Join our Mailing List!
Please click the link below to sign up for your community paper mailing list. Stay up to date with all the events going on in your community as well as the latest news.Sign Up Today!
Aust, Ridgeway face off in state Senate race
By Nancy Hull
To say Sandra Aust and Luann Ridgeway are on opposite sides of the fence might be an understatement.
The two women running for Clay County’s Senate District 17 race disagree on everything from health care to education.
Aust, a Democrat, would be new to the Senate, while Ridgeway, a Republican, is running for re-election.
Aust says it’s time for change.
“Things are a mess. I’m very disappointed in how we’ve been represented,” Aust said. “My opponent is the reason I am running.”
She said Clay County needs someone like her who will represent the progressive thinking of the majority of the citizens.
Ridgeway hopes voters look to her four years in the Senate when they make their choice.
“I have been a consistent voice of financial responsibility, local control and representing the interests of the people to government and not the other way around. People know what they’re getting with me,” she said.
Aust, a former nurse, criticizes Ridgeway’s role in the 2005 Legislature’s cuts to Medicaid, saying the decision left too many without health insurance and jobs.
“That’s outrageous. That never should have happened. We cannot do that to the weakest and sickest people in our state,” Aust said.
She said that there are some ideas held by various organizations that, if implemented, could improve access and affordability of care without raising state and taxpayer costs.
Ridgeway backs the Medicaid cuts, saying that the move curbed out-of-control welfare extensions while trimming a budget deficit.
“We are now able to spend more money per person for the people on welfare who truly need welfare,” Ridgeway said.
Aside from the health care issue, Aust said she’ll work to protect public education, expand K-12 education funding and find ways to make college more accessible. In addition, she said she would promote jobs in the areas of biotechnology and life science research and support stem cell research.
“People want change. We can’t stand four more years of this,” she said.
A Northland native, her leadership experience includes serving as commissioner and president of the Kansas City Board of Parks and Recreation.
Ridgeway said her highlights from the past four years include successfully fighting for job growth, increasing education dollars without raising taxes and supporting a proposal to give students in failing school districts an alternative choice.
If re-elected, she plans to help overhaul the tax system by shifting the burden of funding public programs away from property owners.
“There are many who want to push the reset and rewind button on millions of reforms we have made. We cannot let that happen. We need to continue to monitor the reforms we have made,” she said.
Smithville Editor Nancy Hull can be reached at 532-4444 or nancyhull@npgco.com.
The two women running for Clay County’s Senate District 17 race disagree on everything from health care to education.
Aust, a Democrat, would be new to the Senate, while Ridgeway, a Republican, is running for re-election.
Aust says it’s time for change.
“Things are a mess. I’m very disappointed in how we’ve been represented,” Aust said. “My opponent is the reason I am running.”
She said Clay County needs someone like her who will represent the progressive thinking of the majority of the citizens.
Ridgeway hopes voters look to her four years in the Senate when they make their choice.
“I have been a consistent voice of financial responsibility, local control and representing the interests of the people to government and not the other way around. People know what they’re getting with me,” she said.
Aust, a former nurse, criticizes Ridgeway’s role in the 2005 Legislature’s cuts to Medicaid, saying the decision left too many without health insurance and jobs.
“That’s outrageous. That never should have happened. We cannot do that to the weakest and sickest people in our state,” Aust said.
She said that there are some ideas held by various organizations that, if implemented, could improve access and affordability of care without raising state and taxpayer costs.
Ridgeway backs the Medicaid cuts, saying that the move curbed out-of-control welfare extensions while trimming a budget deficit.
“We are now able to spend more money per person for the people on welfare who truly need welfare,” Ridgeway said.
Aside from the health care issue, Aust said she’ll work to protect public education, expand K-12 education funding and find ways to make college more accessible. In addition, she said she would promote jobs in the areas of biotechnology and life science research and support stem cell research.
“People want change. We can’t stand four more years of this,” she said.
A Northland native, her leadership experience includes serving as commissioner and president of the Kansas City Board of Parks and Recreation.
Ridgeway said her highlights from the past four years include successfully fighting for job growth, increasing education dollars without raising taxes and supporting a proposal to give students in failing school districts an alternative choice.
If re-elected, she plans to help overhaul the tax system by shifting the burden of funding public programs away from property owners.
“There are many who want to push the reset and rewind button on millions of reforms we have made. We cannot let that happen. We need to continue to monitor the reforms we have made,” she said.
Smithville Editor Nancy Hull can be reached at 532-4444 or nancyhull@npgco.com.
