This blog post digs into Marc Lewis’s run for Marin County’s Board of Supervisors District 5, his Novato roots, and his plan to anchor governance in fiscal discipline, transparency, and practical housing fixes for a growing, aging Marin.
From downtown Novato to the Sausalito waterfront, Lewis pitches his candidacy as public service—he wants county government to act with more discipline, accountability, and a real sense of responsiveness to every Marin neighborhood.
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Marc Lewis: Qualifications and Vision for Northern Marin
Marc Lewis, a 37-year-old Novato native and Emory-educated lawyer, brings a mix of municipal finance know-how and deep community roots to the District 5 race in northern Marin.
He’s got B.A. degrees in Economics and Political Science, and he likes to highlight his ability to read budgets, fee studies, and bond documents as key strengths for guiding county finances. He’s spent years scrutinizing local government finances, filing public records requests, and breaking down complex documents for neighbors. Managing a family investment portfolio? He’s done that too. All of this, he says, adds up to long-term fiscal responsibility for Marin County.
Lewis keeps hammering home that trust through transparency should sit at the heart of county leadership. He wants budgets that residents can actually follow, independent audits, and tougher enforcement of open-meeting and public records rules.
Throughout his campaign, he promises to publish plain-language explanations, hold regular office hours, and answer questions in communities from Novato Civic Center to, well, pretty much anywhere in Marin (Napa? Just kidding—Marin).
Independent Oversight and Fiscal Transparency
Lewis says he’ll push for an independent Inspector General to audit county spending and make sure budgeting and procurement laws are actually followed. He wants transparent reporting for residents, not just officials.
- Plain-language budget summaries for folks in Novato, San Rafael, and at volunteer-run town halls in San Anselmo.
- Independent program evaluations that track how money is spent and what actually gets done—not just where the money goes.
- Regular office hours and clear public explanations to help people understand bond measures and fee studies.
He plans to self-fund his campaign and cap spending at $2,000. Lewis thinks that keeping spending tight now sets Marin up for smarter investments down the road.
Public Safety, Disaster Readiness, and Infrastructure
On public safety and disaster readiness, Lewis pushes for a proactive approach. He wants to address fire and flood infrastructure before disaster strikes, given Marin’s wildfire corridors and flood-prone spots along the east and north shore.
He’d use part of future property tax growth to pay for essentials—hydrants, evacuation routes, levees, and similar systems—instead of always turning to new taxes. Lewis believes this could help towns from Mill Valley to Fairfax boost resilience while still moving forward with housing goals.
He’s not arguing for austerity just to pinch pennies. It’s about keeping upgrades on a steady track, protecting folks in Novato, San Rafael, and nearby towns, and making sure tax burdens don’t crush families or small businesses across Marin.
Homelessness and Housing-First Accountability
Lewis sees homelessness as a challenge that needs real accountability and coordination. He’s calling for clear countywide targets, independent program evaluations, and consolidated case management to cut down on duplication and actually improve results.
He wants a public dashboard that tracks housing outcomes and encampment resolution, giving residents a clear look at progress (or lack thereof) across Marin’s communities, from Larkspur to Ross and Saussalito—okay, Sausalito.
In his plan, homelessness policy connects directly to housing supply and social supports, with accountability baked in. He’s all in on housing-first strategies: stable homes first, services second, and strong oversight to make sure programs actually hit their marks countywide.
What This Means for Marin’s Communities
For folks living in the northern Marin corridor—from Novato to San Rafael, cutting through Corte Madera, Larkspur, and Mill Valley, then up the Marin headlands toward Sausalito—Lewis’s platform zeroes in on real worries about budgets, safety, and housing. He pushes for transparent budgeting and independent oversight to help rebuild trust in county government.
These communities are dealing with aging infrastructure and the looming reality of denser housing. Lewis argues that if Marin links property tax growth to crucial infrastructure, the county can handle growth without piling on new taxes that would push working families out of places like Novato and San Rafael.
Here is the source article for this story: Meet Marc Lewis, Candidate For Marin County Board Of Supervisors
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