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FOIA Number:
2006-0469-F
FOIA
MARKER
This is not a textual record. This is used as an
administrative marker by the William J. Clinton
Presidential Library Staff.
Collection/Record Group:
Clinton Presidential Records
Subgroup/Office of Origin:
Speechwriting
Series/Staff Member:
Michael Waldman
Subseries:
13663
OA/ID Number:
FolderlD:
Folder Title:
[Reemployment Act] [Binder 1] [1]
Stack:
Row:
Section:
Shelf:
Position:
s
92
3
9
1
�NORTH DAKOTA
OHIO
OKLAHOMA
OREGON
PENNSYLVANIA
RHODE ISLAND
SOUTH CAROLINA
SOUTH DAKOTA
TENNESSEE
TEXAS
UTAH
VERMONT
VIRGINIA
WASHINGTON
WEST VIRGINIA
WISCONSIN
WYOMING
�April 5, 1999
MEMORANDUM FOR RECORDS MANAGEMENT
FROM:
MICHAEL WALDMAN
ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT AND
DIRECTOR OF SPEECHWRITING
a3(>W?<3 p/u
~~
W
Box 2A, 2B:
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
Vm.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
Dartmouth:
Commencement address-info
News clips:
Term limits; 1994 election; Voter Turnout; Japan and campaign
Reform
News release on regulatory reform
Lobby reform fact sheet
Notes
Comprehensive Congression Reform act, 1995
SOTU and political reform agenda
Lobby Stats
Political, congressional, government reform papers
Tax Act of 1999, hearings on lobbying disclosures, line item veto act
Report on 1993 defense base closings
Drafts of remarks to small business conference
Foreign agents registration enforcement
Post-1994 Clinton strategy & memo
Spending limits bill in 1995
Memo on Congressional turnover
Natl Referendum, youth learning; Sperling, long-term planning, Newtites
NotesforDPC meeting 10.12.94
Comprehensive Terrorism Prevention act, 1995.
Aft* i -
1
: . J S R S FL D O E SZ A T C RW
PC 9 d E I E V RI E T A H t S
n-
/
/
/
o
^
�Box3-
mmm fwmmimmm
I.
Memos: marked not to be pulled:
Reinventing gov., natl Referendum
flJMA
Goals 2000
GATT (3)
OSHA (2)
Contract's regulatory provisions
Earth Day
Acc. Write-up
Event to honor working women
Tranp. Proj. event
Commerce event, routing slip
Eastern and Central Europe conf.
Vietnam trade embargo
Civil rights working group
Econ. Pitch, 5/4/94
JFK's nat'l leadership forum
DOJ whistle blowing, signing of performance agreements
New Worker
Cong
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
Info on Congress, special interest
Speeches: McLarty
Commission on political reform acts (7)
Lobby reform clips
POTUS letters to Gingrich, Medicare record, pollution disc.
News clips about Joseph Asaro
I I D-Q>
# 9
&
^
*
ZC/ii
* »
um im?
Bo 4A,4B:
S" - 13
X
J J ) S J R E S
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
Copy of Lobbying ^closure Act
*
SOTUs from selected election years
104th Congress regulatory reform bills
MW personal calendar (April 1994-Feb 1995)
DOL regulatory reform
VI.
F , L E D 0 V
S
« '
Z F
£
ATTACHMEWS
Legal Reform Binder
f/A/Zy/£ S
Box 5A, 5B:
I.
II.
Briefing Books (NAFTA, POTUS trips. Health Care, Census)
Clinton (public papers, economic growth plan)
2
L ~
/Jfn\A
^
// torf
•w^mmbwmsmttMiim^z^—•
/3W7
�3* %~
Box 7A, 7B, 7C:
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
I.
II.
III.
IV.
FEC Binder
Center for New Democratic Binder
POTUS Records (Binder)
CFR Binder
Box 12A, 12B:
I.
II.
III.
Summit of the Americas files-1994
Box 16:
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
GATT
G7 Naples
Summit of the Americas
POTUS Economic Plan 1993
Base Closings
Box 17:
I.
II.
III.
I SCSI
6 ^ '"2*Ct0SdRES FILED O E SZ A T C M N S
V R I E TA H E T
/V'tfYM- / / 0 it S
6** 13 - f
0o* 14 *CUiSjRES «LED O E SZ A A H E S
V R IE H C MW
AJMA-
not7
CRS Reports
List of Donors $25,000+
FEC Reports
Box 15:
I.
• NOlflSdRES FILED O E SZ A T C M N S
V R IE TA H E T -
Affirmative Action (articles, briefing book, etc.)
NAFTA (briefing books, speeches, etc.)
Speech transcripts; SOA, POTUS comments
G-7 Jobs conference
Education training program, briefing book
FEC binder
Reemployment Act 1994 (book)
BoxllA, 11B:
134^ ^
1994-trade communications
Political Reform
Republicans in Congress
13
M/h»
II Obi
�Box 18:
I.
REA
8»M*- /
WCLOSdRES FILED O E SZ A T C M N S
V R I E TA H E T
:
Box 19:
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
POTUS remarks 1993-1994-mis.
Campaign Finance Reform
Post-employment lobbying
Info on Reagan, Carter, and Truman Presidencies
Op-ed statement
BaM^-
^OSdRES FILED O E SZ A T C M N S
V R I F TA H E T
Box 20:
I.
NAFTA
II.
FBI-Freeh Appropriations
•NCJMES FL D O E S E A T C M N S
I E V R I TA H E T
Z
Box 22:
I.
NAFTA
II.
Crime
III.
Medicare
IV.
Lobby reform
V.
Campaign Finance Reform
VI.
Regulatory Reform
VII. Quotes
VIII. Re-Go
IX.
Olympics
X.
Teen Smoking
Box 24A, 24B:
I.
^SdRES FILED O E SZ A T C M N S
V R I F TA H E T
REA-binders
2.3
*CJ>St]RES FILED O E SZ A T C M N S
V R I E TA H E T .
t ^ /
I
r^e*
f
�N R H DAKOTA
OT
�Through March 3 1 , 1994
Program Year 1993 T i t l e I I I Discretionary Grant Awards
(July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994)
STATE: NORTH DAKOTA
Date
Sec.
Approval
Project or
Company
8/3/93
1993 Floods
Funding
$2,000,000
Number to be
Served
300
Location &
Cong. District
Situation
19 Counties
Massive d i s l o c a t i o n s caused by
the summer floods
�RECENT MAJOR LAYOFFS
North Dakota:
Comoanv
Location
No. Affected
Benefits Received
General impact on the Community
�CNA
ORD
FINANCE
�REA Congressional Committee
Summary Sheet
Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND)
SH-7241
202/224-2043
Committee:
Finance
Recent Legislative History
(Y indicates voted with DOL position)
Budget Amendment
Y
Budget Reconciliation
Y
Budget Resolution Adoption
Y
EUC #4
Y
Goals 2000
Y
Electoral Information:
% of Vote in last election Labor $ as % of total contribs.-
Kerrey/Brown Amendment
NAFTA
School -to-Work
Stimulus Package
Y
N
Y
Y
64%
13%
Other Information Acquired and Available:
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Counties/Cities within CD's
Counties/Cities with above average unemployment rates (highlighted in yellow)
REA related newspaper articles and editorials organzied by state
Community and Technical Colleges by CD
1993 Title III Discretionary Grant awards by state and CD
Racial/Ethnic make up of district
Major media in district
Major employers by CD
Pro-NAFTA Businesses by State and CD
Businesses supporting REA (highlighted in green)
Major layoffs by state (partial)
�1-32 • Senators and Staffs
Kent Conrad
KEY STAFF AIDES
Position
Name
Mary Wakefield
Lynn Clancy
(701-258-4648)
Laurie L. Boeder
Scott Sloat
Geri Gaginis
Susan Nehring
Began Service: 1987
SH-724 Hart Senate
Office Building
Washington, DC
20510-3403
(202) 224-2043
•
Chf. of Staff
State Dir.
I
.BIOGRAPHICAL
orn: 3/12/48
Home: Bismarck
H
Educ: B.A., Stanford U.;
M.B.A., Geo.
Washington U.
Prof.: N.D. Tax
Commissioner, 198186
Rel.: Unitarian
•Elected 12/4/92 to serve the
remaining two years of the
term of the late Sen.
