Brad Snowden and Julie Crites participate in a Seward City Council candidate forum at the Seward Community Library in Seward, Alaska, on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)

Seward council candidates discuss issues at election forum

Participating in Thursday’s forum were Julie Crites and Brad Snowden

Two of the three candidates for Seward City Council gathered Thursday in the Seward Community Library to talk about their bid for public office and issues facing city voters as part of a candidate forum hosted by the Peninsula Clarion, KDLL 91.9 FM and KBBI 890 AM public radio.

The forum, hosted in partnership with the Central Peninsula League of Women Voters and the Seward Community Library, was the sixth of eight being held throughout September heading into the Oct. 3 municipal election.

Over the course of about an hour, candidates fielded questions from forum moderators Ashlyn O’Hara, the Peninsula Clarion’s government and education reporter, and Riley Board, reporter at KDLL public radio.

Participating in Thursday’s forum were Julie Crites and Brad Snowden. Incumbent council member Robert Barnwell is also running for a seat on the council but was unable to attend the forum. Seward City Council members serve three-year terms.

Barnwell is a retired teacher and commercial fisherman who holds a master’s degree in education from Framingham State University near Boston.

Crites is a family nurse practitioner who served on the Seward City Council from February to October in 2020.

Snowden has previously served as president of the Seward Rotary and has lived in Seward for more than 55 years.

Thursday’s forum kicked off with a question about the looming vote on the future of Seward’s electric utility, which city voters will decide on election day. The city during a special election in May put before voters the question of whether or not to sell Seward Electric to Homer Election Association. Although a majority voters supported the sale, it failed to meet the 60% approval threshold needed to pass.

Candidates had different opinions about Seward’s potential electric utility sale. Crites said she trusts that the city council’s favorable opinion toward the sale is well-founded and that spreading the costs associated with running an electric utility over a bigger user base is a good idea.

“I think that it’s wise if you can put the upgrades to the infrastructure that utility company needs over a larger base of people than what we have here,” Crites said. “Whether or not (the city sells) to Homer (Electric Association) or Chugach (Electric Association), I think it’s really based on who’s going to give us the best rates and in the future the best rates.”

Snowden said he doesn’t support the sale.

“My answer is short,” Snowden said. “No. I’m not that strong on government running business.”

Regarding the second ballot question voters will be faced with on election day — whether or not to lower the support the threshold needed to sell the city’s electric utility from 60% to 50% — the candidates again disagreed.

Crites said she thinks a utility sale should only require a simple majority to move forward and said anyone who receives electricity from the City of Seward should be allowed to vote on the sale, even if they live outside of city limits.

“I think if you’re utilizing the electric services, you should have the opportunity to vote,” Crites said.

Snowden said he doesn’t support lowering the threshold, which he called “another game of politics.”

“To me, this is just another game of politics, of shifting things — if we can’t get it one way, we’re gonna get another way,” he said.

On the issue of affordable housing, Crites said it’s important for the city to nurture effective programs, such as Seward’s developer reimbursement program, while Snowden said higher wages would give prospective homeowners more buying power.

“I also feel like we should look at — we’re limited with land here in Seward — looking outside of Seward at the borough and kind of pushing toward it to open up a little bit more land for housing for us as well,” Crites said.

Both candidates said they would be strong advocates for Seward’s public schools. Crites said her daughter, currently in high school, has attended Seward schools since she was in elementary school and that a lack of affordable housing for teachers and cuts to extracurricular programming are among the struggles facing the school community. Snowden agreed that education is important.

“It’d be one of my highest priorities,” Snowden said. “Education is absolutely critical to our future — not just Seward, but our country and your children’s future.”

Candidates also fielded questions about Seward’s business community, from how the city council can incentivize participation in Seward year-round to how the city can support business development.

Crites said she sees the challenges affecting Seward’s overall population as being connected to the seasonality and availability of services in town.

“As far as the businesses that don’t stay open in the winter, it’s the lack of the customers utilizing the services which goes back to we need to increase the customer base, the population in Seward,” she said.

