At least four of St. Paul's seven City Council seats are certain to change hands this November, because the incumbents aren't running again. That includes Jane Prince, who is stepping down after eight years representing the Seventh Ward.
The open seat has drawn six candidates who hope to replace Prince in the East Side ward, which includes the Dayton's Bluff, Mounds Park, Swede Hollow, Battle Creek, Highwood, Conway and Eastview neighborhoods — a part of the city that many residents say can feel forgotten. Voter turnout in the Seventh Ward, which includes some of St. Paul's lower-income neighborhoods, is typically lower than the citywide average.
Phoua Thao, a Dayton's Bluff resident who attended an elected officials' forum in September, said through a translator that she doesn't yet know which candidate will get her vote. But she said her biggest concerns include snow plowing, public safety and the tax burden for low-income East Side residents.
"I'm looking for a candidate who is strong enough to protect the area," she said.
Meet the candidates
Dayton's Bluff resident Cheniqua Johnson, a program officer at the St. Paul and Minnesota Foundation, clinched the DFL Party endorsement in a crowded field. She has won the backing of labor and progressive groups like Take Action Minnesota, Faith in Minnesota and Our Revolution Twin Cities, and is endorsed by Mayor Melvin Carter, Attorney General Keith Ellison, Ramsey County Attorney John Choi and several sitting council members.
Johnson, a former staffer for elected officials at local and congressional levels, according to her website, emphasized affordable housing and public safety as critical issues in an interview and at a League of Women Voters forum in September. She said she supports the ballot question asking St. Paul residents to raise the sales tax 1% to fund transportation and recreation infrastructure, saying that she doesn't see an alternative.
Johnson, 28, said she's proud to be the youngest candidate in the race. On the East Side, she said, young people "make up a huge chunk of the population, almost a third."
Her most recent campaign finance report, filed this month, shows Johnson's campaign leading the money race in the Seventh Ward, with $65,300 raised and $13,800 cash on hand.