Quentin N. Burdick (D).
Kent Hall
Craig Obey
Press Secy.
Dep. Press Secy.
Exec. Asst.
Office Mgr./N.D.
Scheduler
Legis. Dir.
Dep. Legis. Dir.
Lisa Godon
Maryann Blouin
Suzy Dittrich
Asst. to Legis. Dir.
Legis. Asst.
Legis. Asst.
Bob Foust
Niles Godes
Craig May
Clarice Nassif
Legis. Asst.
Legis. Asst.
Legis. Asst.
Legis. Asst.
Kevin Price
Steve Super
Legis. Asst.
Legis. Asst.
Jeff Birkeland
Drew Kramer
Charles Nielson
Ellen Fitzgerald
Mark Goodman
Tom Mahr
Legis. Aide
Legis. Aide
Legis. Aide
Legis. Fellow
Legis. Fellow
Economic Advisor
David Haring
Mike Pollard
D -North Dakota
Reelection Year: 1994*
Legislative Responsibility
Policy Dir.
Systems Admin.
Labor, Social Security, Welfare, Pensions,
Health
Child Care, Judiciary, Civil Rights
Taxes, Research
Agriculture (Agricultural Credit Subcommittee)
Veterans/POW-MIAs, Education
Economic Development
Energy, Environment, Defense
Transportation, Business, Federal Employees,
Postal Service
Agriculture, CFTC
Housing, Family/Social Services, Arts, Immigration, Crime, Communications
Nutrition
Indian Affairs
Marketplace
Economic Development
Science/Technology
Banking, Economy, Trade, Foreign Affairs,
Insurance
Fraud/Waste, Budget
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Committee
Subcommittee(s)
Agriculture, Nutrition, and
Agricultural Credit, Chairman • Domestic and Foreign MarketForestry
ing and Product Promotion • Rural Development and Rural
Electrification
Budget
Finance
International Trade • Medicare and Long-Term Care • Taxation
Indian Affairs
Summer 1993
No subcommittees
No subcommittees
© Congressional Yellow Book
�r
Senators and Staffs • 1-33
Kent Conrad
(cont'd.)
OTHER POSITIONS
Senate Democratic Steering Committee • Caucus on Deficit Reduction and Economic Growth,
Chairman
STATE OFFICES
228 Federal Bldg., 3rd St. and Rosser Ave., Bismarck, ND 58501
Suite 105, 100 - 1st St., S.W., Minot, ND 58701
104 Federal Bldg., 102 No. 4th St., Grand Forks, ND 58203
306 Federal Bldg., 657 - 2nd Ave. No., Fargo, ND 58102
Toll free in North Dakota
© Congressional Yellow Book
(701) 258-4648
(701) 852-0703
(701) 775-9601
(701) 232-8030
(800) 223-4457
Summer 1993
�SENATORS
Sea. Kent Conrad (D)
Elected 1986, seat up 1994; b. Mar. 12, 1948, Bismarck; home,
Bismarck; Stanford U., B.A. 1971; George Washington U., M.B.A.
1975; Unitarian; married (Lucy Calautti).
Career Asst., ND Tax Commissioner, 1974-80; Dir., Mgmt
Planning; and Personnel, ND Tax Dept., 1980; ND Tax Commissioner, 1981-86.
Offices: 724 HSOB 20510, 202-224-2043. Also Fed. Bldg #228
3d & Rosser Ave., Bismarck 58501, 701-258-4648; 657 2d Ave N '
8
701 2 32 80
7m sVS
3
; : n ,?
100
,St
St
58201 m 715^601
^
SW
- '
c
N
' ^
#,05
'
Minot
" *
m
St
58701":
^
Committees: Agriculture. Nutrition and Forestry (6th of 10 DV
Agricultural Credit (Chmn.); Domestic and Foreign Marketing and
Product Promotion; Rural Development and Rural Electrification
* * * * * and I .na T, r
J
' (
of
Nnfture ind Long-Term Care; T
Taxation. Indian Affairs (4th of 10 D).• 1 D): International Trade;
g
e
i
h
0 f
2 D )
F i n a n C e
11 t h
C M f tattap
ADA ACLU CDF COPE CFA
«
67
80
75
75
75
_
9|
72
75
Sr
Ratings
1991 LIB — 1991 CONS
5 % — 46%
1
5 % — 38%
9
6% 8
31%
LCV
17
47
ACU NTLC
12
39
43
_
NSI
60
_
COC CEI
20
31
20
30
1992 LIB - 1992 CONS
91% —
5
%
47% —
52%
62% —
35%
Key Votes of the 102d Congress
1. $ for Homeownership AGN
2. Have Cap Gains Debate AGN
3. Remove Budget Walls FOR
4. Ban Striker Replace FOR
5. Clarence Thomas Nom. AGN
6. Lmt Death Row Appeal AGN
7. Handgun Wait/5-Day FOR
8. Abortion' Gag Rule AGN
Key Votes of the 103d Congress
1. Family Leave
FOR
2. HIV Immigrants
AGN
9. Use Force in Gulf ftgn
10. Keep Salvador Aid 4Qlt
11. Cut $1B from SDI AOtf
12. Override China MFNA0H
3. Clinton Budget
K»
Election Results
1992 special
1992 primary
1988 general
Kent Conrad (D)
Jack Dalrymple (R)
Other
Kent Conrad (D), nominated by convention
Quentin N. Burdick (D)
Earl Strinden (R)
103,246
55,194
4,871
(63%)
(34%)
(3%)
($2,479,021)
(S282.ltt)
171,899
112,937
(59%)
(39%)
($2,026,617)
($906.80?)
�OHIO
�RECENT MAJOR LAYOFFS
mm
Benefits Received
General impact on the Community
LMC established
The layoff occurred in April 1994. This event has been
identified as a temporary idling, and the company plans to
reopen this facility in 12 + months. The layoff is occurring in a
MSA with an unemployment rate in March of 7.4%. The jobs
lost, pay some of the highest wages in the area, so additional
impact may occur.
860
LMC established/
Governors' Reserve
funds ($100,000)/ NRA
funds ($800,0000)
While the effect of this closure has greatly affected the
dislocated workers, the state reports the effect ont he
Columbus PMSA has been negligible due to the size (76,000)
of its workforce.
Evendale, OH
2,281
LMC established?NRA
grant ($1,200,000)
The Cincinnati PMSA has a civilian labor force of over
805,0000 workers. As indicated above, the impact on an area
is negligible when a layoff occurs in a large PMSA. However,
many of these workers were highly trained/skilled professionals
who have been forced to leave the area to find similar
employment. The individuals dislocated from less highly skilled
positions have generally not been able to secure other
manufacturing employment.
Columbus, OH
1,100+
LMC established/TAA
certified/ NRA grant
9$815,341)
Because of the location of this company, i.e. the Columbus
PMSA, the impact to the community was not overwhelming.
The state and substate subgrantee report that staff are working
to maximize the services available to these workers through
JTPA Title III and Trade Act funds.
No. Affected
Company
Location
Empire Detroit Steel
Mansfield, OH
900+
Lennox Industries
Columbus, OH
General Electric, Aircraft
Division
McDonnell-Douglas
Corporation Douglas Aircraft
Company
�METZENBAUM
LABOR & H M N R S U C S
UA EORE
�REA Congressional Committee
Summary Sheet
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum (D-OH)
SR-140
202/224-2315
Committee:
Labor and Human Resources
Recent Legislative History
(Y indicates voted with DOL position)
Budget Amendment
Y
Budget Reconciliation
Y
Budget Resolution Adoption
Y
EUC #4
Y
Goals 2000
Y
Electoral Information:
% of Vote in last election Labor $ as % of total contribs.-
Kerrey/Brown Amendment
NAFTA
School -to-Work
Stimulus Package
Y
N
Y
Y
57%
5%
Other Information Acquired and Available:
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Counties/Cities within CD's
Counties/Cities with above average unemployment rates (highlighted in yellow)
REA related newspaper articles and editorials organzied by state
Community and Technical Colleges by CD
1993 Title III Discretionary Grant awards by state and CD
Racial/Ethnic make up of district
Major media in district
Major employers by CD
Pro-NAFTA Businesses by State and CD
Businesses supporting REA (highlighted in green)
Major layoffs by state (partial)
�Through March 31, 1994
Program Year 1993 T i t l e I I I Discretionary Grant Awards
(July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994)
STATE: OHIO
Location &
Cong. District
Situation
110
Counties of
Jackson,
Pike, Ross &
Scioto
CDs: 6 & 7
425 workers d i s located (without
a WARN notice)
from the Fruehauf
T r a i l e r Corp.
