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Kim Mack said she decided to run for City Council District 2 because she saw a need that hasn’t been filled in her North Sacramento community: responsive leadership.
That isn’t necessarily a dig at the current council member for the district, Mack said Tuesday – it’s a statement of purpose.
Mack, 49, has a long career in government service under her belt, including campaign experience as a field organizer for Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign where she was responsible for campaign activities from Bakersfield to the Oregon border.
Mack also worked on local campaigns including Ami Bera's recent run for the 3rd Congressional District and Richard Pan’s successful run for Assembly.
“I believe deeply in grassroots organizing and grassroots activism,” Mack said. “Working on those campaigns proved to me that I was right to believe in that. It showed me that with a little bit of leadership, we can achieve a lot.”
Now, Mack said, it’s her turn to jump into the political arena with both feet.
Although Mack was born in Sacramento, she moved with her parents to Redding as a teen. Mack moved back to Sacramento in 1992 and has lived in District 2 for 13 of the last 19 years.
Vince Mack, Kim’s husband of six years, is a middle school science teacher at Norwood Junior High school who has been teaching in the district for 23 years.
Incumbent Sandy Sheedy will face off against Mack and former Midtown Business Association Executive Director Rob Kerth in the coming City Council election – and more candidates may still enter the field.
“There’s a lot of people that see a vulnerability on Sheedy’s part,” Mack said. “She has not done a lot for the whole of the district. The majority of the district feels neglected, and now there is a resurgence in city activism.”
Mack said grassroots activism is her specialty, and she intends to engage fully in the district to bring people together to discuss community problems and deal with them.
“I am giving full-time focus to my campaign,” Mack said, “and I will be a full-time council person.”
Mack said she thinks it’s important to not be distracted as a council member, so she doesn’t plan to hold another job or serve on other boards or commissions during her time in office, if she wins the election.
“She really knows her community,” said Kimberly Durson, a legal clerk in Grass Valley and a former co-worker during the Obama campaign. “She is emotionally invested in Sacramento and in her neighbors.”
District 2 has large populations of Russian, Laotian, Hmong and African-American families, among others, Mack said.
With so much diversity in a single district, Mack said she feels it is “the responsibility of a leader to create understanding between people in all parts of the community.”
Mack said she wants to go into the community, connect with community leaders and get their input on how they see diverse cultures coming together.
“I want to have an understanding of each culture myself to become a pathway for bringing people together,” Mack said. “I’m not going to presume to know everything about everything.”
Mack said she has strong feelings about some of the policy issues that Sacramento has struggled with recently, including regulating medical marijuana dispensaries, redevelopment, and the recent Occupy Sacramento movement that has been active in Cesar Chavez Plaza for more than three weeks.
“I support the Occupy Sacramento movement,” Mack said. “General citizens need to be given the same consideration as banks have been given.”
However, Mack said she would like to see the movement have “a little more direction,” and for protesters to articulate exactly what they want to accomplish.
“The momentum (the movement) has gained warms my heart,” Mack said, “but now let’s use this strength to make something happen – let’s have a clearer end goal.”
Durson said setting goals and meeting them are Mack’s specialty.
“She is a really good organizer,” Durso said. “She runs a clean campaign – never disorganized or hard to understand what she’s trying to convey.”
Durson said Mack’s ability to work well under pressure will be an asset to her during the upcoming election.
“(Mack) digs in and works through challenges,” Durson said. “She’s been through hard times – her son in the military was deployed to Afghanistan, and she struggled with that. Some things are mind over heart, and she puts her head down and works hard to get through tough situations.”
When it comes to medical marijuana, Mack said she supports the voters’ decision to make it legal in California – as long as decisions about locations of dispensaries are well thought out.
“I support the law, but let’s be smart about it, and let’s be safe about it,” Mack said. “Industrial areas? Fine. Near schools and homes? No. We can be smart about how we approach it.”
Samantha Corbin, a friend who worked with Mack on local campaigns for Ami Bera for Congress and Dr. Richard Pan for Assembly, said Mack is “unique” in her commitment to finding “real solutions to real community problems.”
“She has a skill for helping voters find and tell their stories that makes her a perfect candidate for local office,” Corbin said. “She is a true community advocate.”
Mack said her fundamental priority – outside of restoring pride and empowering the community – is restoring city police and fire departments.
“Public safety is the top priority of municipalities,” Mack said. “I can tell you with 99.9 percent accuracy that I will never vote to lay off police officers and fire personnel.”
“Ordinary people doing extraordinary things.” Mack said that’s her favorite Obama quote – and it is exactly what she sees as the future of District 2.
“It might take more than four years; it might take more than eight years,” Mack said, “but you will see noticeable difference with me in office because there will be someone in the community, working for the community. Good or bad, I‘m not afraid to walk on those streets.”
Melissa Corker is a staff Reporter for The Sacramento Press. Follow her on Twitter @MelissaCorker.
I do not live in District Two but I am concerned with elected officials in all districts since they vote on matters outside their individual districts.
I wish her luck, I also wish, if elected, in regards to public safety she begins to think outside the endorsement box.
http://sacramentopress.com/headline/2200/Strong_Mayor_Weak_Ethics
While Ms Mack mentioned " There’s a lot of people that see a vulnerability on Sheedy’s part.. She has not done a lot for the whole of the district. The majority of the district feels neglected...:" Seems she failed to mention there are some folks who see a vulnerability on her (Mack's) part and feel she (Mack) has done some unsavory things with regards to the above mentioned list and "neglected"-- well appears she (Mack) may have neglected to tell us the whole truth."
It's not like the above mentioned reference article was written knowing Mack was going to later run for District 2 - so no hidden agenda's there. Seems the only one who may have an hidden agenda may be Mack, and those at KJ & Camp who want her vote once in office. If it walks like a duck, looks like a duck, quack like a duck it's a duck-lol
I am not saying - at the moment- that this candidate is one of the soon to be puppets. But I am saying it’s extremely sad, frustrating and annoying that we have to pull the truth, watch for wolves in sheep’s clothing, strategist making things complex when we should have Simple (but not simple-minded) honest to goodness candidates keeping it real.
Again, I would love for Sac Press to have a candidate forum for Sac Press readers and contributors to come and ask questions to the candidates. Usually i attend neighborhood candidate forums where individual groups are ganging up on candidates with a "If we give you our vote what will you do for us" forum asking only what pertains to them with candidates feeding into the groups egos. This way we can all attend and see how candidates address all issues and make an informed decision judging their honesty, transparency... on related and unrelated matters
Somewhere the ghost of Joe Serna just burst into laughter.....
Volunteering on campaigns is not government service. Running a phonebank is not government service.
"Mack also worked on local campaigns including Ami Bera's recent run for the 3rd Congressional District and Richard Pan’s successful run for Assembly." She left or was removed from both campaigns months before the actual election.