Snowden said Seward competes with Anchorage and that he knows from his own experience owning businesses in town the struggles that come with staying open in the off-season.

“Having been in business in Seward, unquestionably this town is really suffering in the wintertime with … no business, which creates no jobs.”

Candidates also talked about their vision for the future of Seward, what they think are the biggest challenges facing the city and where they think the city may be spending too much or not enough money. They were also given the opportunity to make opening and closing statements during Monday’s forum.

Thursday’s full candidate forum can be streamed on the Clarion’s Facebook page or on KDLL’s website at kdll.org. The next forum will be held on Monday, Sept. 25 at the Soldotna Public Library and will feature candidates for the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District Board of Education’s Nikiski and Soldotna seats.

Election day is Oct. 3 and absentee in-person voting started on Sept. 18.

Reach reporter Ashlyn O’Hara at ashlyn.ohara@peninsulaclarion.com.

CORRECTION: A previous story identified Brad Snowden as the owner and opeartor of the Hotel Seward. Per the Alaska Department of Commerce, Community and Economic Development, the current owner of the Hotel Seward is JL Hotel Seward, LLC.

More in News

A snowmachine rider takes advantage of 2 feet of fresh snow on a field down Murwood Avenue in Soldotna, Alaska, on Monday, Dec. 12, 2022. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Ice fishing opens on some Kenai National Wildlife Refuge lakes

Snowmachines are permitted for ice fishing access on Hidden, Kelly, Petersen, Engineer and Watson lakes.

The waters of Cook Inlet lap against Nikishka Beach in Nikiski, Alaska, where several local fish sites are located, on Friday, March 24, 2023. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Kenai asks for fishery economic disaster declaration

The Kenai City Council requested that Gov. Dunleavy declare a disaster and support a recovery plan for the Upper Cook Inlet East Side Set Net fishery.

The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District logo. (Photo courtesy of Kenai Peninsula Borough School District)
District superintendent dispels rumors about student construction

Superintendent Clayton Holland said student involvement in Seward High School construction is “based on rumor, not fact.”

Anchorage-based singer and songwriter Keeley Boyle is pictured in Anchorage<ins>, Alaska,</ins> on Sept. 26, 2023. Boyle, who was raised on the Kenai Peninsula, will use a $10,000 grant she received from the Rasmuson Foundation to create an album of songs about her grandparents’ home in Nikiski. Photo courtesy of Jovell Rennie
Musician hailing from Kenai receives Rasmuson grant

Keeley Boyle will record an album of songs about her grandparents’ Nikiski home.

Commercial fishing and recreational vessels are docked in the Homer harbor on Oct. 23, 2025. The commercial fishing industry endured a series of challenges over the year, some of them imposed by the new Trump administration. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Alaska fisheries in 2025: turmoil, economic and environmental challenges and some bright spots

NOAA cuts, economic headwinds and invasive species pose problems, but there was some recovery in crab stocks and salmon harvests.

Cook Inlet near Clam Gulch is seen on Oct. 23, 2025. (Photo by Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Disputed oil lease sale in Alaska’s Cook Inlet upheld in new Trump administration decision

After completing a court-ordered environmental study, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management said no changes are needed for the 2022 sale that drew just one bid.

The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District logo.
School district projects $7.5 million budget deficit for fiscal year 2027

Decreased enrollment and increased property values mean less local and state funding.

The sign in front of the Homer Electric Association building in Kenai, Alaska as seen on April 1, 2020. (Photo by Brian Mazurek/Peninsula Clarion)
Homer Electric Association announces rate increase

The proposed increase, if approved by the Regulatory Commission of Alaska, will go into effect Jan. 1.

A photo of Anesha “Duffy” Murnane, missing since Oct. 17, 2019, in Homer, Alaska. (Photo provided, Homer Police Department)
Calderwood pretrial hearing rescheduled

The omnibus hearing for Kirby Calderwood was continued to Jan. 21. Trial week is currently scheduled for Feb. 17, barring finalization of a plea agreement.

Most Read