Sinclair promotes strengthening economy through agriculture

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For Amy Sinclair, Republican candidate for District 14 of the Iowa Senate, one of the most locally important issues is agriculture, because agriculture affects many things, including the economy.

Sinclair gave the example of when the country “fell off the edge of a cliff” in the downturn of the economy a few years ago.

“Iowa didn’t, and it didn’t because of agriculture,” Sinclair said. “Long and the short of it, agriculture kept Iowa from being in the mess the rest of the nation was. As a senator, we need to make sure we have policies and regulatory practices that don’t inhibit that as our economic base.”

Background

Agriculture is something Sinclair has been around her entire life because she grew up on a farm near the Iowa-Missouri border.

Sinclair’s husband Boyd, who is the elementary-school principal at Wayne Community School District, and their three sons live on a 123-year active family farm that Sinclair described as “south of Humeston, west of Allerton, north of Lineville and east of Leon.”

The farm has a cow-calf operation with 60 to 65 head of cows.

Sinclair is also a business-office manager for a grain elevator.

When it comes to local politics, she is on the board of supervisors for Wayne County. Sinclair is in the second year of her second term.

She has held numerous leadership positions on boards and committees, including Iowa County Engineers, Service Bureau, South Iowa Area Crime Commission, Community Health Centers of Southern Iowa, Chariton Valley Transportation Planning Affiliate, South Central Iowa Community Action Agency and Wayne County Farm Bureau.

Government

According to Sinclair, sometimes there’s a disconnect between local and state governments, an example when former Iowa Gov. Chet Culver ordered a 10 percent across-the-board cut of the state’s budget in 2009.

“To me, having somebody who’s familiar with the local government’s end of it, can be nothing but a benefit at the state level,” she said. “You know, to have a senator in there who understands what consequences those votes will have back on the people who are actually doing the business of governing.”

Along with agriculture and the economy, education is also a big issue for Sinclair, who has worked for Central Decatur Community Schools and Southwestern Community College.

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