Candidates for 64th identify top issues

LAKEVILLE — With election season underway, The Lakeville Journal spoke with the candidates for the 64th District in the Connecticut House of Representatives.

Incumbent Maria Horn (D-64) is running for a third term.

Asked for her top priorities, she started off with access to rural health care.

Horn said this includes reproductive health care, including abortion (she referred to the recent U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade), and maternity (Sharon Hospital’s parent company, Nuvance, seeks to close the hospital’s labor and delivery unit).

Horn said the state has done a good job preserving the legality of abortion.

“But we have to make sure the access is there.”

Horn said her top environmental concern is waste management.

“The state has not done an adequate job after the closure of MIRA” (the trash-to-energy plant in Hartford was closed in July).

Horn said any solution will have multiple elements, including composting, anaerobic digestion, transportation, “and finding other ways to deal with our solid waste.”

Horn’s third issue is the continuing effort to bring broadband service to the 64th.

She said she’s not sure if the primary effort will be in the form of legislation or in making sure the state and region get their share of the federal funds allocated to broadband service expansion.

Horn also said that as chair of the Public Safety Committee of the Legislature she wants to keep the focus on mental health and law enforcement.

Horn said police officers need help, both in terms of training for dealing with mentally ill individuals, and with the stress that comes from such interactions.

Republican challenger Chris Dupont is no stranger to politics. He worked on the congressional campaigns of Andrew Roraback and Mike Greenberg, and his father’s 2018 GOP primary campaign for Congress in 2018.

“I thought it was time I put my name on the ballot.”

Dupont listed his top three issues as affordability, public safety, and local control.

On the first, Dupont reeled off a list of tax cuts he would like to see, including the tax on prepared food, the excise tax on diesel fuel, the upcoming truck tax, and a lower overall sales tax.

On public safety, Dupont said he wants to see the same kind of qualified immunity for law enforcement officers that existed prior to legislation that took effect in July 2021 (Horn worked on that legislation).

“I was a firefighter,” Dupont said. “I worked with a lot of police officers, and I know what they go through.”

On local control, Dupont said he is against any form of statewide zoning regulations and state education mandates.

“We don’t need a lot of mandates from Hartford,” he said. “Our towns know best.”

Horn and Dupont are scheduled to appear at a debate at Housatonic Valley Regional High School on Thursday, Sept. 29, at 7 p.m.

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