Pubdate: Tue, 25 Oct 2005 Source: Austin Daily Herald, The (MN) Copyright: 2005 Austin Daily Herald Inc Contact: http://www.austindailyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1201 Author: Josh Verges HATCH PLANS CHANGES TO HEALTH CARE, METH PREVENTION The favorite to challenge Gov. Tim Pawlenty in 2006 officially joined the race Monday, and was fund-raising in southeastern Minnesota on Tuesday. Attorney General Mike Hatch is making his third run at the governor's office, but unlike 1990 and 1994, he's expected to win the DFL endorsement this time. Also running for the office are real estate developer Kelly Doran, state Sen. Steve Kelley and painter Ole Savior. Health care reform tops Hatch's agenda, followed by maintaining clean waterways and increasing the quality of public schools and access to higher education. In an interview at the Austin Daily Herald Tuesday, Hatch said Pawlenty's health care policies have fallen short. Hatch said he intends to cut the costs Minnesotans pay for pharmaceuticals by negotiating prices with major providers. "You can make change and this is one way to do it," he said. Gov. Pawlenty's Web site connecting patients to Canadian drugs didn't get much use and hurt Minnesota pharmacies, Hatch said. He also wants to prevent health problems by establishing school-based clinics; Hatch said they've worked in several schools around the country. Hatch blamed Pawlenty for this year's partial government shutdown. He said the governor's no-tax pledge and casino and stadium talk were a distraction. The attorney general - who argued which lights should stay on during the shutdown - said he would find commonalities from both sides of the political aisle to get the state's work done on time. He said he wants to change the attitude in St. Paul that "being pure, not compromising, is political accomplishment." In the first city in the state to pass legislation on precursors to methamphetamine, Hatch strayed from his speaking points Tuesday to say that the ordinance - and a more comprehensive bill later passed by the state - is not helping much. He called Pawlenty's work on meth "a great cosmetic bill. It has accomplished nothing." Hatch called for treatment programs and for ephedrine and pseudo ephedrine to be regulated like a narcotic. If that fails, he said, the state should consider a ban by weighing the value of cold medicine against the destruction of methamphetamine. Further, Hatch wants to bring back a statewide gang task force, which would work to shut down the interstate and international drug trade. Citing an estimate that only 20 percent of meth in Minnesota is cooked in the state, he said only the task force could clean up the state. On the topic of economic development for outstate Minnesota, Hatch dismissed Pawlenty's JOBZ program as offering incentives for businesses that already planned to expand. He said the state needs to help individual businesses, and that a priority should be convincing Northwest Airlines to maintain its Minneapolis hub. As the only elected official in the DFL bunch, Hatch is considered the favorite challenger to Pawlenty. That - and that Hatch's gubernatorial aspirations were no secret - were evident in the preparedness of the incumbent party to attack the challenger. The state Republican Party quickly set up an egg pun-laden Web site challenging Hatch's record, and party chair Ron Carey sent an e-mail to supporters charging Hatch with breaking his word by taking another shot at the office. "Democrats realized a long time ago that to know Mike Hatch is not to like him. Now Minnesotans are going to have a chance to really get to know him," Carey said. Hatch does have the support of Austin DFL Rep. Jeanne Poppe, who said she got to know Hatch 20 years ago when he served as Insurance Commissioner and Poppe was a paralegal. "He is such a strong advocate for vulnerable people and people who have gotten the raw end of the deal," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth