Challengers take on
Price in recent senate debate Incumbent
questioned on recent votes regarding education,
transportation bills
By JANET McGREGOR
jmac_snippets@hotmail.com
The
public and party regulars gathered at Baci
Italian Restaurant recently to listen to and
question incumbent state Sen. Rick Price and his
three challengers.
The
short, informal Senate District 28 forum was
hosted by the Fayette County Republican Party at
its monthly First Saturday breakfast. Senate
District 28 encompasses a small portion of
Fayette County including Peachtree City, all of
Coweta County and all of Spalding County.
Price,
Charlie Harper, Dan Lakly and Mitch Seabaugh
answered questions from the audience regarding
Gov. Roy Barnes' recent education bill, the
Atlanta Regional Commission, the Georgia Regional
Transportation Authority and the Georgia flag.
Throughout
the forum Price asserted he is proud of his
record during his two terms. He was challenged
regarding his procedural votes on two main bills,
the governor's education bill and creation of
GRTA.
While
Price ultimately voted against both bills,
Harper, Lakly and Seabaugh indicated they would
have voted against the bills throughout the
process. Price defended his earlier votes to
study the issues or to bring
them out of committee, noting that it was
his job to take poor legislation, that would pass
with a Democratic majority in power, and make it
better.
All
four asserted that they would not support any
legislation to change the state flag. Seabaugh
said that proponents of taking the Confederate
battle emblem off the state flag are trying to
make it a racial issue. Harper stated that
pressure to change the flag is led by
outsiders trying to drive a wedge.
Price
answered simply No, and gave a brief
background on the recent history of the flag, and
Lakly, referring to Zell Miller's attempt to
change the flag in 1993, said, They didn't
change it then and they won't change it
now. He further noted that changing the
flag takes the focus off things that are
important.
Price
was questioned regarding his stance on the
Atlanta Regional Commission. He has been attacked
recently by his Senate challengers regarding the
vote to include Fayette County in the ARC during
his term on the Fayette County Commission. Price
said he abstained from the vote and did not vote
to include Fayette as asserted, later noting he
did not believe there had been sufficient
information provided to the commission to allow
him to vote in good conscience.
Lakly,
who served on the County Commission at the same
time, interjected that he (Lakly) had made the
motion and voted for inclusion because, We
had two choices: to be part of the regional
commission centered in Barnesville or in
Atlanta.
He
said he felt Fayette was closer aligned to
Atlanta than Lamar County. Harper continued to
assert that Price had voted for inclusion,
referring to commission minutes while Seabaugh,
who lives in Coweta County, talked about positive
leadership.
All
of the candidates voiced opposition to GRTA and
the ARC's current proposals regarding rapid rail,
higher density and what they perceived to be a
lessening of local government's ability to
control local issues. Price said, Local
government is the best government. Lakly
spoke against the usurping of county
authority and said, No thank you to
rapid rail and rapid density. Lakly also
said he would make his first campaign promise,
which would be to introduce legislation to
repeal [regional development commissions].
Regarding
Bill 1187, the education reform bill, Harper said
he was opposed from beginning to end.
Lakly noted he would have fought with every
breath of my body [against the bill].
Seabaugh stated the bill did not help education
and he would have voted against it. Price voted
against the final bill.
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