Will Conley Will Conley[/caption]

Will Conley (incumbent)


Experience: current precinct 3 commissioner, obtained a degree in political science and business from Texas State University, experience managing businesses, active in state politics and legislative issues


Top priorities: flood recovery, creating a vision and implementing a strategy across our county to deal with growth and change coming to Hays County



Why are you running?


I love this community. I love public service. I really see this being an important place and time in our history, and I want to offer my skills and services to the people I represent to help fulfill our personal goals.



Aside from growth, what is the biggest challenge facing Hays County?


You just can’t get away from the growth issue. It impacts every square foot of our community, and it impacts every department and every level of service we provide in our county. A lot of people forget that a huge part of what we do—over 60 percent of our budget—is judicial services. Growth, the sophistication of crime and the sheer volume of what is going through our justice system, requires a great deal of attention and management.



What role do you see the county playing in ensuring the Hill Country and Hays County’s natural resources are not depleted?


You have to create a vision and a plan, and then you need to go out and implement the strategy. Specifically, Hays County went through a very extensive planning process with many jurisdictions and a large group of stakeholders and citizens and created our habitat conservation plan. That plan has now been put into full effect and led to the largest preserve in Hays County’s history. You always hear people say, ‘Development needs to pay for itself.’ Well that’s exactly what this is accomplishing.







Rob Roark Rob Roark[/caption]

Rob Roark


Experience: 13 years experience in the semi-conductor manufacturing industry, volunteer with the Blanco River Regional Recovery Team to assist with flood recovery, volunteer with the Hays County Food Bank


Top priorities: maintaining quality of life while dealing with growth and keeping taxes low; improving planning for natural disasters; improving infrastructure



Why are you running?


I believe that our founding fathers never meant for public service to be a profession. I think you need someone who will go, serve and then is going to go back to the community and allow other people to have input.



Aside from growth, what is the biggest challenge facing Hays County?


When you have people coming into a community and you have this growth, one of the biggest problems we have is that people are disconnected from their communities. If you can take people and get them connected to their communities, and if you can get people to work together so that people are not relying on government or relying on others, that’s how you build stronger communities. How do we get multiple people to work together so that we can build up a lot of our resources within the community that are there, such as our social networks, our churches, our organizations?



What role do you see the county playing in ensuring the Hill Country and Hays County’s natural resources are not depleted?


We have got to start to look down the line at the next 10-20 years: Where are the areas that are going to be critical to us, especially as we’re looking into the flood areas and the flood conservation areas? For an example, San Marcos has done a very good job with dedicated green spaces. The county is attaching some of that to the Purgatory green space. We now have on the books almost 1,200 acres—larger than Central Park—that is right in the southwestern part of the district, the precinct I’m running for.