Difference between revisions of "Mark Miller"

From KeyWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 199: Line 199:
 
   
 
   
  
Stoughton
+
'''Stoughton'''
  
Robert Barnett Jr., Former Mayor of Stoughton  (more)
+
*[[Robert Barnett Jr.]], Former Mayor of Stoughton  (more)
 +
*[[Liniel Cooper]], Former Mayor of Stoughton  (more)
 +
*[[Buzz Davis]] & [[Kay Davis]], Former Dane County Supervisor
 +
*[[Denise Duranczyk]], Stoughton City Alder
 +
*[[Kathleen Kelly]], Stoughton City Alder
 +
*[[Erik Swenson]], Former Stoughton City Alder
 +
*[[Donna Vogel]], Dane County Supervisor
 +
*[[Nic Dibble]], Stoughton School Bd. Member
 +
*[[Ruth Fortney]], Stoughton School Bd. Member
  
Liniel Cooper, Former Mayor of Stoughton  (more)
+
'''Other Local Officials'''
  
Leslie "Buzz" & Kay Davis, Former Dane County Supervisor
+
*[[Robert Lee]], Dane Town Chair
 
+
*[[Rosalind Gausman]], Dunn Town Clerk
Denise Duranczyk, Stoughton City Alder
+
*[[Meagan Yost]], Lowville Town Chair
 
+
*[[James Van Deurzen]], Mazomanie Town Supervisor
Kathleen Kelly, Stoughton City Alder
+
*[[Ada Deer]], Former Menomini Restoration Committee Chair
 
+
*[[Nick Ganser]], Roxbury Town Supervisor
Erik Swenson, Former Stoughton City Alder
+
*[[Carleton Hamre]], Vienna Town Chairperson
 
 
Donna Vogel, Dane County Supervisor
 
 
 
Nic Dibble, Stoughton School Bd. Member
 
 
 
Ruth Fortney, Stoughton School Bd. Member
 
 
 
 
 
 
Other Local Officials
 
 
 
Robert Lee, Dane Town Chair
 
 
 
Rosalind Gausman, Dunn Town Clerk
 
 
 
Meagan Yost, Lowville Town Chair
 
 
 
James Van Deurzen, Mazomanie Town Supervisor
 
 
 
Ada Deer, Former Menomini Restoration Committee Chair
 
 
 
Nick Ganser, Roxbury Town Supervisor
 
 
 
Carleton Hamre, Vienna Town Chairperson
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 00:45, 4 March 2011

Mark Miller

Template:TOCnestleft Mark Miller is a State Senator and Senate Minority leader from Wisconsin.

Miller is serving his first term in the Wisconsin Senate. He serves the 16th Senate District which includes parts of Dane County, Columbia County and the Village and Town of Merrimac in Sauk County. He was elected on November 2, 2004 and was sworn in on January 3, 2005.

Senator Miller is the Co-Chair of the Joint Committee on Finance and the Chair of the Senate Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources. He also serves on the Joint Audit Committee, the Joint Legislative Council Committee, the Joint Committee on Employment Relations, the Joint Committee on Policy Information and Technology and the Claims Board.

He also served on the Governor’s Task Force to Improve Access to Oral Health (2005), the Child Abuse and Neglect Prevention Board, the Child Welfare Program Enhancement Plan Implementation Team, and the Board of Health for Madison and Dane County.[1]

Education

Mark Miller graduated from Middleton High School, received his Bachelor of Science from UW-Madison in 1973. He also attended the Bowhay Institute for Legislative Leadership Development in 1999 and the Fleming Fellows Leadership Institute in 2002.[2]

Career

Before being elected to the State Senate, Senator Miller served in the Wisconsin State Assembly from January of 1999 to January of 2005. Senator Miller also served on the Dane County Board of Supervisors and was a military pilot in the Air National Guard, retiring in 1995 at the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.[3]

Positions

Senator Miller is a leading advocate in health care reform and has led the fight to pass a statewide health care plan in Wisconsin. He is committed to making health care both affordable and accessible. He is the author of legislation requiring health care coverage be provided for Wisconsin residents and children. He has continued to work to find effective and reasonably priced solutions to prescription drug costs and assure good quality health care for all Wisconsin citizens.

