| Editor’s
note: Sen. John Snow, D-Murphy, is now into his
first session as a senator representing Jackson,
Swain, Macon, Clay, Cherokee, Graham and a portion
of Haywood.
Q: How has it been
for you being a freshman senator, what are your
gut reactions about how your first term in office
has gone?
A: When people
think of you as a lawyer and a judge they think
that you already know a lot of this stuff, which
is an assumption that is not necessarily true.
A lot of my background as a judge and working
with the laws is very helpful in trying to work
in the legislature.
But going through the procedures and all the
little things you have to do in drafting legislation
and things of that nature are things that everybody
has to learn.
My transition was made a lot easier by my background,
but by the same token I still have to do a lot
of the things that a lot of freshmen do to get
acquainted and to get orientated and to get in
the line of doing the proper procedures and doing
the right things at the right time.
So I guess I’ve had as hard a transition
as anybody else, helped a little bit by being
familiar with the laws. Some of my committee assignments
like the justice and public safety committees,
I had a little a head start with that with people
on that because people would come in and talk
to us about our programs like the guardian ad
litem program or court system. Things like drug
courts and youth family court system, I was familiar.
Q: Have there been
any situations where you felt that your background
as a judge would be particularly helpful and surprisingly
it wasn’t or sometime when you didn’t
think it would and it came in handy?
A: I really can’t
say that there was a time when I thought it would
and it wasn’t. I think it’s helped
me generally in all situations because it helps
me in trying to present an idea that I might have,
particularly in issues like we’re dealing
with now.
This methamphetamine bill, we’re trying
to take the sudephedrine off the counter and put
it behind the drug counter. My experience as a
judge and knowing something about how badly this
meth problem is out here in Western North Carolina
and how it affects our children and our families
was particularly helpful to me in trying to get
that bill out of the J2 committee on the Senate
side. Now we’re working to go to the House
side and getting ready to present in a judiciary
committee over there. I think it was really helpful
in that respect having that background and having
some knowledge about the problem.
Q: In general you
have taken a bit more of what we will call a “conservative”
stance on what people call moral issues such as
gay marriage or abortion. Have those come up at
all in this term?
A: I’ve had
people come to me to talk about issues and I tried
to express my views to them in those terms. The
marriage amendment I voiced support for, I’m
not so sure that it’s necessary because
our laws that we already have on the books. We
have very conservative judges in North Carolina
that I don’t think it’s ever going
to come up to be an issue.
You know, I’m a Democrat but I have pretty
conservative views. My feelings about (the Pop
the Cap bill) are not only based on my constituency,
but on my years of experience in the court system
watching people coming through there driving drunk
and things of that nature. We’re now at
6 percent on the alcohol content, and you run
it up to, what was it, 15 or 16? You get drunk
a lot quicker and in my mind it puts a lot more
people on the road that could hurt somebody. So
my conservatism is not only based in the sense
of the way I feel about things but that’s
my experience.
... A lot of times when you think Democrat, they
put a label on you as being somebody from New
York or somewhere that way, and I just don’t
quite fit that mold and don’t like to be
categorized like that.
Q: How has it been
for you in terms of having to tow the party line?
Have you been called out for being this conservative
democrat?
A: No. I’ve
had freedom to speak at all times. And that was
one of the things that was really important to
me was to be able to speak out and not be a freshman
that had to keep their mouth shut. I’m not
very prone to keep my mouth shut anyway. One of
the things about our caucus and the democratic
Senate group is that I’m given the option
to exercise my vote in any way I see fit. They
were very helpful to me in my election, but they
in no way have tried to control what I do because
they realize to that my views are coming from
me, but they’re also a reflection of my
district.
Q: How do you think
industry fits in to the Western North Carolina
economic versus technology and how does Western
Carolina University’s Millennium Campus
fit into that picture?
A: There’s
not going to be a lot of big manufacturing companies
like the one I’m working on over there (in
Brevard) unless we can find some that are bio-tech
industries and things of that nature that might
be willing to come to this area. They want to
go to places like our area, but a lot of times
they don’t have the necessary infrastructure
to do it.
