County Commission candidates debate at Tiger Bay, and Ken Hagan’s under fire

Share

Republican Ken Hagan received a firestorm of criticism at today’s debate at the Tiger Bay Club in Downtown Tampa. The Hillsborough County Commission Chair is running for the countywide District 5 seat. He was supposed to debate former Tampa City Council member, Democrat Linda Saul-Sena, and her no-party affiliate competitor Jim Hosler. But Hagan didn’t show up, a habit which Saul-Sena says should cost him his seat.

Jim Hosler berated party politics and criticized Hagan’s poor attendance at important debates and meetings.

Saul-Sena’s campaign literature claims that despite the unemployment rate, Hagan hasn’t showed up to any meetings of the Workforce Alliance. Saul-Sena supports the transportation investment, because she says it will provide immediate investments in the economy.

Hosler pointed out that Hagan’s stance on the one cent sales tax referendum has not been consistent.

Hosler said he’d be a nuts and bolts kind of guy, and that he thinks County Commissioner should be a boring job.

His experience in planning covers both public and private sector projects. But Saul-Sena said that her work has been more community-oriented than Hosler’s experience with what she calls ‘theoretical planning’.

She also claimed that Hagan lost the county millions in federal money by missing 80% of the Affordable Housing Advisory Board meetings, and mismanaging the housing program. Hagan also garnered criticism from Linda Karson, who is with the Salvation Army. She asked the candidates how they would help the area’s homeless population.

Saul-Sena also criticized Hagan for voting against a proposal by Catholic Charities to set up facilities to help the homeless in Hillsborough County, a proposal she says that she would support. Absentee ballots have been mailed out and early voting for the November 2nd election begins October 18th.

You may also like

Medicaid Expansion is in Our Hands Now

Florida is one of only 10 states that has not...

Hillsborough County State Attorney candidates clash at heated political forum

Listen: Candidates for the Hillsborough County state attorney position faced...

‘Hold Fast’ podcast creators talk alt-weeklies, Mike Lacey and more

Alt-weeklies are getting increased attention this year, thanks in part...

The Scoop: Fri. May 17th, 2024 Tampa Bay and Florida headlines by WMNF

WMNF’s Chris Young reports that an advocacy group wants more...

Ways to listen

WMNF is listener-supported. That means we don't advertise like a commercial station, and we're not part of a university.

Ways to support

WMNF volunteers have fun providing a variety of needed services to keep your community radio station alive and kickin'.

Follow us on Instagram

The 70's Show
Player position: