Anderson focuses on business, job creation
Once a forester and horse logger, now a
lawyer and businessman, city council candidate John Anderson has
followed a varied career path.
He grew up in the Midwest north of
Green Bay, Wisc., in a mill town. He spent summers working in the
mill while earning a biology degree from Beloit College.
In 1988 he ventured west to Missoula
and worked for the Forest Service at the Powell Ranger Station on a
rehabilitation project at Gravy Creek. He liked Montana so much, he
decided to stay.
While working part-time with the Forest
Service, he started a horse logging business in the hills around
Missoula.
“I had a team of horses and a
chainsaw,” Anderson explained. “It was a lot of fun. I miss it
sometimes. But it’s dangerous work and it was tough. I scrapped
together a living, pay check to pay check, and earned enough to get
through the winter.”
Following his stint as a logger he
decided law school was the obvious next step. He was accepted to
the University of Montana School of Law and earned a general law
degree.
From there he moved to Libby for the
epic winter of 1996-97 where he lived in a cabin with his wife and
worked as a lawyer.
“We only had wood heat,” Anderson said.
“By the end of winter the snow was piled so high we couldn’t see
out of the windows.”
He then moved to Austin, Texas and
worked for a publicly traded company, on both the business and
legal sides of the operation. It was good a experience, he said,
“but I’m a country boy.”
They moved to Whitefish seven years ago
and Anderson is now managing the Kaufman, Vidal, Hileman firm in
Kalispell. He has served five years on the Whitefish Chamber of
Commerce board and is currently the chairman.
“We moved to Whitefish for the same
reasons everyone else does,” Anderson said. “We wanted a small town
that had all the things a family and young couple want.”
Anderson’s main focus if elected will
be the economy and job creation. He wants to continue his business
development agenda that he started with the chamber and says a seat
on council will help him push those ideas.
“There’s no doubt that municipalities
and businesses are intertwined,” he said. “They have to work
together.”
Anderson says Whitefish needs to
maintain its character and appeal for business opportunities to
sprout.
“One reason businesses want to come to
Whitefish, and one reason that Whitefish has had an increase in its
tax base is because of what Whitefish is,” he said. “It’s helpful
to look at other communities that have succeeded. The common
denominator is that they each have an identity and that the
community works real hard to keep that identity.
“These communities focus on their
downtown so that it stays healthy and vibrant. It doesn’t trump
every decision you make, but you have to keep downtown in
mind.”
Anderson doesn’t think Whitefish is
business unfriendly, as other candidates have suggested.
“I don’t think that’s right
substantively and I don’t think its the perception people should be
giving about Whitefish,” he said. “But there’s always improvements
that can be made. It would be helpful if the city took a more
customer-friendly approach and had a more streamlined permitting
process.”
He does think there are too many
regulations and that some ordinances need to be reviewed.
“Every time a regulation comes before
council, they need to ask, ‘Do we really need this?’” he said.
“Whitefish has more regulations than is really necessary. Their
substance and goals are all good, but we need look at obtaining
those goals with a lighter touch.”
The Critical Areas Ordinance is
important to maintaining Whitefish’s water quality, but could be
written more eloquently, he said.
“Clean water is a necessity for
Whitefish,” Anderson said. “We get our water from the lake. Clean
water is something this community needs to pay attention to. But
the CAO is over engineered. I’ve read through it twice to try and
understand it and I have to believe there is a more concise and
eloquent way to draft an ordinance that protects clean water.”
He says it’s important for the city to
have a role in the “doughnut” area.
“That’s where Whitefish is headed, the
next expansion will be into the ‘doughnut,’” he said.
He says the 2010 Interlocal Agreement
was a “non-document.”
“It wasn’t an agreement at all,” he
said. “If you really want to plan a community, a one-year horizon
really undermines your ability to do that.”
A renovated high school is necessary
and the city should play a complimentary role if asked by the
school board for assistance.
“If the city is approached, the city
needs to find a way to support the efforts of the folks trying to
renovate the school,” he said.
A new school will improve business
development, too.
“Families are a little reluctant to
move into Whitefish because of the current school,” he said.
A new City Hall should be downtown,
although he says he isn’t set on any one location.
The best attributes he’ll bring to the
council, Anderson says, are his patience and ability to bring
groups together.