As Democratic candidates for president endlessly cycle through the state, it can be easy to lose sight of the city council elections happening in Iowa City and Cedar Rapids on Nov. 5. Little Village sent questionnaires to all the candidates in order to offer readers a brief profile of each. (Jorel Robinson did not respond to the questionnaire, so information from a phone interview conducted last month was used for him.) Illustrations by Blair Gauntt

Iowa City

Two at-large seats are on the ballot. Because both of the councilmembers vacating those seats are men, and all the candidates are women, the next city council will be majority-woman.

Megan Alter

Test development manager at ACT

After years of working with community groups — from the South District Neighborhood Association and Black Voices Project to Big Brothers Big Sisters and the Iowa Womenโ€™s Foundation — as well as her service on the Iowa City Housing and Community Development Commission, Megan Alter decided to run for office.

โ€œ[W]hile I appreciate what can be done by individuals and organizations, I want to be impactful on a larger scale,โ€ she said. Alter came to Iowa City for graduate school and decided to make it her home.

She sees a series of interrelated issues forming the biggest challenge facing the city: the need to create affordable housing, improving public transportation โ€œso that it is convenient, accessible, safe and efficient,โ€ and addressing the lack of affordable quality child care.

Alter favors creating city housing vouchers โ€œto supplement those received from HUD.โ€ She is also a supporter of city-lead efforts, such as โ€œthe South District Home Investment Partnership Program pilot program for home ownership.โ€ Alter describes herself as โ€œa staunch believer in pilot programs and community feedback to implement, correct or improve, and advance experiments so they can be successfully brought to scale.โ€

Laura Bergus

Attorney, managing partner of the Hayek, Moreland, Smith & Bergus law firm

โ€œLocal government excites me,โ€ Laura Bergus, a lifelong Iowa Citian, said. โ€œMy first job was televising Iowa Cityโ€™s city council meetings, and my first career was dedicated to improving communication between the city and its residents.โ€

Bergus lists creating more affordable housing, better local and regional transportation, and the โ€œneed to shepherd responsible growth in diverse sectors of our economyโ€ as Iowa Cityโ€™s biggest challenges.

But asked what her top priority as a councilmember would be, Bergus chose โ€œimproving the processโ€ rather than a specific issue. โ€œGood process is transparent, reliable and accountable,โ€ she said. โ€œCity council must focus on policy, not micromanaging … I will speak up if the city council gets stuck in the weeds. I will push staff to make city information easier to find.โ€

Bergus served on the Iowa City Telecommunications Commission for nine years. She has also been active with community groups, including the South District Neighborhood Association and the Community Foundation of Johnson County, and she does pro bono legal work through Iowa Legal Aidโ€™s Volunteer Lawyer Project.

Janice Weiner

Retired diplomat

โ€œMy parents instilled in me the ethos of public service, which I embraced, serving my country for 26 years as a Foreign Service Officer (diplomat),โ€ Janice Weiner said. She believes her โ€œdual perspective of growing up in this community, then viewing it with new eyes when I returned homeโ€ after living in many other countries will make her effective in identifying problems and creating solutions.

Weiner said her legal training — she attended Stanford Law School, after graduating from Princeton — taught her how โ€œto examine issues from all angles,โ€ and her diplomatic background has given her the ability to deal effectively with people of all backgrounds.

She lists โ€œaffordable housing, transit that works for all, lack of quality, affordable daycare and infrastructure issues,โ€ as the cityโ€™s biggest challenges, and said she would focus heavily on daycare, โ€œwhich is an economic as well as a social justice issue.โ€ Weiner said she would be mindful of funding issues.

โ€œSolid finances must be part of the whole,โ€ she said. โ€œBut having everyone at the table is key.โ€

Since returning to Iowa in 2015, Weiner has been contributed to community organizations and serves on the boards of Shelter House, UNA-USA and Agudas Achim Synagogue.

Cedar Rapids

Cedar Rapids will have three contested city council positions on the ballot: two at-large seats and the District 2 seat.

District 2

Sofia Mehaffey

Director of community health and nutrition programs at Horizons: A Family Services Alliance

โ€œMany years ago, I moved to Cedar Rapids in order to go to school and build a better life for my family,โ€ Sofia Mehaffey said. โ€œI was a single mother of two, and we lived in poverty on government assistance. What happened over the next decade was miraculous — because of the community support here, I was able to achieve masters-level education, escape the cycle of poverty and give back to the community in a truly meaningful role with Horizons [a nonprofit that assists underserved populations].โ€

Mehaffey said she is running for city council to make sure the kind of support she received is available to everyone.