One of the things that’s really important
— you’d mentioned the Millennium Campus,
this is not exactly tied into it, but it soon
will be — I don’t know if you’ve
heard of the Balsam Fiber Network. Well what that
amounts to is a fiber loop that’s being
put by Drake and the Eastern Band of Cherokees
that’s going to go from Franklin to Sylva
to Bryson City to Murphy down to into Tennessee
and Georgia back into Clay County and finally
back over to Franklin.
It’s a fiber loop that goes all the way
around the area. When Balsam Fiber finally finishes
it we’re going to have a bunch of bumps
on there — we’re going to have bumps
coming out of Atlanta, Chattanooga, Greenville,
S.C., Asheville to Greensboro, maybe Knoxville.
What we’ll have in that loop is redundancy
for broadband. And that’s the kind of thing
we need out there because any industry these days
needs that high speed and good broadband support.
So I’m thinking in those terms and I’ve
been doing everything I can to try to support
Balsam Fiber and show how important they are.
I was able to work with them, they’ve got
a $2.2 million grant to try to hook up the schools
in western North Carolina, all the six school
systems in the six counties in the far west. We’re
working on something like that if we get that
broadband out through there where you could even
use the Internet, too, off of this thing once
we get it going. There’s a lot of high tech
industry and research and development industry
that needs that. We’re not going to get
a General Motors or a Canton Paper Company, but
we might get an industry that employees 50 people,
60 people, maybe even only 20 people, but if they’re
doing work that needs that broadband hook up that’s
going to be a big help to us.
Q: Who do you think
should take responsibility for selling this concept
that here we are and we have all this kind of
stuff? Local economic development commissions
seem to each have different ways of promoting
their county. And this region’s largest
economic development entity, AdvantageWest, doesn’t
do retail.
A: Well, they don’t
do retail, but we don’t have anybody that
does retail. I don’t think we’ve got
anybody who does retail working anywhere in the
state. If we do I’m not aware of it, unless
it’s your local chamber of commerce. And
our local chambers of commerce are organized and
more pointed toward tourists. That’s one
of our big things out here is tourism, but we
just can’t live off of tourism, we’ve
got to have some real jobs.
And so I think that the key to is our economic
development people with the Department of Commerce
and we have one of those that’s stationed
in Bryson City, once we get this fiber network
hooked up then we can market ourselves a whole
lot better. Perhaps even with a great big Web
site that covers our area out here and touts our
wares, what we have to offer. That’s what
I see for it, I see something how we could do
it ourselves because we’re not going to
get anybody doing retail work for us. Our chamber
of commerce aren’t that sophisticated. It’s
not like an Asheville Chamber of Commerce that
could do something like that.
Q: How do you see,
in terms of jobs, in terms of the economy, the
issue of the Haywood County prison factoring in?
A: I think the
prison’s going to be alright. It’s
in our subcommittee. I’ve not had a lot
of emphasis about it in terms of jobs, but what
I’ve really been getting a lot of information
from is from these surrounding counties that use
prison labor for cleanup and doing work. I’ve
had more emphasis and more reason to try to keep
the prison for that reason. I think it’s
going to be alright.
Q: How do you see
the legislature dealing with health care issues
in the next couple years, particularly in terms
of Medicaid and how it’s trickling down
to the counties?
A: We’ve
got to deal with that and you know I’m not
sure what’s the answer to that. I don’t
have an answer to that. I’m really in a
quandary about. I just don’t have any good
answers for that. It’s not an area that
I consider myself an expert in or anything of
that nature, I’m learning about it as we
go. It’s a funny thing about the legislature,
it seems that after you’re there for a while
you develop an areas where you have an expertise
in and you work in those areas more. ...
One of the things that counties have been complaining
about is that they have to pay 7 percent of the
Medicare costs and that is a lot of money for
them. They’ve been trying to get out of
it, and there’s been a lot of legislation
this year to try to move that away from them and
it’s not been accomplished yet. But we’re
the only state in the nation. There used to be
New York, which was the only one that did it with
us, but we’re the only state in the nation
that does it. So that’s got to go pretty
soon. We’ve got to get counties relief from
that, it’s not right. |