$1,033,973
92
Ohio Count i e s : Athens,
Coshocton,
G a l l i a , Guernsey, Jackson, Meigs,
Morgan, Muskingum, Noble,
Perry, Vinton
& Washington
West V i r g i n i a : Mason
CDs: OH-6,18,
WV-2
Workers d i s l o c a t ed by the mass
layoffs from Southern Ohio Coal
and Central Ohio
Coal companies as
a r e s u l t of the
Clean Air Act.
$1,000,000
75
Coshocton,
Guernsey,
Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, & Noble
Counties
CD: 18
150 workers d i s located by a mass
layoff without a
WARN n o t i c e from
the Central Ohio
Coal Company.
Date
Sec.
Approval
Project or
Company
9/27/93
Fruehauf Trailer
$375,000
9/29/93
Southern Ohio
and Central
Ohio Coal
Companies
12/17/93
Central Ohio
Coal
Funding
Number to be
Served
�1/3/94
Ohio E d i s o n ,
Peabody C o a l ,
and Saginaw
Mining
$850,000
85
Belmont, Carr o l l , Columbi a n a , Coshoct o n , Guernsey, H a r r i son, J e f f e r son , Monroe,
Muskingum
P e r r y & Tuscarawas Count i e s i n Ohio
and Brooke,
Hancock, Mars h a l l and
Ohio C o u n t i e s
i n West V i r ginia
Ohio CDs: 17
& 18.
West V i r g i n i a
CD: 1
Workers d i s l o c a t ed by t h e l a y o f f s
a t these p l a n t s
due t o t h e cancel l a t i o n of coal
c o n t r a c t s due t o
t h e Clean A i r Act
requirements.
1/25/94
Lennox Industries
$800,000
400
F r a n k l i n Coun t y CDs: 12 &
15
860 w o r k e r s d i s l o c a t e d from Lennox as a r e s u l t
of a p l a n t r e l o cation.
$4,058,973
762
State Totals
�* DSA*NAFTA MEMBER
OHIO
MAJOR EMPLOYERS BY CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
DAVID M N (D-1ST-OHIO)
AN
it
AMERICAN BRANDS INC
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELG CO
it BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB COMPANY
it CSX CORPORATION
ii DELTA AIR LINES INC
it GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
jit INTERNATIONAL BUS MCHS CORP
it J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
it MEAD CORPORATION
it MONSANTO COMPANY
* PRUDENTIAL INSUR OF AMER INC
SARA LEE CORPORATION
* SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
THE D W CHEMICAL COMPANY
O
THE KROGER CO
* THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY
it
250
1200
500
1400
3800
12900
500
200
275
1890
395
900
350
2550
2600
6770
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
ROTEX, INC.
TASTEMAKER
VACANT (2ND-OHIO)
•k
ALUMINUM COMPANY OF AMERICA
BANC ONE CORPORATION
k CORNING INCORPORATED
k DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION
k DPL INC
k EMERSON ELECTRIC CO
•k FORD MOTOR COMPANY
k GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
* INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY
k ITT CORPORATION
k J
C PENNEY COMPANY INC
k KMART CORPORATION
k ROADWAY SERVICES INC
k SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
k THE D W CHEMICAL COMPANY
O
k THE KROGER CO
k THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY
k THE UPJOHN COMPANY
k WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORP
* XEROX CORPORATION
k
300
210
265
250
561
500
1600
4270
625
300
200
200
600
850
1288
1120
850
350
2600
200
�TONY HALL (D-3RD-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELG CO
BANC ONE CORPORATION
BELLSOUTH CORPORATION
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
KMART CORPORATION
MEAD CORPORATION
METROPOLITAN L I F E INSUR CO
PEPSICO INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
SUPERVALU INC
THE KROGER CO
7405
1100
950
300
340
23744
530
200
5417
300
250
1565
550
223
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
MIAMI VALLEY MARKETING GROUP, INC.
ROBBINS & MYERS, INC.
MICHAEL OXLEY (R-4TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
CSX CORPORATION
DANA CORPORATION
EATON CORPORATION
EMERSON E L E C T R I C CO
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL E L E C T R I C COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
HARRIS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
PRUDENTIAL INSUR OF AMER INC
ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL CORP
SPRINT CORPORATION
THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY
WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION
200
412
400
3200
2500
500
3900
700
400
400
700
1112
250
4750
PAUL GILLMOR (R-5TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
ALLIED-SIGNAL INC
CSX CORPORATION
DANA CORPORATION
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
INGERSOLL-RAND COMPANY
NORFOLK SOUTHERN CORPORATION
P H I L I P MORRIS COMPANIES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
THE KROGER CO
WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
NATIONAL ENGINE PARTS MANUFACTURERS ASSOC.
1100
250
266
1650
6000
840
500
400
260
231
3200
�TED
+
+
*
*
*
*
*
*
STRICKLAND (D-6TH-OHI0)
AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER CO
AMOCO CORPORATION
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY
NORFOLK SOUTHERN CORPORATION
SHELL PETROLEUM INC
TEXTRON INC
THE DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY
1412
230
200
435
725
500
422
200
DAVID HOBSON (R-7TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB COMPANY
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
DU PONT E I DE NEMOURS AND CO
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
I L L I N O I S TOOL WORKS INC
KMART CORPORATION
MEAD CORPORATION
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
USX CORPORATION
JOHN BOEHNER
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
ALLIED-SIGNAL INC
ALUMINUM COMPANY OF AMERICA
BROWNING-FERRIS INDUSTRIES
CHAMPION INTERNATIONAL CORP
CORNING INCORPORATED
EMERSON E L E C T R I C CO
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY
P H I L I P MORRIS COMPANIES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
THE B F GOODRICH COMPANY
THE KROGER CO
THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY
UNION P A C I F I C CORPORATION
UNITED PARCEL SERVICE AMER INC
WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
HOBART BROTHERS COMPANY
MOSLER INC.
WATKINS MANUFACTURING, I N C .
525
1023
1108
1117
732
200
200
2600
950
806
(R-8TH-OHIO)
1300
7400
200
4800
800
1800
2000
200
499
300
200
750
514
15000
200
200
525
�MARCY KAPTUR
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
(D-9TH-0HI0)
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
CSX CORPORATION
DANA CORPORATION
DAYTON HUDSON CORPORATION
DU PONT E I DE NEMOURS AND CO
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL MILLS INC
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS CORP
ROADWAY SERVICES INC
THE KROGER CO
UNISYS CORPORATION
UNITED TECHNOLOGIES CORP
440
1000
285
575
230
980
850
5000
350
4100
1155
272
210
2960
MARTIN HOKE (R-10TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
ALUMINUM COMPANY OF AMERICA
BANC ONE CORPORATION
CHAMPION INTERNATIONAL CORP
EATON CORPORATION
GENERAL E L E C T R I C COMPANY
GEORGIA-PACIFIC CORPORATION
HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
MARRIOTT CORPORATION
PEPSICO INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
LOUIS STOKES
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL E L E C T R I C COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
MORRISON KNUDSEN CORP DEL CORP
ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL CORP
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
SUPERVALU INC
TRW INC
WESTINGHOUSE E L E C T R I C CORP
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
MANTUA MANUFACTURING CO.
1WO STARS WEST
ZACLON, I N C .
