2012

Meet the Legislative Candidates: Mike Knudson • State House – District 12

Mike is a lifelong South Dakota resident who was born and raised in Sioux Falls. I graduated from Washington High School in 1998 and earned my Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the University of South Dakota in 2002. Currently, I work for a Sioux Falls-based healthcare system.

In 2011, I married my wife and best friend, Kylie, who is an elementary school teacher. Together we help raise my six year-old son, Carson, who is a second grader in the Harrisburg School District.

Public service is important to my family. My mother, De Knudson, is a former Sioux Falls City Councilor (2002-2010), who worked tirelessly to move Sioux Falls forward. My father, Dave Knudson, spent eight years in the South Dakota Senate (2003-2010) and was the Senate Majority Leader from 2007-2010. He was a champion for K-12 education, open government and was a true leader.

In my spare time, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. I also love cheering on the Minnesota Vikings, Twins, Timberwolves and Wild.

Platform:

As a lifelong South Dakotan with a young family, I am committed to helping make South Dakota a better place for our children. Government’s first job is building a better future for our citizens. Education and economic development are the keys to that better future. Today more than ever, our children need legislators who are genuinely committed to a better education for our kids. I am committed to improved education as my number one priority. I’m a common sense candidate who puts progress before party affiliation and will do what is right for the people of District 12.

Do you support the one-penny sales tax increase to fund education and Medicaid. If so, why or why not?

Education is the single biggest advantage we can give our children. The Sioux Falls and Harrisburg School Districts are doing an outstanding job educating our students with limited resources. I support Initiated Measure 15 (one penny sales tax increase with the proceeds being split between education and Medicaid) but respect the voter’s decision on this issue.

What is the number one issue the state legislature should focus on in the 2013 Legislative session?

The biggest issue we face in South Dakota is the lack of education funding in our state. Increasing the funding for education in South Dakota is my number one priority. We need to focus on our children because they are the future.

Since the state had a surplus this year of $50 million, do you think they should start funding public education better, reduce taxes or allocate those funds to something else?

In 2011 the Legislature voted to cut education funding by 50 million dollars. At the same time they were increasing the number of state employees. This is wrong. The state’s increased revenues from current taxes should be used to restore the cuts made to education and Medicaid rather than to grow state government.

 

Meet the Legislative Candidates: Darrell Solberg • Candidate Dist. 11 House

Darrell Solberg, born and raised in Day County South Dakota. Graduated from Bristol High School, attended Brown Institute for Broadcasting in Minneapolis. Spent 15 years in Broadcasting. Started his own consulting/marketing company in 1983, which he still owns and operates with a partner.

As an entrepreneur he has been a partner is starting six companies in South Dakota, of which he is still active in two of them. Has lived in Sioux Falls since 1976

Have two children:

• A son, Shannon with his wife Molly and their son Fisher reside in Duluth, MN. Shannon owns a construction company and Molly is marketing director for Duluth Pack.

• A daughter, Heather living in China with her husband Kent who is an engineer for Daktronics in Brookings. Heather works for Adwerks Advertising agency via the internet.

Q & A

1) If you had to choose between public education funding or tax breaks and refunds to corporations interested in doing business in South Dakota, which would you cut first?

I would choose properly funding education

2) Do you support a one-penny sales tax increase to fund education and Medicaid. If so why or why not?

Only if I was guaranteed that additional penny sales tax would always go to education and Medicaid without used as a replacement for current state dollars and not after year one go into the General Fund to be used at the discretion of the Legislature.

3) What is the number one (1) issue the state legislature should focus on in the 2013 Legislative session?

Help create jobs with livable wages for South Dakotans

4) Since the state had a surplus this year of $50 million, do you think they should start funding public education better, reduce taxes or allocate those funds to something else?

Fund all levels education properly

5) Do you support citizen driven initiatives like the current snow gates petition that is circulating?

I am OK putting it up to a vote of the people

6) Bonus Question: If you were King for a day in Pierre, what would you change about the legislative session (EX: Rules, procedures & timeframes)?

Have a balance of power, so one party can’t govern at will. This would provide a better Legislature for the good of all people.

 

Just another reminder of how civilized small town SD is.

This Lake Andes Motel sounds like a good place to stay . . . that is, if you are white and Republican.

I’m all for freedom of speech, and think it is fantastic that these people wear their racism on their sleeves (probably in the form of an armband) even though they seem to be in denial;

Mary Snyder swears to the Mitchell Daily Republic that she and her husband are just misspellers, not racists.

Yeah . . . right. If you don’t like black people, pull off your white hood and just say it. That is the beauty of our country, you don’t have to like people, and you don’t even have to be informed about why you don’t like them.

No money for snowgates, but plenty of money for Pickleball?

Yup, you heard me right, taxdollars going to pickleball.

Some ask where will the city come up with extra money for snowgates? Well why don’t we tap the pickleball budget? That’s right, the city built a pickleball court at Menlo park, invested in equipment that you can borrow, and are even building an indoor pickleball court at the Kenny Anderson community center (so you can play pickleball in the winter). Just watch this episode of City Scene (about at the 50% mark) that explains pickleball.

And how did this come about? Someone walked into the Parks and Rec office and asked for it, and like magic, the city built it for them. No petition drives, no messy elections, not even City Council approval.

Oh, but it gets better. We both know that the money budgeted for snow removal comes from the operation fund (1st Penny) and Parks and Rec comes from the capital fund (2nd Penny). You would think former mayor of Sioux Falls, Rick Knobe would understand this;

Petitions are being circulated in Sioux Falls to mandate the use of snowgates. I am not going to sign a petition, and if a vote is held, I will vote “no.”

City staff is prudently researching the cost efficiency of snowgate use. The research is not yet complete. I may ”think”  they are a good idea, because I don’t like cleaning out my driveway after the plows have come thru. However, the higher cost, extra time, and maintenance of the additional equipment may not be worth it.

Our federal government is broke because they continue to make  promises we can no longer  afford to keep. As local taxpayers, it doesn’t make sense to mandate a service(raise taxes), just because we  are tired of shoveling snow.

We elect a  mayor and eight council members to make policy and daily administrative decisions on our behalf. If the mayor wants snowgates, he can put them in the budget. If the council wants snowgates, they can add them to the budget.

Should we have public votes on the type of technology the city uses? Equipment on fire trucks, or in police cars? How often the grass in the park is mowed?

It doesn’t make sense for us,  ”sidewalk(driveway) superintendents,” to direct or micromanage snow plowing operations.

Hey, Rick, that’s not how the operation’s penny works. The ‘first’ penny CANNOT be raised. The city has to work with what they take in, period. That means budgeting responsibly for PUBLIC SERVICES. Obviously we will still have money for pickleball in the 2nd penny, even if snow gates get implemented by the voters. The people are not voting on ‘budgets’ they are simply asking for a public service. You are right, it is the Mayor and City Council’s job to create the budget, and if voters approve snowgates, the city will have to find the money in the first penny for them. TAXES WILL NOT BE RAISED (at least on the 1st penny), because they don’t have the power to RAISE THEM.

But essentially it is about priorities, not higher taxes or pickleball. Snowgates are a public service and public safety issue not a ‘frill’ like pickleball or monkey hot tubs. Our taxdollars need to be spent on PUBLIC SERVICE not PICKLE SERVICE.