Politics & Government

MA Patch Candidate Profile: Carmine Gentile For State Representative

Carmine Gentile is running for the 13th Middlesex District State Representative seat.

(Patch Graphics)

SUDBURY, MA — The 2024 election is heating up in Massachusetts and there are plenty of races with candidates eager to serve in elected office. Eyes are primarily focused on the presidential election at the top of the ticket, but plenty of other seats are up for grabs as well.

Patch asked candidates to answer questions about their campaigns and will be publishing candidate profiles as election day draws near.

Carmine Gentile is running for the 13th Middlesex District State Representative seat and answered Patch's questions below.

Find out what's happening in Sudburyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Age: 70

Position sought: State Representative, 13th Middlesex District

Find out what's happening in Sudburyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Party affiliation: Democratic Party

Family: Wife Linda, children Andrew and Sara and 3 grandchildren

Education: Tufts University B.A., Suffolk Law School J.D., other course work at Clark, Harvard, and Northeastern Universities

Occupation: Legislator

Previous or Current Elected Office: Currently in fifth term as State Representative, previously elected Sudbury Planning Board 3 terms (9 years)

Campaign Website: CarmineGentile.com

Why are you seeking elected office?

I am seeking re-election to continue to improve education, human services, housing, and meet the challenge of climate change in my five communities and the Commonwealth, so that life is better for all of us and our children.

What are the critical differences between you and other candidates seeking this post?

I have fought for women’s right to choose and was recognized as a Roe Act Champion, while my opponent wrote to me objecting to that legislation, calling it, “the Infanticide Bill.” I have a wealth of current (Chair of Sudbury Housing Trust, member COA) and earlier (Planning Board, Finance Committee, Town Manager Search Committee, Voting Registrar, Scoutmaster) local experience, and have lived in the district for 43 years. My opponent moved into the district five years ago and has substantially less experience in local and state affairs.

Describe the other issues that define your campaign platform:

Education Funding and Unrestricted Local Aid

My top two funding priorities remain Chapter 70 state aid to cities and towns for K-12 education and unrestricted local aid.

Education is the best investment we can make for our children. I have successfully fought for more Chapter 70 funding, public higher education financial aid, lower tuition, and free community college, - which together form the foundation of our state commitment to an educated society and productive workforce. I have also filed legislation to facilitate changing secondary school starting times throughout the Commonwealth (as we have already done in the 13th Middlesex District). Later secondary school start times improve the health, safety, and academic achievement of our children.

Unrestricted local aid from the state provides essential funding to supplement municipal revenue. This helps take some of the burden off homeowners and local businesses.

Meeting the Climate Crisis Challenge

Now that the legislature passed the 2050 roadmap to a clean and thriving Commonwealth, we need to meet our milestones and achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2045. I was proud to vote for a landmark climate bill in 2022 that focused on electrifying vehicles and transit, reducing carbon emissions in new construction, and incentivizing offshore wind and solar power. I continue to work to have an energy and climate bill enacted in 2024 that will enable the timely construction of scores of new electrical substations and other infrastructure to enable our transition to clean energy sources which will satisfy all of our energy needs.

Safeguarding Our Environment, Food Supply, and School Grounds

While we have a Clean Air Act and a Clean Water Act, there is no Clean Earth Act at the federal or state level.

Glyphosate is the new DDT (an insecticide banned in the last century and subject of Rachel Carson’s acclaimed book, A Silent Spring). Glyphosate, the world’s bestselling herbicide, has now been banned or substantially restricted in 22 countries around the world. Glyphosate (a chemical in Roundup) contaminates many of the processed foods on our grocery store shelves causing human blood levels multiple times the limit allowed in European drinking water. GMO / Genetically Modified Organism seeds manufactured by Monsanto/Bayer to be immune to glyphosate are now used to grow much of the food Americans eat. One liter of glyphosate diluted with water kills every living thing (not genetically modified) when sprayed over an acre of land. While Monsanto insists that it is “safe enough to drink”, I continue to lead the effort in Massachusetts to curtail and eventually eliminate the use of this poisonous substance from our foods and water.

After having a Glyphosate Commission created and funded, I continue to pursue legislation and regulatory reforms to reduce our exposure to and ingestion of this chemical which has caused non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and other serious illnesses resulting in over $11 billion in judgments against Monsanto / Bayer (the company who earlier gave us DDT and PCBs).

I filed other legislation to replace the herbicide known as Agent Orange and other hazardous pesticides/herbicides from the list of chemicals permitted for use on Massachusetts school properties and playing areas with pesticides/herbicides found not to be harmful by the EPA. This legislation was initially voted favorably by both the House and Senate on the last day of the previous session.

Campaign Finance Reform

A majority of Democrats, Republicans, and independent voters throughout the country want to amend the Constitution to nullify the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission. This would return authority to Congress and the states to regulate campaign spending and stop treating corporations and other non-human entities as if they were human beings. The Citizens United decision has allowed billionaires, large domestic and multinational corporations and foreign governments to spend vast amounts of money legally (and unlawfully in the case of foreign governments) to drown out the voices of the people in both our state and national elections and ballot questions.

In the 2018 general election, over 71 percent of Massachusetts voters supported Question 2, creating a Citizens’ Commission to research, report, and issue recommendations on how to advance a constitutional amendment to undo the political financial corruption spawned by Citizens’ United. It was my privilege and honor to serve as an appointee on the Commission, which met 20 times across the Commonwealth and released two detailed reports.

In bipartisan partnership with my colleagues in the House and Senate, I have filed and advocated for legislation for Massachusetts to join with other states to pass a Constitutional Amendment to overturn Citizens United.

Helping Our Seniors

Throughout my tenure in the legislature, I have served on the Joint Committee on Elder Affairs to better the lives of older residents. I have focused on providing better wages to the home care workers and home health aides whose work, paid for with state funds, is essential for enabling thousands of older residents and disabled residents to remain in their homes rather than be forced into nursing homes. I have been recognized for successfully leading the fight for both the home care and home health care aide pay raises. I continue to work for legislation which would cause their pay and benefits to be evaluated at least every two years. Unless and until these workers are paid a living wage, thousands of older and/or disabled residents will continue to go without the essential care they are eligible for and desperately need.

I have also filed and advocated for legislation which would more easily allow towns and cities to implement means tested property tax exemptions for senior citizens. In Sudbury, this policy has helped seniors stay in our community after retirement.

What else would you like voters to know about yourself and your positions?

I focus on three areas as a State Representative: Constituent Services, the Budget, and Legislation. I take great satisfaction in helping constituent families, individuals, and businesses with problems they encounter in dealing with state and/or federal agencies or departments. While working on the annual budget and supplementary budgets and legislation, I work to see that priorities are funded and successfully addressed. My campaign website CarmineGentile.com and public website CarmineGentileMA.com have a great deal of information on my legislative work.

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