3100
292
525
1025
1000
319
225
700
265
400
450
(D-11TH-OHIO)
2300
3650
500
565
1000
3500
400
600
2299
1300
�JOHN KASICH (R-12TH-OHIO)
k
k
k
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
ABBOTT LABORATORIES
AETNA L I F E AND CASUALTY CO
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELG CO
ASHLAND OIL INC
BANC ONE CORPORATION
BAXTER INTERNATIONAL INC
CIGNA CORPORATION
CSX CORPORATION
DAYTON HUDSON CORPORATION
EMERSON ELECTRIC CO
INTERNATIONAL BUS MCHS CORP
OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS CORP
ROADWAY SERVICES INC
ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL CORP
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
STATE FARM MUTL AUTO INSUR CO
SUPERVALU INC
THE KROGER CO
3000
450
750
2000
2103
200
400
900
300
2150
500
2200
500
1400
300
800
600
1653
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
THE COLUMBUS AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
WORTHINGTON INDUSTRIES
SHERROD BROWN (D-13TH-OHIO)
* ALLIED-SIGNAL INC^
* AMERICAN BRANDS INC
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
CSX CORPORATION
EMERSON ELECTRIC CO
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
KMART CORPORATION
MARRIOTT CORPORATION
PEPSICO INC
RJR NABISCO HOLDINGS CORP
ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL CORP
SARA LEE CORPORATION
400
700
250
875
7329
500
2 30
250
500
500
230
500
400
* SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
330
* THE B F GOODRICH COMPANY
* TRW INC
540
425
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
FAIRMOUNT MINERALS, LTD.
THE CHARDON RUBBER COMPANY
�JAMES TRAFICANT (D-17TH-0HI0)
+
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELG CO
BANC ONE CORPORATION
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY c
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
KMART CORPORATION
NORFOLK SOUTHERN CORPORATION
SPRINT CORPORATION
USX CORPORATION
200
580
1250
24700
645
756
375
557
491
DOUG APPLEGATE (D-18TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB COMPANY
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
ITT CORPORATION
PHILIP MORRIS COMPANIES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
TENNECO INC
UNION CAMP CORPORATION
UNITED TECHNOLOGIES CORP
300
230
750
200
200
500
230
250
2006
ERIC FINGERHUT (D-19TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELG CO
BANC ONE CORPORATION
EATON CORPORATION
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
KMART CORPORATION
MARRIOTT CORPORATION
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
THE B F GOODRICH COMPANY
TRW INC
USX CORPORATION
XEROX CORPORATION
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
AUTOMATION SERVICES & CONS. INC.
200
500
200
10600
480
4000
200
500
500
530
1710
450
284
200
�THOMAS SAWYER (D-14TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
600
470
240
800
3625
1185
600
160
220
BANC ONE CORPORATION
GENCORP INC
I L L I N O I S TOOL WORKS INC
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
ROADWAY SERVICES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
SUPERVALU INC
THE B F GOODRICH COMPANY
UNION P A C I F I C CORPORATION
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
DIEBOLD, INC.
ECOLOGY INTERNATIONAL LTD., CORP.
GENERAL T I R E
MYERS INDUSTRIES, INC.
J3MITHERS-OASIS CO.
DEBORAH PRYCE
(R-15TH-OHIO)
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELG CO
ASEA BROWN BOVERI INC
DAYTON HUDSON CORPORATION
DEERE & COMPANY
DIAL CORP
GENERAL E L E C T R I C COMPANY'
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
KMART CORPORATION
MARRIOTT CORPORATION
ROADWAY SERVICES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
TENNECO INC
THE KROGER CO
UNION P A C I F I C CORPORATION
1000
1800
600
275
300
1100
2000
3170
205
700
490
7061
200
690
202
RALPH REGULA (R-16TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
ABBOTT LABORATORIES
ASHLAND O I L INC
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
EMERSON E L E C T R I C CO
GENERAL E L E C T R I C COMPANY
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
PEPSICO INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
TENNECO INC
625
265
3689
250
1150
230
234
400
500
�Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum (D)
Elected 1976, seat up 1994; b. June 4, 1917, Cleveland; home,
Lyndhurst; Ohio State U., B.A. 1939, LL.B. 1941; Jewish; married
(Shirley).
Careen Practicing atty., businessman; OH House of Reps., 194346; OH Senate, 1947-50; Co-founder, Airport Parking Co. of
Amer, Chmn., 1958-66.; Chmn. of the Bd., ITT Consumer Svs.
Corp., 1966-68.
NASA astro52; VP, Royal
. 1967-69.
Offices: 140 RSOB 20510, 202-224-2315. Also 200 N. High St.,
#405, Columbus 43215, 614-469-6774; 1240 E. 9th St., #2919,
Cleveland 44114, 216-544-7272; City Ctr. One, 100 Fed. Plaza E.,
#510, Youngstown 44503, 216-746-1132; 10411 Fed. Bldg., Cincinnati 45202, 513-684-3894; and 234 Summit St., Toledo 43603,419259-7536.
) N. High St.,
r Ave., Cleve•7, Cincinnati
Toledo 43604,
I Services (( th
TCCS; Military
Juclear Detcrernmental Afigence (Select)
Committees: Environment and Public Works (8th of 10 D): Clean
Air and Nuclear Regulation; Superfund, Recycling and Solid
Waste Management; Water Resources, Transportation, Public Buildings and Economic Development.
Intelligence (Select) (2d of 9 D). Judiciary (3d of 10 D): Antitrust, Monopolies and Business Rights
(Chmn.); Constitution; Courts and Administrative Practice. Labor and Human Resources (3d of 10 D):
Aging; Disability Policy; Education, Arts and Humanities; Labor (Chmn.).
Croup Ratings
, |
W
ADA
90
100
ACLU
91
—
CDF COPE CFA
90
100
92
100
83
100
LCV
100
93
National Journal Ratings
1991 LIB — 1991 CONS
97%
0%
Cconomic
0%
87%
Social
0%
86%
fureign
ACU
0
0
NTLC
22
NSI
40
COC
11
10
CEI
21
24
1992 LIB — 1992 CONS
84% —
12%
84% —
11%
86% —
0
%
I*) Votes of the 102d Congress
| S for Homeownership AGN
Ha*c Cap Gains Debate AGN
i Remove Budget Walls FOR
4 fcfl Striker Replace FOR
5. Clarence Thomas Nom. AGN
6. Lmt Death Row Appeal AGN
7. Handgun Wait/5-Day FOR
8. Abortion Gag Rule AGN
9. Use Force in Gulf
AGN
10. Keep Salvador Aid AGN
11. Cut $1B from SDI FOR
12. Override China MFN FOR
1*9 Wen of the 103d Congress
% Hmtt) Leave
FOR 2. HIV Immigrants
FOR
3. Clinton Budget
FOR
i f c a a Rnolts
ftaml
Howard M. Metzenbaum (D)
George V. Voinovich (R)
Howard M. Metzenbaum (D)
Ralph A. Applegate (D)
Howard M. Metzenbaum (D)
Paul E. Pfeifer (R)
2,480,038
1,872,716
1,070,934
210,508
1,923,767
1,396,790
(57%)
(43%)
(83%)
(17%)
(57%)
(41%)
($8,547,545)
($8,233,859)
($2,794,172)
($1,025,595)
�STRICKLAND - 6th C
D
ED & LABOR
�American Assn of Community Colleges
F D R L RELATIONS
EEA
03: ZV. 56 P
M
Run Date: 05/20/93
Page: 74
Terminal: T24
Selection: A C M M E S IN C N . DISTRICT
AC EBR
OG
CLEE
OLG
CITY/STAI
ZIP
C
D
NM
AE
03
Peter D H Bath
. .
Kettering Coll of Medical Arts
45429
(513)296-7201
(000)000-0000
01610
04
J . Richard Bryson
Marion TechnicaJ^Xollege
43302-5694
(614)389-4636
(614)389-6136
0081',
O
A
Byron Kee
44901
(419)755-4800
(419)755-4750
0180(1
O
A
James J. Countrymppr
45804
(419)222-8324
(419)221-0450
11153:
531!
TELEPHONE
FAX
OOiO
AHl
Lima Technical College
050HIO
00538
OS/'Richard M. Simon
Terra Technical College
Fremont O
H
43420
(419)334-8400
(419)334-9414
OJAtf.
