Like many who find themselves drawn to local politics, Camas City Council candidate Amanda Stamness says it was a hot-button issue that first caught her attention.
“I had heard that they were considering a tax on utilities and I wanted to find out more,” Stamness, a relative newcomer to the Camas community, says.
After talking to local politicians about the city’s structural deficit and the reasons why some local leaders feel a utility tax could be a good revenue source, Stamness found herself warming to the idea of being a part of the local political scene.
A Kansas native who lived in Ohio and California before moving to the Portland area a few years ago and to Camas in 2014, Stamness says she chose to run for city council because felt disappointed by the majority of state and national politicians, was disenchanted by what she saw as a concentrated effort to delegitimize the Libertarian Party on a state and national level, and because she wanted to make a difference in her new community.
Although Stamness admits to having little to no experience in local government, she says she hopes her background in management, investment management, commercial lending and institutional portfolio management will give her a leg up when it comes to managing the city and dealing with public finances.