Her platform focuses on senior issues, public health and food insecurity.

โ€œPublic Health encompasses many components of city and community development — including housing, access to city resources and infrastructure,โ€ Mehaffey said. โ€œThe built environment can be influenced by city incentives and ordinances, and decisions made on behalf of the community must reflect constituent needs and the public good.โ€

Mehaffey serves on the boards of numerous community organizations, including Family Promise of Linn County and NewBo City Market, and is completing a term on the Linn-Mar School Board.

If elected, Mehaffey would be the first black woman to serve on the Cedar Rapids City Council. Only one other black person, Dale Todd, has served on the council.

Scott Overland

(Incumbent) Vice president of investments at Cedar Rapids Bank and Trust

Scott Overland ran for city council four years ago โ€œto reinvigorate the core neighborhoods of Cedar Rapids.โ€

โ€œI saw an opportunity to create a homeowner lending program, Neighborhood Finance Corporation (NFC), which would make home loans in the older neighborhoods of Cedar Rapids,โ€ Overland said. โ€œ… After a lot of hard work, I was successful in bringing NFC to Cedar Rapids last year. So far, NFC has made 28 loans totaling over $1 million.โ€

Overland said that if heโ€™s elected to a second term, he will โ€œcontinue to advocate for strengthening neighborhoods through promotion of NFC.โ€ He will also work on affordable housing for both homeowners and renters.

Prior to running for city council in 2015, Overland served for nine years on the Cedar Rapids City Planning Commission. He is a trustee of the Indian Nature Creek Center and works with a number of other area nonprofits.

At-Large

Patrick Loeffler

President, Cedar Rapids and Iowa City Building Trades, and owner of Corner Store Apothecary & More

Patrick Loeffler said his reasons for running are simple: โ€œ[B]eing a lifelong CR resident, and having grandkids in the school system, has been very motivating.โ€

โ€œPublic safety and the shooting issues lately have me very concerned,โ€ he added. โ€œFlood protection is personal … I want to make sure of the follow-through for the westside protection.โ€

Loeffler is president of a union that represents workers in the building trades throughout eastern Iowa, and owns Corner Store Apothecary & More, a Czech Village shop that sells CBD oil and hemp-based products.

โ€œI truly feel every job I have had has led me to where I am now,โ€ Loeffler said.

As a union leader, โ€œI represent everyone no matter of race, religion or political views.โ€
โ€œI feel I have the knack for bringing people together and working through the obstacles and differences,โ€ Loeffler said.

Loeffler serves as co-chair of the Master Facilities Oversight Planning Committee for the Cedar Rapids school board and has been an active advocate for the legalization of medical marijuana in Iowa.

Ann Poe

(Incumbent)

Ann Poe said it was her experience as community liaison for the Rebuild Iowa Office (RIO) following the 2008 floods that first inspired her to run for city council.

โ€œThere was still so much rebuilding to complete by our City Government, citizens and businesses and believed my knowledge and experience with RIO provided me the opportunity to continue to support our recovery efforts,โ€ Poe said. โ€œDisasters are personal. The flood affected my family, a family home [weโ€™d had] for over 80 years and the community I love.โ€

Poe was first elected in 2011, and is seeking her third term as an at-large councilmember. Poe said she wants to continue to work on infrastructure — Paving for Progress and the flood control system — and targeted economic development โ€œlike supporting the Czech Village and NewBo District Plan.โ€

Poe also includes addressing gun violence and affordable housing as top priorities.

She supports expanding programs at recreation centers across the city โ€œto keep kids active and off the streets.โ€

โ€œThe concept is a good one, but very expensive,โ€ Poe said. โ€œWe are actively in discussions with the school district that would open up facilities and provide programming and mentoring for our youth.โ€

Jorel Robinson

Productivity specialist at GoDaddy

Jorel Robinson cites the need for the city to improve its response to gun violence as a major reason for running.

โ€œI had a friend who was shot by a police officer, and besides that, just the number of kids I know in this community who have experienced gun violence,โ€ Robinson said.

Robinson believes that making sure young people have productive things to do would reduce gun violence, since it would help them avoid becoming involved in the โ€œwrong things.โ€

If elected, Robinson said he would also focus on affordable housing and improving how city government shares information.

โ€œAs a person who works at GoDaddy, thatโ€™s all I think about,โ€ he said. โ€œThere are so many updated ways to get this information out to people.โ€

Robinson added, โ€œOur elected officials should be trying to create excitement in our city and give people a reason to want to live in Cedar Rapids and have a family here.โ€
Izabela Zaluska contributed reporting to this article. This article was originally published in Little Village issue 273.

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