05
Robert OeBard
Bowling Green Univ-Fire lands
Huron O
H
44839
(419)433-5560
(419)433-5560
06
George R. McCormick
Southern State C
C
Hillsboro O
H
45133
(513)393-3431
(513)393-6682
06
Barry M. Dorsey
U of Rio Grande-CC Component
Rio Grande O
H
45674
(614)245-5353
(614)245-9220
0205£i
06
Charles J . Ping
Ohio University
Athens O
H
45701
(614)593-1000
(000)000-0000
010U
06
Carson K. M i l l e r
Washington State Conm Coll
Marietta O
H
45750
(614)374-8716
(614)373-7496
00654
06
John J. Light
Hocking Technical College
Nelsonville O
H
45764
(614)753-3591
(614)753-9018
060H10
0236'
»
�TED STRICKLAND' ( D - 6 T H - 0 H I 0 )
AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER CO
AMOCO CORPORATION
•GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY'
INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY
NORFOLK SOUTHERN CORPORATION
SHELL PETROLEUM INC
TEXTRON INC
THE D W CHEMICAL COMPANY
O
DAVID HOBSON
1412
230
200
435
725
500
422
200
(R-7TH-OHIO)
BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB COMPANY
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
DU PONT E I DE NEMOURS AND CO
GENERAL E L E C T R I C COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
I L L I N O I S TOOL WORKS INC
KMART CORPORATION
MEAD CORPORATION
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
USX CORPORATION
JOHN BOEHNER
*
*
*
*
*
*
4
c
A L L I E D - S I G N A L INCALUMINUM COMPANY OF AMERICA
BROWNING-FERRIS INDUSTRIES
CHAMPION INTERNATIONAL CORP
CORNING INCORPORATED
EMERSON E L E C T R I C CO
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY
P H I L I P MORRIS COMPANIES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
THE B F GOODRICH COMPANY
THE KROGER CO
THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY
UNION P A C I F I C CORPORATION
UNITED PARCEL SERVICE AMER INC
WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
HOBART BROTHERS COMPANY
MOSLER I N C .
WATKINS MANUFACTURING, I N C .
525
1023
1108
1117
732
200
200
2600
950
806
(R-8TH-OHIO)
1300
7400
200
4800
800
1800
2000
200
499
300
200
750
514
15000
200
200
525
�Representatives and Staffs - 11-243
Ted Strickland
D-Ohio, 6th District
Began Service: 1993
1429 Longworth House
Office Building
Washington, DC 20515-3506
(202) 225-5705
FAX: (202) 226-0331
BIOGRAPHICAL Bom: 8/4/41 •Home: Lucasville
• Educ: Ph.D., U. of Ky. • Prof.: Psychology Prof. • Rel.:
Methodist
KEY STAFF AIDES
Name/Position
Legislative Responsibility
Frances Strickland
Admin. Asst.
Ron Sylvester
Press Secy.
Annelise Hafer
Legis. Dir.
Andrew Garfinkel
Legis. Asst.
Small Business (Regulation/
Business Opportunities Subcommittee); Economic Development,
Banking, Budget/Taxes, Public
Works/Transportation,
Science/Space/Technology,
Communications
Susan Zettler
Legis. Asst.
Labor, Taxes
Catherine Zudak
Legis. Asst.
Defense, Education
Amanda Mavis
Scheduler
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Education and Labor: Elementary, Secondary, and Vocational
Education • Labor Standards, Occupational Health and Safety
• Postsecondary Education and Training
Small Business: Regulation, Business Opportunities, and Technology • Rural Enterprises, Exports and the Environment
OTHER POSITIONS
Rural Health Care Coalition • Congressional Coalition on
Adoption
DISTRICT OFFICES
1236 Gallia St.
Portsmouth, OH 45662.
© Congressional Yellow Book
(614) 353-5171
Summer 1993
�OHIO
1001
DISTRICT
^ ttled from the south, where the Ohio River and its tributaries made the hills of inland
•P permeable to coastal Americans. Yankee settlers came down the Ohio from Pittsburgh
funded Marietta in 1788 as Ohio's first town. Around the same time George Washington
d for his Revolutionary War veterans bounty lands in the Virginia Military District of
'"Ltween the Scioto and Miami Rivers, centered on Chillicothe. In Marietta the Yankees
home. Old Fo .
v.w England style churches; in Chillicothe the young Virginian Thomas Worthington who
1964; L u t h e r a n ; ^
V" governor of Ohio built his home, Adena, designed by architect Benjamin Latrobe.
^ans
outnumbered New Englanders, and their traces remain on the landscape, laid
e, 1966-88.
^'"l^gular-shaped parcels as in Virginia, not the Northwest Ordinance's checkerboard grid
\ on most of the Midwest. There have been lasting political effects too. These rolling
5405. Also 120 Jeff,
-6446; and 148
^
^south of U.S. 40 have never attracted much industry; most people here speak with an
2-2500.
i that sounds southern to northern Ohioans; they retain, with conservative cultural
^"des a Democratic heritage that manifests itself as a willingness to vote Democratic on
13th of 17 p.)- Qv^ .
^ . '(jt elects Vem Rifle, the senior state House Speaker in the nation). It was one sign of
and Finance;
^hrewdness of Bill Clinton's campaign that the Clinton-Gore bus trip out of the New York
*' niion went through just this part of Ohio, and that Clinton ultimately carried the state in
""hy running just about even here. Clinton returned to the area in early 1993 to sell his
*" ^ package to the middle-class voters.
^ Congressional District of Ohio covers most of southern Ohio, from Marietta down the
. ni to the gritty industrial towns of Ironton and Portsmouth; it runs across the hilly
^Lpe io include part of Chillicothe and all of Piketon (site of a bitter year-long strike,
in Jun
nuclear materials plant), and west over to Warren
NSI ax: cn
'amy between Dayton and Cincinnati. It has no large central cities and almost entirely avoids
100
75
|
j^politan areas. As of 1992, this is a combination of two old districts: the 6th, which extended
V
O
49
^north toward Columbus and west toward Cincinnati, and the tOth, which extended from
janxi and Marietta north to Lancaster and Zanesville, east of Columbus. Both were
^Bsented for many years by Republicans; the new 6th is represented by a Democrat. Therein
si ule of how two Republicans of very different generations and temperaments fought each
der in a bitter primary, opening the way for a Democrat who had lost races for Congress three
70%
st before.
74%
Ik two Republicans were Clarence Miller, representative from the 10th since 1966, and Bob
*£»en. representative from the 6th since 1980. Miller brings to mind the days when Robert
'iioonservatives dominated the midwestern delegations: he is an engineer, precise and orderly,
ie Force in Gulf F R
O
«prided himself on never missing roll call votes and, as a member of the Appropriations
S Mil. Abroad $ Cut AGN
jmnittee, introduced amendments for precise percentage spending cuts. Bob McEwen's life
mil SDI Funds
AGS
• be politics: after college and two years in the real estate business, he was elected to the
en
uba Trade Embargo F R
O
Vtaiure in 1974 at age 24; in 1980 he was elected to Congress; in 1988 he made a well«*azed feint at running against Senator Howard Metzenbaum, and then left the race to
'<o|e Voinovich; in 1990 he was mentioned as a possible candidate for lieutenant governor, but
»Hcsst colleague Mike DeWine got that. McEwen was a Reagan-era Republican, not much
AGS
•imulus Plan
•toed about budget deficits, an enthusiast for assertive foreign policy, without the single"•d devotion to bringing home pork barrel projects of his Republican predecessor. During
inning it was assumed Miller would retire if the old 10th was merged into the 6th. When
**» c m out, hefiledto run in the June primary here, though he was 74 and had an injured
a e
* iw™
8
y . u t stayed in out of distaste for his opponent. When
|C-«4.t>*»l
taut bank scandal broke, McEwen first told reporters he had no overdrafts, then that he
(25%)
,i4>!«
*•> few; it turned out he had 166. The primary was bitter and close. McEwen, who had
(6%)
^Sj;
<
after a recount and a lawsuit by Miller by 33,194 votes
a S se
3
e
n
n L
e
t
s o o n
E
ver
c 1
9
9
o
v
e
r
w o r , c
r u l e s
a t
a
6
d 0 S e
t 0 w i t h d r a w i n
i n
M a
1
m
m
0 f t h e n e w d i s t r i c t
w o n
b
�1002
OHIO
That gave afineopening for Democrat Ted Strickland, son of a steelworker and eigh^
children, Methodist minister, former director of a children's home, a prison psych | %
psychology professor at Shawnee State College, candidate for Congress three times bef ^
winner of 46% against McEwen in 1980. In the 1992 primary, Strickland emphasi*^ ^ \
choice stance and less rigid opposition to gun control and beat Chillicothe mayor Joseph ^
by a 2-1 margin. In the general, Strickland campaigned for more highways and school '*
and for countering alcohol and drug abuse, school dropouts and teen pregnancy: ' \ S
communities where children are nurtured and educated and protected and cared for" L ''S
He and his wife (author of a kindergarten screening test and a children's book on f ^
Kentucky Governor Martha Layne Collins) have made their way up as counseling profe ^
Strickland attacked House procedures and hit McEwen for missing 25 roll call votes o n l ^
received honoraria for speeches; McEwen hit Strickland for getting paid $35 an hour to n''^
prison encounter groups and for not saying he'd vote against gun control.
