
contradiction to Section I and II of the state constitution,
elements which call for three government departments with separate
and distinct powers. He called the delegation of powers to the
governor to decree law and shut down business “unconscionable,” and
said that during COVID it was what allowed the governor to deem
Tennesseans as “non-essential.”
Fritts was
hard-hitting when he listed a variety of issues, including substance
abuse and how it relates to the open southern border and the failure
of the Tennessee General Assembly to harden Tennessee to prevent the
infusion of crime and drugs; the Elementary and Secondary Schools
Emergency Relief (ESSER) Act, which encourages K-3 teachers to
instruct on sexual and gender topics widely considered
inappropriate; and anti-Americanism, including elderly folks dying
alone in hospitals and nursing homes.
Drawing the
distinction between a public servant and a politician who develops
relationships, gets absorbed into the system and become part of a
corrupt and broken system that is taking your money and violates
rights, Fritts said he’d be a fighter.
“I think your
choice is clear. If you want someone to stand up for your rights,
pick someone that has proven that he will do that. If you’re okay
with the status quo politicians, if you’re okay with the way things
are going right now in the state of Tennessee and these United
States of America, I’m probably not your person,” said Fritts
bluntly, as he asked to be hired because he is volunteering to
serve.
Fritts,
the only one of the House District 32 candidates to respond,
received a score of 23 of 23 on the Tennessee Firearms Association legislative
survey.
Donnie Hall,
who left Roane County for a period of time, was in the military for
10 years, operates with his wife Three Rivers Theatre acting studio,
and is a coach for Roane State Community College athletics.
Hall, positive
on the state being in “fine hands,” pointed to Tennessee being the
least-taxed per capita in the nation, having the largest rainy-day
fund in history and $300 million being given back to taxpayers this
year, said he wants to be sure the state keeps going in the right
direction.
In his first
100 days, Hall said the biggest thing is to create relationships,
something he has already been doing with, for example, State
Representative Sam Whitson (R-Franklin) from Williamson County on
in-state tuition at University of Tennessee for the children of an
active-duty military person, and House Caucus Chair Jeremy Faison
(R-Cosby), as well as maintaining a 40-year relationship with State
Senator Ken Yager (R-Kingston).
Hall has
received the endorsement of the Tennessee Education Association, a
state affiliate of the National Education Association teachers’
union that passed a nearly 400 resolutions in a 115-page
document for 2021-2022. These
included statements or concepts regarding the opposition to home
schooling, students having access to gender-affirming healthcare,
transgender use of the bathroom or locker room of their choice,
social emotional learning, statehood for the District of Columbia,
and freedom from religion and global climate change, among numerous
others.
Hall said
common core and CRT are “gone,” and with the state’s new education
funding plan going into effect in 2024, there is still opportunity
to tweak it. Hall said that Tennessee is $1 billion behind Kentucky
and Alabama in education funding and, with kids deserving more and
better than what they’re currently getting, the funding has to be
fixed immediately.
Hall said that
there are a lot of infrastructure needs in Roane County and he will
make sure that funding gets to the 32nd district.
“Red meat
issues” he gets asked about a lot are national issues that Hall said
won’t be dealt with at the state level, as he mentioned the Second
Amendment, border security and his pastor brother’s church 63 miles
from the border where parishioners pack weapons to worship God, and
economic woes including $5 a gallon gas.
When voters
get in the booth, Hall said they should ask themselves which
candidate is going to be able to represent the district best, have
alliances in place, and talk with people in the county and city
governments to represent and lead the 32nd district.
Teresa Kirkham,
having what she said is a calling for public service, has spent 38
years in Roane County government, including nearly 20 years as the
assessor of property, a role that, as it came to a close, was reportedly surrounded
with accusations within the office. Over that time, Kirkham said she
listened to complaints, wants, and needs, and that she feels like it
is her time to step up to help do something about the issues that
face Roane County.
Her top
category of the four is economic development, in that she worked
closely with Roane County government and Washington congressman in a
PILOT program, which she said worked well. PILOT programs, TIF (tax
increment financing) and economic development, Kirkham said, are
very important to her.
Kirkham
emphasized she would do a lot of listening, learning, collaborating,
and relationship-building in the district and at the legislature.
Jan Hahn, a
practicing family physician of 42 years, talked about the host
venue, the O’Brien Theater, being named after his wife’s stepmother,
with whom he had many long conversations. As his field of expertise,
Hahn said that the healthcare system is “disjointed, disconnected,
dysfunctional, and does not deliver.” Of the four primary topics,
Hahn addressed the addiction issue in East Tennessee, saying that
selling drugs is a crime but using is an illness. He talked about
the “toolbox” needed for tailored treatment and that underlying all
of it is ongoing mental health care.
From the words
of Annabelle O’Brien, Hahn said politics is a beautiful word and
that politicians should give voice to the healthiest of aspirations
of its citizens and by their words and deeds inspire the better
angels of our souls to unite and solve common problems.
“Let us
dedicate ourselves to that vision and engage anew in this most noble
of professions,” Hahn said in conclusion.
The
National Rifle Association Political Victory Fund (NRA-PVF) graded all
five of the Republican candidates for Tennessee House District 32
Monty Fritts
and Teresa Kirkham received an AQ grade, “A pro-gun candidate whose
rating is based solely on the candidate’s responses to the NRA-PVF
candidate questionnaire and who does not have a voting record on
Second Amendment issues.”
Donnie Hall
received a D grade, for being “an anti-gun candidate who usually
supports restrictive gun control legislation and opposes pro-gun
reforms. Regardless of public statements, [Hall] can usually be
counted on to vote wrong on key issues.”
Keaton Bowman
and Randy Childs received a “?,” which is defined as “refused to
answer NRA-PVF candidate questionnaire or a candidate who has made
contradictory statements or taken positions that are inconsistent
with the candidate’s answers to the NRA-PVF candidate questionnaire
or previous record. A rating of ‘?’ often indicates indifference, if
not outright hostility, to gun owners’ and sportsmen’s rights.”
The
video of the Roane County Chamber of Commerce 2022 Voter Forum can
be viewed here,
with the session including Tennessee House District 32 candidates
starting at 1:45.
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7/20/22