Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Gil Pinac

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Succeeded by
  
Jack Montoucet

Spouse
  
Cherie Arceneaux

Name
  
Gil Pinac

Religion
  
Roman Catholic


Gil Pinac

Preceded by
  
Christopher Charles John

Born
  
November 29, 1957 (age 66) (
1957-11-29
)

Political party
  
Democrat turned Republican in 2008

Children
  
Lauren Pinac Andrea Pinac Kelli Pinac Mary Catherine Pinac

Alma mater
  
University of Louisiana at Lafayette Louisiana State University

Education
  
Louisiana State University, University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Occupation
  
Hospital administrator

Gillis James Pinac (born November 29, 1957), is a former three-term Democratic member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from Crowley in Acadia Parish. He switched his affiliation to Republican a week before announcing his candidacy for the Louisiana Public Service Commission in the special election held on April 4, 2009.

Contents

Background

Pinac is a hospital administrator, the CEO of Pin Mark Enterprises in Lafayette. He graduated from the parochial school, Notre Dame High School of Acadia Parish, and holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, then known as the University of Southwestern Louisiana. He procured his Master of Business Administration from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. Pinac is married to the former Cherie Arceneaux and is the father of four daughters: Lauren, Andrea, Kelli, and Mary Catherine. The family holds membership at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Crowley.

Prior to his legislative service, Pinac was as a member of the Crowley City Council from 1987 to 1995 and served for a time as mayor pro-tem.

Campaign history

Pinac was first elected to the District 42 seat in the state legislature in the nonpartisan blanket primary held on October 21, 1995, when he defeated a fellow Democrat, Isabella L. DelaHoussaye (born April 24, 1939) of Crowley, 6,512 (55.9 percent) to 5,148 ballots (44.2 percent). Pinac succeeded Representative Christopher Charles John of Crowley, who ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor in 1995. In 1996, John was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Louisiana's 7th congressional district, since disbanded.

In the Louisiana House, Pinac was the chairman of the Commerce Committee. He maintained a pro-life voting record. In other legislative votes, Pinac opposed (1) human cloning, (2) the restoration of mortgage interest deductions for Louisiana state income taxes, and (3) placing constitutional limits on state spending. He supported (1) more slot machines at horse racing tracks, (2) permitting public officials to be employed by casinos, (3) allowing bars to be located near churches, and (4) tuition tax deductions for private schools. Pinac was unopposed for his second and third terms in 1999 and 2003.

Limited to three terms in the state House, Pinac instead ran as a Democrat in the primary held on October 20, 2007, for the District 25 seat in the state senate seat vacated by another Democrat-turned-Republican, Gerald Theunissen (born 1933) of Jennings, the seat of Jefferson Davis Parish. In that same election, he was a strong backer of the Democrat Bob Odom, who was eliminated from another term as state commissioner of agriculture and forestry. Pinac led in the primary with 13,437 votes (38.5 percent) and went into the general election with Republican Dan Morrish of Jennings, who trailed in the first round of balloting with 11,145 (32 percent). A third candidate, Republican Mark T. Abraham (born November 13, 1953), the president of the Lake Charles Port Authority, a member of the Lake Charles City Council from 1989 to 1992, and a former LSU football player ran third with a crucial 10,294 votes (29.5 percent) In the November 17 general election, with a much lower turnout, Morrish prevailed with 11,186 (53.9 percent) to Pinac's 9,556 (46 percent). After his failure to win the state Senate seat, Pinac switched parties just prior to announcing that he would run for the PSC. Isabella delaHoussaye also switched to Republican affiliation and ran for the House seat again in 2007, but she was defeated by the Democrat Jack Montoucet, 57-43 percent.

Louisiana Public Service Commission candidate

Pinac sought to succeed the Democrat Dale Sittig of Eunice on the PSC, who served from 1995 to 2008, when he resigned to accept the directorship of the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, known by the acronym LOOP. Sittig is a former member of the Louisiana House from neighboring District 41.

In his statement of candidacy, Pinac claimed that he would "fight to get more power to you, the Louisiana consumer. I will take a common sense approach while working to keep electric rates fair, encourage the development of new sources of reliable, affordable, clean energy, and demand the safe and quick return of power to our homes and businesses after disasters strike our state. Our day-to-day lives are affected every time we flip that electrical switch, and in these difficult economic times, we should get what we pay for: safe, reliable, and reasonably-priced electricity and other utilities."

Pinac finished in third place in the PSC election. As he conceded on election night, Pinac endorsed his fellow Republican, former U.S. Representative Clyde C. Holloway of Louisiana's 8th congressional district, since disbanded. Holloway led narrowly in the initial balloting with 32,258 votes (43.50 percent) to Democrat State Senator Joe McPherson of Woodworth, also in Rapides Parish, who received 31,610 votes (42.63 percent). Pinac trailed with 10,280 ballots (13.86 percent), but he won his home parish of Acadia and polled four votes more than Holloway and McPherson, who tied with 120 votes each, in thinly-populated Cameron Parish on the Gulf of Mexico. McPherson's greatest strength was in Calcasieu Parish – Lake Charles – where he led 11,178 (50.40 percent) to Holloway's 7,873 (35.50 percent), and Pinac's 3,127 (14.10 percent). Holloway's total in Calcasieu – Lake Charles – was also his single largest parish total. The home of both runoff candidates, Rapides Parish, in a low turnout cast 6,527 ballots for Holloway, 5,327 for McPherson, and 791 for Pinac.

A runoff election for the PSC seat was cancelled, when Democrat McPherson, who lost to Sittig in a previous special election in 1995, withdrew from the race. McPherson had been reelected in his District 29 Senate seat in 2007 with 69 percent of the vote in the primary against a fellow Democrat.Holloway won the position automatically without the need for a runoff election.

References

Gil Pinac Wikipedia