"'V
Strickland won a general election that turned out to be almost as close as the Renni,!
primary. 51%-49%. This was all the more a stinging rebuke of McEwen since Georg ^
carried the district. McEwen carried the 59% of the district he used to represent, but b
55%^45%; Strickland carried the old Miller areas 59%^41%. McEwen got a second c a
hn
early 1993 when he decided to run for the 2d District seat being vacated by Bill Gradsion "
lost in the March primary to Rob Portman. Strickland's challenge now is to deliver, bori^'*
promises to shape new national programs and on the old-fashioned work of delivering proi^
southern Ohio. He got a good start on "delivering" when, in April 1993, he was bac|(i *
district helping to mediate a riot at the maximum-security Lucasville prison where he"^
previously worked as a psychologist.
^
of
.03
0 Q
s
l 9
U
|9
92«'
n c r a l
92
Qrr
Ssj
c
n
sE
hills and plair
laoufacturing cen
^ i n a n t technoJ
i v e been replaced
Retimes with un.
, with the capita
District. Its largest
for years; in the 1
v'istar. To the so
Base, whose name
The Dayton area
business growth, le
chnological advai
District are Bellefoi
(he site of Honda's
American workers
long ago thought A
open that are more
far less of the bad
supposedly better i
The 7th Distric
Republicans Willi;
monopolies, discou
new businesses anc
without ideologies
margin to George
The 7th Distric
elected in 1990 at
until 1993 two Ja
Registration Act
obviously interest!
conservative on
balanced budget.
sculpt a Republic
companies with h<
Tony Hall to secu
national aviation
i e
Sa
The People: Pop. 1990: 570,804; 60% rural; 13% age 65+; 97% White; 2% Black. Voting age
420,945; 2% Black. Households: 61% married couple families; 29% married couple fams. w. chili*'
30% college educ; median household income: $21,761; per capita income: $10,349; median gro^ ^
$315; median house value: $46,200
**
ie
1992 Presidential Vote
Bush(R)
Clinton (D)
Perot (I)
1988 Presidential Vote
102,481 (40%)
99,761 (39%)
50,532 (20%)
Bush (R)
Dukakis (D)
128 989 m
90Jr i n
Rep. Ted Strickland (D)
Elected 1992; b. Aug. 4, 1941, Portsmouth; home, Lucasvik
Ashbury College, B.A. 1963, Ashbury Theological Semiiun.
M.Div. 1967, U. of KY, Ph.D. 1980: Methodist; married(Frajxai
Career Methodist Children's Home advisor, 1968-76. Assi. Dir.
1974-76; Prof.. Shawnee State, 1986-92; Consulting psycholcts.
Southern Ohio Correctional facility, 1986-92.
Offices: 1429 LHOB 20515, 202-225-5705. Also 1236 GalliaSL
Portsmouth 45662, 614-353-5171.
Committees: Education and Labor (24th of 28 D): Ee e u
lmn n
Secondary and Vocational Education; Labor Standards, Oc p
cu *
tional Health and Safety; Postsecondary Education and Trainui
Small Business (16th of 27 D): Development of Rural Enteniraa
Exports and the Environment; Regulation, Business O p m u n
po uu
and Technology.
Croup Ratings and 102d Congress Votes: Newly Elected
:!
-'^I$fiS '*
'•- .•--••.'.'^.:...;,5'VU^
VENTH DIS
�bounties, 1990 population
efiance 39,350
ErW 76,779
Hen\ 29,108
HurorK 56,240
Lorain (bt.) 37,307
Mercer QM.) 5,438
Ottawa (p\.) 25,406
Cities, 1990 Ropulation (10,000
Bowling Gr^en (pt.) 12,929
Defiance 16,\68
Fostoria (pt.) \l,892
Fremont 17,6
Norwalk 14,731'
Paulding 20,488
Putnam 33,819
Sandusky 61,963
Seneca 59,733
Van Wert 30,464
Williams 36,956
Wood(pt.) 57,850
or more)
Perrysburg (pt.) 11,955
Sandusky 29,764
Tiffin 18,604
Van Wert 10,891
Vermilion 11,127
Race and Hispanic T i g i n
White 95.9%
Black 2.1%
American Indian, Eskii
or Aleut. 0.2%
Asian or Pacific Islander 0.3%
Other 1.596
Hispanic origin 3.1%
Ancestry
American 4.5%
Dutch 3.3%
English 12.9%
French 4.1%
German 56.4%
Hungarian 1.5%
Irish 14.8%
Italian 3.2%
Polish 2.7%
Scotch Irish 1.5%
V Scottish 1.8%
Slovakian 1.2%
viss 1.1%
elsh 1.1%
Universities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Bowling Green State University Firela^ds College, Huron
1,446
Defiance College, Defiance 964
Heidelberg College, Tiffin 1,286
Terra Technical College, Fremont 2,303
Tiffin University, Tiffin 896
Newspapers, total circulation (in all districts)
Bowling Green Sentinel-Tribune 13,406
Bryan Times 10,687
Cleveland Plain Dealer 409,749
Defiance Crescent-News 16,458
Fremont News-Messenger 13,356
Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette 117,410
Norwalk Reflector 8,753
Port Clinton News Herald 6,154
Sandusky Register 23,421
Tiffin Advertiser Tribune 10,561
Toledo Blade 150,637
Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Toledo (62%), Cleveland (20%), Ft. Wayne (16%) an^
Dayton (3%)
WINM, Angola (None)
WGGN-TV, Sandusky (None)
Cable television systems, total subscribers
Buckeye Cablevision; Sandusky 18,589
Buckeye Cablevision; Toledo 116,000
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Bellevue 6,500
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Fostoria 14,015
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Norwalk 7,500
dimension Cable Services; Defiance 6,800
iremont Cablevision; Fremont 6,700
TGI of Ohio; Bryan 7,200
Wdod Qble Ltd.; Bowling Green 8,200
MilitaA installations, 1991
Camp retry Air Force Guard Station, Port Clinton 31
Businesse&and other major employers
General Motors Corp.; Defiance; iron castings 4,000
Whirlpool Corp.; Clyde; household laundry appliances 3,500
Campbell Soup Co.; Napoleon; canned soups 2,500
General Motors Corp./Delco Moraine Div.; Sandusky; industry machineiv 2,000
North Americart^Philips Corp.; Ottawa; elearonic components 2,000
R. R. Donnelley S^Sons Co.; Willard; publishing/printing
1,800
Ford Motor Co./Plasiw: Produas Div.; Sandusky; motor
vehicle equipment l.,650
Toledo Edison Co./Davld Beese Nuclear Power Station; Oak
Harbor; electric serviced 1,200
Allied-Signal Inc./AutoliteUDiv.; Fostoria; spark plugs 1,100
Sandusky Area Health Service; Sandusky 850
ARO Corp.; Bryan; pneumatic air tools 840
Aeroquip Corp.; Van Wert; rubber hose/tubing 815
MTD Produas Inc.; Willard; firm/garden machinery 800
National Machinery Co.; Tiffin; Wietalworking machinery 800
Seaway Food Town Inc.; Tiffin; grocery stores 750
Teleflex Inc.; Van Wert; motor veFticle parts 700
Norwalk Furniture Corp.; NorwalkiVurniture 700
Atlas Crankshaft Corp.; Fostoria; dieS^l engines 700
Providence Hospital Inc.; Sandusky
Pepperidge Farm Inc.; Willard; bakery produas 680
Federal-Mogul Corp.; Van Wert; gaskets/packing 655
Manville Sales Corp.; Defiance; insulation \600
Memorial Hospital; Fremont 566
American Standard Inc.; Tiffin; pottery 550
City of Sandusky/Board of Education; Sandusky 550
6th District
South — Portsmouth; Chillicothe; Athens
The 6th is the largest district in the state, taking in all of
Ohio's southeast corner and reaching across to Warren County
in Ohio's southwest. What suburbs it had near Dayton and
Cincinnati were stripped away in the 1992 redistricting, leaving
behind a collection of some of Ohio's poorest rural areas.