Senator Miller is committed to sound environmental policy and conservation. Miller strongly believes it is imperative to prevent contaminated drinking water, reduce runoff pollution into Wisconsin’s lakes, rivers and streams and make Wisconsin more energy self-sufficient. He is the author of legislation that will "reduce our dependence on imported energy, create jobs and encourage a cleaner environment".[4]

DSA support 2004

In Democratic Socialists of America's Democratic Left Winter 2004/2005, Theresa Alt wrote;[5]

We reported on the candidates that DSAers were supporting in the last issue of Democratic Left. How did they do?
In Wisconsin, progressive incumbents Feingold, Baldwin and Obey won. In a race for an open state senate seat, the favored Mark Miller won handily. However, progressive insurgent Bryan Kennedy lost badly..

Supported Progressive Health Care Reform

In late 2009, Mark Miller was one of more than 1,000 state legislators to sign a letter entitled "State Legislators for Progressive Health Care Reform". The letter was a project of the Progressive States Network and was developed in consultation with national health care reform advocates, including the AFL-CIO, AFSCME, Community Catalyst, Families USA, Herndon Alliance, National Women's Law Center, Northeast Action, SEIU, and Universal Health Care Action Network. The letter reads in part,[6]

"Failure to pass national comprehensive health reform now will further jeopardize state and local budgets, undermining public services like education, public safety, and transportation infrastructure... We, the undersigned, call on President Obama and the Congress to enact bold and comprehensive health care reform this year – based on these principles and a strong federal-state collaboration – and pledge our support as state legislators and allies in pursuit of guaranteed, high quality, affordable health care for all."

"Fast one"

Before protesters stormed the capitol, the mayor of the city of Madison tried to pull a fast one. The governor's budget repair bill was on the fast track, and Madison Mayor Dave Ciesliewicz was racing against the clock to pass new union contracts first.

E-mails obtained by the FOX6 Investigators show that the mayor enlisted the help of State Senator Mark Miller. They both tried to convince the Secretary of State to hold up the bill by taking the maximum 10 days allowed by law before publishing the bill.

They were trying to buy some time so they could ratify new contracts to protect workers from benefit cuts.[7]

Endorsements

The following organizations endorse Mark Miller in 2010:

Over 90 current and former public officials endorse Mark Miller For State Senate.

Assembly

Dane County

Columbia County

Cottage Grove

DeForest

Maureen McCarville, Former Deforest Village Trustee

Lodi

Madison

Dave Cieslewicz, Mayor of Madison Brian Benford, Madison City Alder Steve Holtzman, Madison City Alder Brenda Konkel, Madison City Alder Gregory Markle, Madison City Alder Judy Olson, Madison City Alder Santiago Rosas, Madison City Alder Matt Sloan, Madison City Alder Paul Van Rooy, Madison City Alder Robbie Webber, Madison City Alder Carol Carstensen, Madison School Bd. Member Joann Elder, Former Madison School Bd. Member Bill Keys, Madison School Bd. Member Juan Jose Lopez, Madison School Bd. Member Shwaw Vang, Madison School Bd. Member


McFarland

Erik Thorensen, McFarland Village President (more)

Ken Brittingham, Retired McFarland School Dist. Super.

Cathy Kirby, Former McFarland Village President

Patrick Miles, McFarland Village Trustee

Connie Hutchinson, McFarland School Board Member

Jim Moeser, McFarland School Bd. Member


Monona

Robb Kahl, Mayor of Monona (more)

Dean Bowles, Former Mayor of Monona

Bill Graf, Dane County Supervisor

Peter McKeever, Monona City Alder

Michael Meulemans, Monona City Alder

Kathy Thomas, Monona City Alder

Douglas Wood, Monona City Alder

Jon Traver, Former Monona City Alder

Bill Bland, Former Monona Grove School Bd. Member

Nancy Gagnon, Former Monona Grove School Bd. Member

John Kitslaar, Monona Grove School Bd. Member

Phillip McDade, Monona Grove School Bd. Member

Bill Thomas, Former Monona Grove School Bd. Member

John Weinberger, Monona Grove School Bd. Member


Oregon

Darrell Klimke, Oregon Village Trustee

Steve Staton, Oregon Village Trustee

Charles Uphoff, Former Oregon School Board Membero


Stoughton

Other Local Officials

References

Template:Reflist