Voters have a clear choice in November about the direction they want Clark County to take, in hopes of pulling out of the worst recession in decades.
In Marc Boldt, Joe Tanner David Madore and Tom Mielke, voters have four candidates, all with different ideas about how the county can prosper once again. But just two, incumbent Boldt in east county and challenger Tanner in north county, have the ability to mesh good ideas, a willingness to work across party lines and a proven track record in crafting solid plans of action, to achieve success.
Boldt, of Brush Prairie, the incumbent commissioner representing east county for the last eight years, has been an effective voice for most citizens due to his calm, low-key but deliberate approach to the issues at hand. He has been a fiscal conservative, partly because of philosophy but also out of necessity, making tough choices on services the county simply cannot fund as it has in the past. Yet he has done so in a way that does not alienate his fellow commissioners or constituents. And like the other candidates he gives priority to making the county a much friendlier place for small businesses.
By contrast Boldt’s challenger, Madore of Vancouver, CEO of a Clark county company U.S. Digital, takes a far different approach to the county’s problems. His comments on the campaign trail indicate that, as a businessman and taxpayer advocate, he would unmercifully go through county departments with a hatchet, despite the genuine need for many services. And he would withdraw all county support for the Columbia River Crossing, despite the need for some traffic relief along the I-5 corridor. His “my way or the highway” approach would not mix well in a three commissioner county board that has to find common ground to be effective.