Scioto County is the 6th's most populous, with 80,000
residents and 14 percent of the total. It contains Portsmouth, the
district's largest city (population 23,000).
While steel and bricks have been linchpins of Portsmouth's
economy throughout the century, one of the largest employers in
the district is the nearby uranium-enrichment facility owned by
the Department of Energy and operated by Martin Marietta. In
Chillicothe (20,000 of whose 22,000 residents are in the 6th), 44
miles due north of Portsmouth in Ross County, nearby forests
support a large paper plant.
Athens County has a number of government employers,
including Ohio University, with 18,500 students, that cushions it
somewhat from adverse economic conditions. Athens was one
of just two Ohio counties to support George McGovern for
Ohio
583
�president in 1972; Michael S. Dukakis and Bill Clinton each
carried it with more than 50 percent of the vote in 1988 and 1992,
respectively.
he Democratic influence is counterbalanced by neighboring
County, where the GOP has a better than 2-to-l
Sntage.
M:iny of the poorer voters in other counties along the Ohio
River still call themselves Democrats—a remnant of Civil War
days when Confederate sympathies were strong in this area—but
nowadays their conservative outlook leads them toward GOP
candidates in most elections.
The counties immediately east of the Cincinnati area are rural
Republican country. Clinton and Highland counties lie on the
outer fringe of the Corn Belt.
Farther east the land is poorer, the Appalachian Mountains
rise and GOP strength begins to ebb. Seven of the eight poorest
counties in the state (in terms of proportion of families in
poverty) are here in the 6th: Pike, Scioto, Jackson, Meigs,
Lawrence, Vinton and Gallia. Only Adams County to the
immediate west in the 2nd District is poorer. Clinton carried five
of tho ie seven counties in 1992, losing only Jackson and Gallia.
One-fifth of the 6th's land area is contained within the three
regions of the Wayne National Forest in the district's eastern
Appalachian section, including almost all of Lawrence County
on Ohio's southern edge.
In 1992, George Bush and Bill Clinton ran almost evenly in
this distria, with Bush taking 40.2 percent of the vote to
Clinton's 39-6 percent. Clinton won eight of the 14 counties that
are all or partly in the 6th; several of these viaories were by less
than 350 votes. Despite the name affinity, Bush did prevail
decisively in Clinton County, taking 48 percent of the vote to the
^^^^>crat's 30 percent.
Election Returns
Democrat
Republican
98,768 (39.696)
122,720 (50.5%)
100,162 (40.2%)
119,252 (49.1%)
6[h Disirici
1992
President*
House
1990
Governor
78,522 (45.7%)
93,223 (54.3%)
1988
President
Senate
89,621 (41.4%)
118,774 (55.1%)
127,041 (58.6%)
96,681 (44.9%)
•Vott for Pml was 49,796 (20.0%).
Demographics
Population 570,901
Percent change from 1980 10.9%
Land area 6,372 square miles
Population per square mile 90
Counties, 1990 population
Athens 59,549
Clinton 35,415 .
illia 30,954 (GtVV.»)
|hland 35,728 (ft'-jWf.d )
focking 25,533
Jackson 30,230
Lawrence 61,834
584 Ohio
Meigs 22,987
Pike 24,249
Ross(pt.) 41,884
Scioto 80,327
Vinton 11,098
Warren (pt.) 48,859
Washington 62,254
Cities, 1990 population (10,000
Athens 21,265
ChUIicothe (pt.) 19,913
Ironton 12,751
Lebanon 10,453
or more)
Marietta 15,026
Portsmouth 22,676
Wilmington 11,199
Race and Hispanic origin
White 97.1%
Black 2.1%
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut. 0.2%
Asian or Pacific Islander 0.5%
Other 0.1%
Hispanic origin 0.4%
Ancestry
American 10.3%
Dutch 4.1%
English 16.0%
French 3.1%
German 33.1%
Irish 19.7%
Italian 1.9%
Scotch Irish 2.2%
Scottish 1.9%
Welsh 1.9%
Universities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Hocking Technical College, Nelsonville 5,212
Marietta College, Marietta 1,383
Ohio University, Chillicothe 1,614
Ohio University, Ironton 1,785
Ohio University, Athens 18,505
Shawnee State University, Portsmouth 3,180
Southern State Community College, Hillsboro 1,567
University of Rio Grande, Rio Grande 1,937
Washington State Community College, Marietta 2,660
Wilmington College, Wilmington 2,026
Newspapers, total circulation (in all districts)
Chillicothe Gazette 15,175
Cincinnati Enquirer 162,669
Columbus Dispatch 261,086
Huntington Herald Dispatch 42,242
Ironton Tribune 8,026
Marietta Times 12,920
Parkersburg News/Sentinel 34,079
Portsmouth Daily Times 16,621
Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Charleston-Huntington (52%), Columbus (20%), Cincinnati (18%) and Parkersburg (10%)
WTAP-TV, Parkersburg (NBC)
Cable television systems, total subscribers
Cablevision; Point Pleasant 14,465
Century Ohio Qble; Portsmouth 18,700
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Athens 6,500
Dimension Cable Services; Chillicothe 16,000
Dimension Cable Services; Ironton 7,702
Nelsonville TV Cable Inc.; Nelsonville 6,100
TCI of Ohio; Marietta 11,838
United Video Cablevision Inc.; Coalton 5,290
Businesses and other major employers
ABX Air Inc./Airborne Express; Wilmington; air cargo service 2,700
Mead Corp./Chillicothe Div.; Chillicothe; paper mills 2,600
Ohio University; Athens 2,300
Martin Marietta Energy Systems; Piketon; uranium enrichment 2,000
�U.S. Health Corp./Southern Ohio Medical Center; Portsmouth 1,600
Pillsbury Co./Jenos; Wellston; frozen food products 750
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.; Logan; metal forgings 700
Holzer Medical Center; Gallipolis 694
State of Ohio/Correaions Dept.; Lucasville 686
Elkem Metals Co.; Marietta; steel products 650
Worthington Custom Plastics; Mason; plastics products 625
Ferno-Washington Inc.; Wilmington; medical
equipment/instruments 560
bedroom communities blossomed along Route 33, a four-lane
highway conneaing Lancaster with the thriving city of Columbus, 30 miles northwest.
George Bush did well in the 7th in 1992, taking 45 percent of
thelvote to Bill Clinton's 34 percent. Bush was especially strong
in Wnion County, taking 53 percent.
Election Returns
7th District
President*
ouse
Governor
President
7th District
7
est Central — Springfield; Lancaster
\rhis district resembles a gaping mouth that is set to swallow
Columbus whole. Its nine counties surround Columbus' district
(the hth) on three sides.
TheVth is bisected by U.S. Route 40; the northern section
containsy third of the distria's land, but casts only 15 percent of
its vote. Champaign, Logan and Union to the north are rural
counties that combine agriculture and small industry and have
been GOP strongholds for generations; they backed Alfred M.
Landon for president in 1936.
South of RoW 40, the people are concentrated in Clark
County (SpringfieldJ) and in Greene County, which extends into
Dayton's eastern suburbs.
Springfield's site along Route 40 (the old National Road)
enabled it to develop into the area's leading population center
with 70,000 residents. Thk city's economy suffered substantially
in the early 1980s, but got\a boost in 1983 when International
Harvester (now Navistar) consolidated its truck-making operations here.
Greene County has a working-class mix of blacks and
southern whites. Wright-Pattersork Air Force Base, in the county's far southwest comer, is responsible for a substantial amount
of military-related employment. The^base is the nation's largest
military installation in terms of numb^t; employed—16,000 military personnel and civilians work
The Air Force has recently bolstered Wright-Patterson's
security by consolidating several "commands" into a new one
based here: the Air Force Materiel Commahd, which controls
one-fifth of the Air Force's budget. The base istjie largest singlesite employer in the state.
