Date: Fri 27-Oct-1995
Date: Fri 27-Oct-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
council-election-Schwartz
Full Text:
Council Profiles, Lisa Schwartz
Lisa Schwartz is making her first run for election to the Legislative Council
in District 3. She moved with her family to Newtown in May 1993 and has worked
as a personnel officer for state Department of Labor and the Department of
Administrative services. She is a member of the Democratic Town Committee,
vice chairman of the Newtown Board of Ethics, and an active member of the PTA
at Head O'Meadow School, where her son, Zack, is a first grader. She is also
chairman of the antiques show committee for this year's Newtown Holiday
Festival.
"I have a lot of ideas that have been generated from my previous experience,"
she says. "I would like to be a vehicle for other people to express their
ideas to the council, and I invite people to call me."
Mrs Schwartz says she supported the expansion of the Booth Library. "The
library is a great benefit to the town and all the people who live in it."
The candidate also supports the renovation and expansion plans for Hawley
School and the Newtown High School proposed by the Board of Education. "I
would like to understand more about the numbers, but there is no question in
my mind that that is an absolute necessity for the town."
As for other town projects, Mrs Schwartz says that Town Hall South "definitely
needs a facelift, but I wouldn't give it a high priority." She also supports
the town's continuing program of road reconstruction and repair.
The candidate believes the town is "floundering" in staking out its interests
at Fairfield Hills now that the state is looking for other uses for facilities
there. "I know how the state operates, and if you don't prod them, they don't
move. Somebody needs to be out there lobbying for the Town of Newtown. I would
be willing to spearhead such a movement."
While she was opposed to the proposed exposition center in Hawleyville that
was rejected by the town's Planning and Zoning Commission last week, Mrs
Schwartz believes that some kind of economic development is needed in town.
"There's no question that for some taxpayers, the tax burden is almost
unbearable."
