News & Updates

Welcome To My Website

By Brett Schetzsle, on Mar 16, 2010

Twitter ButtonThank you for taking the time to visit my website. I encourage you to spend some time to get to know me and my positions on the important issues facing our city and state.

 

As Beverly's state representative, I will support policy that is IN FAVOR of the taxpayer, IN FAVOR of more accountable government, IN FAVOR of helping businesses create new jobs and keep the ones we have and IN FAVOR of getting our kids ready for their future.

 

If you have any questions, use the 'Contact' link above, email me at brett@votebrett2010.com or call me at (978) 810-0976.

Click the button below to make a secure, on-line contribution or to receive text message alerts from the campaign.

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Schetzsle Announces Proposal for Budget Process Reform

By Brett Schetzsle, on Sep 2, 2010

This morning, I announced an outline of the first bill I will file as Beverly's state representative. It represents ideas for real solutions to the challenges we face with our state budget - challenges that have been ignored by the majority for too long. Without aggressive and fundamental changes to our approach to creating the budget, the "structural" deficits that everyone complains about, but nobody fixes, will continue.

The name of the bill - the BALANCE Act - explains perfectly both the impact on the budget and the great need we have for new points of view and increased debate in our state legislature. 

I am the only candidate in the 6th Essex race who is proposing real solutions and making clear my positions on the issues we face as a state. I am the only candidate in the race who is willing to stand up and challenge the business-as-usual approach on Beacon Hill.

To read more about the BALANCE Act, click here.

Friendly Neighbors at Campaign HQ

By Brett Schetzsle, on Aug 30, 2010

SalemNewsOne of my objectives for this campaign (in addition to winning of course) was to force a real debate on how Beverly is being represented on Beacon Hill and to ensure that the citizens of the city had a real, competitive campaign through which to evaluate the candidates for State Representative. As Michael Douglas says in The American President - American is advanced citizenship. You gotta want it bad, because it will put up a fight.

Well, I am happy to say that both party city committees are working hard to put up a fight. The more people who are engaged, the better.

Today's Salem News highlights the campaign offices which have sprung up across the street from one another.

Drumroll please...

By Brett Schetzsle, on Aug 9, 2010

And the winner of a pair of tickets to Thursday's Patriots game and a September Bruins game is:

Johanna Bohoy, Hale St., Beverly

Legislative Session Comes to a Close

By Brett Schetzsle, on Jul 31, 2010

I released the following statement as the formal sessions for the 186th General Court came to a close:

"There may be some incumbent Representatives who will be claiming victories based on minor reforms as this session ends, but voters will more likely remember the tax increases, local aid cuts, election law flip-flops and the resignation of the House Speaker as the key points of this session. They served as ample evidence that the way to get our state back on track is to replace a healthy chunk of lawmakers with those willing to stand up to the corruption and special interest influence and do what is right for taxpayers instead"
 
"There is so much to be done by the next legislature, particularly when it comes to getting people back to work. It took until the last hours of the last day to get a minor economic development bill passed because the majority once again went all-in on a jobs plan based on one favored industry rather than focusing on addressing the broad-based barriers for job creation in the state. If we are serious about getting 320,000 people back to work, we have to stop putting all of the eggs in one basket and start helping every industry create jobs. And as it turns out, the state may not even get the gaming industry jobs because, at the last minute, the legislature sent the Governor a bill they knew he wouldn't accept."

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