James "JJ" Johnson is a program advisor and adjunct instructor at Spokane Community College. He has served as both chair and vice chair of the Spokane Valley Planning Commission, director of the Spokane County Human Rights Task Force, and on the Pasadena Park Citizens Advisory Committee.
Johnson is running for Spokane Valley City Council, Position 1 to bring more homes to the city as well as affordable housing along the Sprague corridor. Johnson wants to see the Appleway Trail connected with the Centennial Trail and would advocate for more parks and green spaces to be bought or established.
His opponent is Rod Higgins, who has served on the Spokane Valley City Council from 2012 to 2021, and was mayor from 2016 to 2019. He is running again to apply "conservative principles to city government." His website is inactive as of mid-October, but Higgins is prioritizing making the city more business-friendly. An archived version of his site blames progressives for trying to unseat Trump and states that his goal is to re-establish a conservative majority in the city council.
Johnson has been endorsed by Republicans, labor unions, and the more moderate members of the current city council. While not a progressive choice, Johnson represents a better direction than Higgins. We lean Johnson for Spokane Valley City Council, Position 1.
James "JJ" Johnson is a program advisor and adjunct instructor at Spokane Community College. He has served as both chair and vice chair of the Spokane Valley Planning Commission, director of the Spokane County Human Rights Task Force, and on the Pasadena Park Citizens Advisory Committee.
Johnson is running for Spokane Valley City Council, Position 1 to bring more homes to the city as well as affordable housing along the Sprague corridor. Johnson wants to see the Appleway Trail connected with the Centennial Trail and would advocate for more parks and green spaces to be bought or established.
His opponent is Rod Higgins, who has served on the Spokane Valley City Council from 2012 to 2021, and was mayor from 2016 to 2019. He is running again to apply "conservative principles to city government." His website is inactive as of mid-October, but Higgins is prioritizing making the city more business-friendly. An archived version of his site blames progressives for trying to unseat Trump and states that his goal is to re-establish a conservative majority in the city council.
Johnson has been endorsed by Republicans, labor unions, and the more moderate members of the current city council. While not a progressive choice, Johnson represents a better direction than Higgins. We lean Johnson for Spokane Valley City Council, Position 1.
Because of a Tim Eyman initiative, the Legislature is required to submit any bill it passes that closes tax loopholes or raises revenue to a nonbinding advisory vote. The Legislature had a historically productive 2021 session, resulting in several advisory votes appearing on the ballot. We hope the Legislature will change the law to remove these meaningless measures in the future.