Date: Fri 25-Oct-1996
Date: Fri 25-Oct-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
candidate-profiles-Lovegrove
Full Text:
Candidate Profiles - Lovegrove
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
Fred Lovegrove is seeking to retain the 28th district's state senate seat he
has occupied since 1982, standing by his record and vowing to continue to look
out for Newtown's best interests.
Mr Lovegrove's challenger, Tom Ganim, has raged an intense campaign against
the incumbent, however, using television ads to attack his voting record and
question his motivation.
But the Fairfield resident has a solid Republican backing throughout the
district, and he hopes to earn reelection and return to Hartford for an eighth
term.
Taking the credit for breaking what he calls "Hartford's tax and spend
habits," Mr Lovegrove, 57, said he's proud of his record in Hartford and
believes Ganim's allegations that he is a poor legislator are "twisted.
Mr Ganim promised to take his opponent to task this fall, but so far Mr
Lovegrove sees his opponent engaging in a nothing more than negative campaign
rhetoric.
"He is distorting the truth. He's not taking my record factually," Mr
Lovegrove said. "If there's something to take me to task for, I assume he'd be
doing it, but he's not."
The state senator believes Mr Ganim, who's brother, Joe, is the mayor of
Bridgeport, has sought to unseat him because of his vote against the
construction of a casino in Bridgeport this past year.
Mr Lovegrove said he only voted against the casino because of traffic
concerns. "I-95 is currently running at 165 percent capacity and it's growing
at two percent per year," he said.
As chairman of the State Human Services Committee Mr Lovegrove helped write
one of the nation's "most successful" welfare reform plans, created to help
people become more self-sufficient.
"Tough, but fair, the plan has helped over 6,000 families off the state's
welfare roles," he said in a recent campaign newsletter.
The bill requires all employable welfare recipients find a job within 21
months. If not, they lose their welfare. But, as Mr Lovegrove points out,
those who do get a job, will continue to receive state assistance, including
both medical benefits and day care for two years after welfare, and job
training for those in need of it.
Mr Lovegrove points out that the Welfare Reform Bill has already delivered a
$166 million savings since being enacted 19 months ago and has helped create
the first decrease in state spending in over a decade.
Mr Lovegrove has also been working to abolish welfare programs for single
adults, pointing out that 29 states have already done so.
"The Democrats are dragging their heels on this one," he noted.
In response to Mr Ganim's criticism of his decision to vote against the gas
tax cut in May, Mr Lovegrove said it was the Democrats who were responsible
for raising the gas tax in the first place in the early 90s by spending the
state surplus.
"It's extremely hypocritical for a Democrat to come out and say he's cut the
gas tax," he said.
Mr Lovegrove says he was a leader in the state's successful fight to reduce
the state income tax and was an outspoken opponent of the income tax in the
first place. The tax reduction along with direct property tax relief, "has put
as much as $200 million back into taxpayers' household budgets at a time when
they needed it most," he said.
Mr Lovegrove believes the state is a safer place to live in since his work in
enacting a workable death penalty and the requirement that violent offenders
serve a minimum of 85 percent of their jail sentences. The Republicans also
had a hand in the passage of "Megan's Law" requiring community notification of
the presence of sex offenders.
He said he and his fellow Republicans passed the Dead Beat Dad's Bill that
revokes the driver's license of a father not paying child support.
A lover of animals (he's raised Bantam Chickens since he was 6) Mr Lovegrove
has taken on the role of animal/wildlife advocate among the senators. He was
instrumental in passing the Duck Stamp Act which reportedly raises about
$500,000 per year for the state. The stamp is required by hunters in order to
hunt ducks.
