TRUST YOUR AFFAIR TO THE FINEST CATERER 0 0 0 0 JEWEL 0 KOSHER CATERERS Looking To The Future 27th District state rep candidates examine the issues. CLASSIC CUISINE Approved by Council of Orthodox Rabbis Jewel Kosher is proud to announce we are working with EXCLUSIVE CATERING YOUNG ISRAEL OF SOUTHFIELD! PHILIP TEWEL Food & Beverage Director (248) 661.4050 Farmington Hills 895280 More... Better... Easier... &Vew Zr 03mproved JN 10/29 2004 32 SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN Staff Writer R egardless of who wins the two-year term for state rep- resentative next week, Michigan's 27th District will be rep- resented by a man who cares about its future. Both incumbent Andrew Meisner, D-Ferndale, and Republican chal- lenger William Axtell, who is mak- ing a run for his first political office, have the community at heart. The district includes Huntington Woods, Oak Park, Berkley, Pleasant Ridge, Ferndale and Hazel Park. Although they disagree on some issues, both are education advocates. "There must be a better way for people who are adamant about get- ting their kids into better school dis- tricts to be able to do it," said Axtell of Ferndale, a former teacher who now works as a communication and marketing specialist. Meisner sees the key to the issue as the preservation of "investments in early education, K-12 funding and adult education." Both candidates for the $79,650- a-year job feel strongly about mak- ing sure Americans are employed. "In an effort to protect Michigan's jobs, I introduced legislation to stop Michigan from doing business with companies that incorporate offshore to avoid paying their fair share," Meisner said. "Gov. Granholm used this legisla- tion as a model for an executive order she signed this year, so now Michigan's government stands by those companies that stand by us. We have more work to do in pre- serving overtime pay and expanding unemployment benefits, which will keep families afloat and pump money into the economy." Axtell said, "There is a realization that this is not an ordinary recession where the pendulum will swing back, and it will all be back to nor- mal. The manufacturing jobs we relied on for so many years are not coming back, and we have to take stock of this situation in Michigan," he said. He also feels that, although many benefit from services pro- vided by the state; "we might have more downsiz- ing to do there, and we need to think in terms of how we can provide servic- es outside the public realm." More Issues Commission on Disability Concerns. Some Opposition Meisner An advocate for Oakland County families, Meisner cites safe communities, affordable health care and making the tax system fair at the top of his list of important issues. He was the first repre- sentative to introduce leg- islation to expand • Michigan's drug treatment courts and hold offenders Axtell accountable. "I also promote commu- nity-oriented policing and work closely with law enforcement, fire safety and first responders to make sure they have the tools and resources needed to make us safe," he said. Meisner feels "Michigan needs to improve health care through mental health parity, by boosting accounta- bility in the insurance industry and by making prescription drugs more affordable through bulk purchasing agreements, like what is now avail- able to consumers through the new Michigan drug discount card." Axtell sees a need to establish a pool allowing uninsured workers to gain access to basic health insurance coverage. He also hopes to work to reduce workers compensation fraud and toward providing adequate funding for problems associated with mental health needs. Meisner is working to reform Michigan's tax system by asking for a full accounting of corporate give- away dollars and tax loopholes in the annual budget. Axtell, who worked for United Cerebral Palsy of Metro Detroit, is an advocate for disability rights, hav- ing held the gubernatorial appointed position on the Michigan An area where the two strongly diSagree is on the issue of stem-cell research. "I am pro-life," Axtell said. "So anything that destroys human life, I would have a hard time with." Meisner, on the other hand, is ready to introduce legislation to repeal Michigan's ban on stem- cell research and to strengthen penalties on human cloning. "The ban is not only a barrier to potentially life-saving - breakthroughs in treatment of diseases such as Alzheimer's and spinal- cord injuries, it is an impediment to creating high-paying jobs in the life sciences field," he said. During his first term in office, Meisner was appointed to the Mental Health Commission by Gov. Granholm and served on the Adult Education Task Force. He serves as minority vice chair of the Criminal Justice Committee and on the Education and Regulatory Reform committees sand is assistant minority whip. A longtime volunteer heavily involved in community service work, Axtell currently serves on the Ferndale Memorial Association and several agencies supporting public schools and libraries, is a trustee of the Ferndale Educational Foundation and has served as a Ferndale precinct delegate. Also running for State Representative in Michigan's 27th District is Libertarian Lloyd W. Sherman of Hazel Park. Sherman is a machinist NC/CNC programmer operator. He has served on Hazel Park's Zoning Board of Appeals, Charter and Code Commission, General Building Authority, Brownfield Redevelopment Authority and the Fence Board of Review. ❑