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Wyoming House District 46

The Wyoming House of Representative is the lower house of the state legislature. Similar to the U.S. House of Representatives, they work with Senators to create laws, set the state budget, and determine state tax rates. State Representatives are elected to a two-year term with no term limits.

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  • Candidate picture

    Ocean Andrew
    (Rep)

  • Candidate picture

    Cam Wright
    (Rep)

Biographical Information

Why are you running for this office? Describe the experience and skills that make you the most qualified candidate.

Do you support the ballot initiative for a 50% reduction in property taxes, and why? If passed, should the state backfill the loss of local revenue? Please explain.

Do you support or oppose the sale or exchange of public lands? Please explain.

Is the current structure and funding level for public education appropriate? Please explain.

What is your opinion on the use of public funds for social services?

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Campaign Email cam@wright4wyoming.org
Facebook www.facebook.com/p/Wright-4-Wyoming-61575377468269/
Campaign Phone 307-223-5686
Education: BS, MS, PhD electrical engineering, licensed Professional Engineer in Wyoming

Experience: 30 years military service 23 years teaching as an engineering faculty member at the University of Wyoming, including 6 years as Dean of the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences. Recently retired as a full Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

Skills: More than four decades of real-world leadership experience for both small and large organizations, managing people (as many as 300+ people), budgets (as much as $758 million), and efficiently achieving goals and objectives while balancing available resources.
Essential government services funded by property taxes cannot be allowed to wither and become ineffective due to loss of funding as a result of property tax reductions. While back-filling the losses incurred by cities and counties if property taxes continue to be reduced might have to done on a temporary basis, it can’t be a permanent solution. The voters much be made aware of the need for a reasonable level of property taxes, and convinced not to vote for an arbitrary reduction with little or no consideration to the unavoidable consequences.
In general, no I don't support that. There may be rare special circumstances that can be evaluated on a case-by-case basis, but overall I believe public lands should stay public, and they should be accessible to the public. Responsible use and stewardship of our public lands is something all citizens of Wyoming should expect and demand.
The level, as provided by recent re-calibration, appears appropriate. Public education requires adequate and appropriate funding, with sufficient budgeting flexibility given to local control. I believe that fine tuning/tweaking of the re-calibration legislation passed last session is needed, to allow administrators to allocate funding as needed, without budgetary micromanagement from the state. We must also look into the future, and act proactively rather than waiting to be forced by the courts to address any future funding imbalance.
There are certainly some social services that need public funds to ensure that a safety net exists for our most vulnerable members of the population. A combination of charitable giving and public funds seems to be the best approach. While a total reliance on charitable giving would be welcome and wonderful, that approach has proven to be insufficient over the years.