St. Paul mayoral candidate Elizabeth Dickinson envisions a greener city

By Eric Roper Star Tribune

St. Paul mayoral candidate Elizabeth Dickinson, left, chats with Stuart Schmitz outside his home. “I’m the only Green. … What makes me the most different … is emphasizing energy and the environment,” she says. Elizabeth Dickinson.

Some are drawn into politics by an inspiring speech. For Elizabeth Dickinson, it was a smokestack.

The Green Party candidate for St. Paul mayor was shocked to see a coal-burning power plant from her new home atop the city’s West Side bluffs nearly two decades ago. She became a leader in the fight to convert the High Bridge facility to natural gas, which Xcel Energy agreed to do in 2002.

“I had never done community organizing before, and it really brought home how impactful that could be,” Dickinson said.

In a crowded race to replace Mayor Chris Coleman, who is stepping down to run for governor, Dickinson paints herself as the candidate most focused on the environment and sustainable energy, pushing for more green energy jobs and detailing plans for solar panels on public buildings. A life coach and former actress, her pitch to voters is that she’s different.

Dickinson, 57, has never held elected office, but she has become a familiar face in St. Paul campaigns, having run for mayor in 2005 and City Council in 2003. She’s one of two female candidates for mayor — the other is perennial candidate Sharon Anderson — in a city that’s never elected a woman to the top job.

“I’m one of the only women in the race,” she told a man while door knocking recently in Highland Park. “I’m the only Green. And I’d say what makes me the most different from the guys who are running, policywise, is emphasizing energy and the environment.”

She also would like to see St. Paul adopt a $15 minimum wage and phase it in over time to ease the transition for businesses, as Minneapolis is doing.

Dickinson spreads her message by knocking on doors to talk with residents, all the more important because she has just a fraction of the campaign cash that some other candidates have, according to the most recent finance reports. She turned down a $1,000 donation from WomenWinning because the Green Party does not allow donations from political action committees.

That doesn’t deter supporters like Andrea Kiepe, who met Dickinson during community organizing related to the power plants and was impressed by her ability to articulate policy issues.

“She’s just one of those people you run into and you’re like, ‘Wow, she is a sharp cookie,’ ” Kiepe said. “She knows what she’s doing and she’s got good judgment and she’s got a good heart.”

Dickinson grew up north of Boston and studied English at Cambridge University. She was living in California and working as an actress when she read in an actors union newsletter how many actors in the Twin Cities had health insurance. She picked up and moved to St. Paul in 1998.

Dickinson also has been a substitute teacher, a licensed psychologist and a lobbyist. Locally, she has pushed for comprehensive sex education on behalf of the Minnesota AIDS Project, the smoking ban in bars and restaurants for the Association of Non-Smokers, and Common Core standards for the National Congress of Parents.

“Life is more nuanced and complicated than just having two options,” Dickinson said. “And by running Green you’re saying we need more options.”

Elizabeth Dickinson

Age: 57

Education: Bachelor’s degree in education from Cambridge University, master’s degree in arts from Lesley University

Family: Husband, Christopher Childs

Fun fact: Played intake nurse in the 1997 film “Gridlock’d,” starring Tupac Shakur and Tim Roth.


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