You may not spend much time thinking about the connection between a vibrant small-business climate and how that benefits your community, but Shelley Madore brings real pro-business sensibility to the Congressional race in the 2nd District: she connects the dots between building roads and infrastructure to attract business to locate and expand in the district and what that means for working families, because investing in our business community means we have jobs and the crucial benefits they provide heading into the future. Shelley Madore gets it.
During her time in the state legislature, Madore authored dozens of bills, and left her imprint on dozens more with ideas such as the Madore amendment that corrected a long-standing imbalance in road transportation funding. She understands that potholes are more than an annoyance during your daily commute, they send a message to business owners that we aren't investing as carefully in our community as they would in their parking lots.
Shelley Madore brought common sense ideas to the table, and then built the necessary consensus to keep bills moving forward so voters saw real results instead of partisan gridlock. Now she's bringing her razor sharp pencil to the campaign process, running a tight, fiscally responsible campaign that's picking up steam as she picks up endorsements such as the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association, and Education Minnesota. She'll bring that same common-sense leadership to Washington.
Maybe it's because she's had to deal with the enormous burden of medical costs as a special needs mom, but her understanding of how the complexities of interconnected budgets work also impressed the President of South Central College, Keith Stover.
Stover knows Shelley Madore sees more than just the big picture; she gets the way the system works, and can make it work better on behalf of the working people who live and raise their families in the district. Madore understands that we've got to provide the training our employers need and deserve right here in the district - that we've all got to work together to get Minnesota back to being the great place to live and work that we remember it from 10 or 20 years ago when people were moving here for the great schools, great jobs, and unparalleled quality of life.
During her time in the state legislature, Madore authored dozens of bills, and left her imprint on dozens more with ideas such as the Madore amendment that corrected a long-standing imbalance in road transportation funding. She understands that potholes are more than an annoyance during your daily commute, they send a message to business owners that we aren't investing as carefully in our community as they would in their parking lots.
Shelley Madore brought common sense ideas to the table, and then built the necessary consensus to keep bills moving forward so voters saw real results instead of partisan gridlock. Now she's bringing her razor sharp pencil to the campaign process, running a tight, fiscally responsible campaign that's picking up steam as she picks up endorsements such as the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association, and Education Minnesota. She'll bring that same common-sense leadership to Washington.
Maybe it's because she's had to deal with the enormous burden of medical costs as a special needs mom, but her understanding of how the complexities of interconnected budgets work also impressed the President of South Central College, Keith Stover.
President Stover had seen his plans to expand the Faribault campus, remodel the lab nursing students use and facilities to train for manufacturing jobs skipped over in favor of funding projects elsewhere in the state. Stover's impressed. "You really did your homework," he told Madore and her staff at a recent meeting as she explained what the one missing piece was when the state considered allocating precious MNCSU funds.
Stover knows Shelley Madore sees more than just the big picture; she gets the way the system works, and can make it work better on behalf of the working people who live and raise their families in the district. Madore understands that we've got to provide the training our employers need and deserve right here in the district - that we've all got to work together to get Minnesota back to being the great place to live and work that we remember it from 10 or 20 years ago when people were moving here for the great schools, great jobs, and unparalleled quality of life.
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