NORTH MANKATO — North Mankato City Councilman Dave Pearson joined the race against incumbent Paul Engel for the District 5 Nicollet County Commissioner’s seat Tuesday.
Pearson, who turns 57 next month, said he is ready to leave the Council, but wants to remain active in local government.
“I enjoy city government, but also believe 12 years on the North Mankato City Council was enough,” he said. “A new set of eyes and ears with fresh ideas keeps the city growing.”
Pearson said he was the “self-designated budget watchdog” on the Council, and plans to keep that role if elected to the County Board.
“I am a conservative,” he said. “People that know me know I turn a dollar over twice before I spend it.”
“I have a great sense of responsibility when I spend other people’s money,” he added.
Pearson said he is troubled that Nicollet County pays 100 percent of health insurance premiums for its employees and their families while, in his view, there is a lack of funding for county roads and bridges.
As a commissioner, Pearson said he also would push hard for the proposed interchange at the intersection of Highway 14 and Nicollet County Road 41, just west of North Mankato. Slow progress on the interchange may have caused the city to miss out on commercial development, like the Wal-Mart distribution center that is being built in Mankato, he said.
Pearson also wanted the county to rejoin the All Season’s Arena board to better represent county youth hockey players.
Pearson has been an Xcel Energy employee for 37 years and is manager of community and government relations. He also serves on the boards for local non-profits Community Assistance for Refugees and the South Central College Foundation.
Pearson and his wife, Jean, have two adult children and live on Eagle Ridge Trail in North Mankato.
New Ulm-area veterinarian Bruce Beatty is also running for the District 5 seat
Local News
Pearson joins Nicollet County Board race
- Local News
-
-
Mankato's civic center strategy: Ask for $14.5 million, but plan for less
The city’s strategy to get state money to expand the Verizon Wireless Center is to ask for the full $14.5 million but show the state it can build the project in phases, City Manager Pat Hentges said.
-
City gives thumbs down to chickens
Chickens won’t be coming home to roost in Mankato anytime soon.
-
Attorney plans mental illness defense for stabbing
Requests for search warrants that have been filed with the case also reveal clues Minnesota Security Hospital staff missed when they let Ewing leave the facility with his mother, Marlys Helen Olson of Coon Rapids.
-
Cooperative baseball complex to be christened Saturday
The fledgling community athletic fields at Rosa Parks Elementary School is a joint venture of the city of Mankato, Mankato Area Public Schools and MAYBA.
- Mankato council to talk gay marriage
- City approves new bus routes
-
Highway 93 near Henderson reopened
Highway 93 reopened.
-
Helicopter pilot hospitalized after crash near Delavan
Pilot remains hospitalized after crash near Delavan Friday.
- Storms prompt flood concerns
-
Suffering in Silence, Part 3: Core services remain, but professionals are spread thin
When Irvin Schaefer left the hospital, the first thing he did was sign up for day treatment. It’s a kind of step down from the hospital for people who aren’t ready to live on their own.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Mankato's civic center strategy: Ask for $14.5 million, but plan for less