Up north, the economic picture is rosier in tlnion County
than in many of Ohio's other rural areas. Lying just northwest of
Columbus, this is an attractive site for industries seeking open
land, low taxes and—despite the county's name—no nistory of
unions.
Much of the area's economic stimulus has come fro^
unusual source: Japan. Honda opened a motorcycle plan)*,
Marysville in the western part of Union County in 1979, a)i
three years later the company opened its first American
plant there. Honda employs 6,400 people between the two
facilities, making it the largest private employer in the region.
(Other Honda plants in adjoining districts employ 3,500 more
people.) The Marysville auto plant built 342,000 Honda Accords
in 1992; it is the only plant that builds the Accord coupe and
station wagon. Honda of America exported more than 55,000
cars in 1992—with 20,000 of them going to Japan.
Fairfield County, in the 7th's far southeast corner, has
experienced high growth (for this region) in recent years, as
Democrat
84,111
66,237
62,092
73,057
110,255
(33.5%)
(28.6%)
(37.7%)
(34.3%)
(51.6%)
Republican
112,517 (44.8%)
164,195 (70.9%)
102,567 (62.3%)
140,102 (65.7%)
103,471 (48.4%)
'Volt for Pent u/os 54,050 f21.5%).
Demographics
Population 570,
Percent change f f y m 1980 11.4%
Land area 3,473 s<Xiare miles
Population per squaVe mile
Counties, 1990 popul
Champaign 36,019
Clark 147,548
Fairfield 103,461
Fayette 27,466
Greene 136,731
Logan (pt.) 22,329
Pickaway (pt.) 37,933
Ross(pt.) 27,446
Union 31,969
Cities, 1990 population (IDyOOO or more)
Springfield 70,487
Beavercreek 33,626
Urbana 11,353
Bellefontaine 12,142
Washington 12,983
Circle ville 11,666
Xenia 24,664
Fairborn 31,300
Lancaster 34,507
Race and Hispanic origin
White 93.6%
Black 5.3%
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut.
Asian or Pacific Islander 0.7%
Other 0.2%
Hispanic origin 0.7%
s
Ancestry
American 7.
Dutch 4.4%
English 15.3%
French 3.2%
German 39.3%
Irish 19.0%
1
Italian 16%
Polish V4
Scotch Iriskj
Scottish
Welsh 15 \
.%
Universities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Air Force Institute of Technology, Fairborn 915 \
Antioch School of Adult Learning, Yellow Springs 591
\Antioch University, Yellow Springs 671
\
Cedarville College, Cedarville 1,918
\
Central State University, Wilberforce 2,886
Clark State Community College, Springfield 2,718
Ohio University, Lancaster 2,027
Ohio 585
�B H E - 8th C
ONR
D
E & LABOR
D
�American Assn of Community Colleges
F D R L RELATIONS
EEA
03:25':01 P
M
Run Date: 05/20/93
Page: 75
Terminal: T2*.
Selection: A C M M E S IN C N . DISTRICT
AC EBR
OG
:
#
CLEE
OLG
C
D
NM
AE
01964
07
Raymond S. Willtes
Ohio University-Lancaster
Lancaster O
H
43130
(614)654-6711
(614)687-9497
01130
07
Albert A. Salerno
Clark State Caimunity College
Springfield O
H
45505
(513)325-0691
(513)328-6142
08
Kenneth A. Yowell
Edison State Caimunity College
Pique O
H
45356
(513)778-8600
(513)778-1920
09
Larry G McOougle
.
Northwest Technical College
Archbold O
H
43502
(419)267-5511
(419)267-3688
U of Toledo-Com & Tech Coll
Toledo O
H
43606
(419)537-3311
(000)000-0000
CITY/STATE
9'
ZIP
TELEPHONE
FAX
08OHIO
00192
090HIO
00924
02218
09
05034
09
Patricia Ann Dalke
Mercy College of N Ohio
W
Toledo O
H
43624-1197
(419)259-1279
(000)000-0000
01706
09
Daniel H Brown
.
Owens Technical College
Toledo O
H
43699
(419)666-0580
(000)000-0000
01600
11
Jerry Sue Owens
Cuyahoga C District
C
Cleveland O
H
44115
(216)967-6000
(216)566-5977
13
Roy A. Church
Lorain County C
C
Elyria O
H
44035
(216)365-5222
(216)365-6519
130HI0
00940
�1006
OHIO
from varying its pay during its current term. Six states ratified it between 1789 and 1791, Ohio
did so in 1873, and from 1978 to 1992, 32 more states followed suit. The 39 state mark should
count as the three-quarters needed, Boehner argued; the U.S. archivist certified the amendmem
ratified and Congress voted nearly unanimously to accept the amendment. What's amazing, of
course, is that politicians as seasoned as members of Congress didn't observe this rule even
without the amendment, since it provides them with afinedefense to charges they have raised
their own pay. they can't collect the raise without the voters' permission. Yet in Boehner's view
Congress is still in violation: in October 1992 he sued to void the January 1993 cost-of-living
increase made automatic in the 1989 pay raise bill as a violation of the 27th Amendment.
The Gang of Seven's work evidently struck a chord around the nation. Six of the seven, all
except Boehner, had serious challenges in the 1992 general election; six out of the seven won.
Boehner with 74%. Can he have as much impact in his second term as hisfirst?He will certainly
try to keep his reforms going from his new seat on the House Administration Committee and his
voice heard as the new chairman of the Conservative Opportunity Society.
Tlie People: Pop. 1990: 570,837; 38% rural; 12% age 65+; 96% White; 3% Black; 1 Asian. Voting
%
age pop.: 415,686; 3% Black. Households: 65% married couple families; 32% married couple fams. w.
children; 36% college educ; median household income: $31,171; per capita income: $13,355; median
giross rent: $389; median house value: $65,900.
1992 Presidential Vote
Bush(R)
Clinton (D)
Perot (I)
121,174 (47%)
75,375 (29%)
60,172 (23%)
1988 Presidential Vote
Bush (R)
Dukakis (D)
151,025 (69%)
67,060 (31%)
Rep. John A. Boehner (R)
Elected 1990; b. Nov. 17, 1949, Cincinnati; home. West Chester;
Xavier U., B.S. 1977; Catholic; married (Debbie).
Careen Navy, 1969; Pres., Nucite Sales, Inc., 1976-90; Union
Township Bd. of Trustees, 1981-85, Pres., 1984; OH House of
Reps., 1985-90.
Offices: 1020 LHOB 20515, 202-225-6205. Also 5617 LibertyFairfield Rd., Hamilton 45011, 513-894-6003; and 12 S. Plum St.,
Troy 45373, 513-339-1524.
Committees: Agriculture (10th of 19 R): General Farm Commodities; Livestock. Education and Labor (11th of 15 R): Elementary,
Secondary and Vocational Education; Labor-Management Relations. House Administration (6th of 7 R): Accounts; Office Systems (RMM).
Group Ratings
1992
1991
ADA
5
0
ACLU COPE CDF
0
17
10
0
20
CFA
13
1
1
National Journal Ratings
1991 LIB-1991 CONS
Economic
4
% — 9%
0
Social
0
% — 8%
4
Foreign
0
% — 8%
8
LCV
0
0
ACU NTLC
96
95
95
—
NSI
100
—
COC CEI
88
82
100
85
1992 LIB - 1992 CONS
9
% _
88%
0
% — 85%
1% — 7 %
8
4
Kry Votes
I Ban Sir
2- $ for H
<
) Tax Ric
4. FY93/S
Key Votes
I. Family
Ejection R
1992 genei
1992 prim
1990 genei
NINTH
Seventy y
fabulous f
and turnet
Libbey-0\
nation's b'
Toledo har
dozen rail
and West
industry,;
early 198i
while the
would not
major shri
was not fc
contrast t'
Portside F
Ohio's t
it has spre
and west
organized
that in 19!
became sc
since.
Kaptur
House; sh<
House se;
Japanese;
enough n
She has b
for a yea
governme
interest ai
pressured
�791, Ohio
irk should
nendment
nazing, of
ru^^n
Key Votes of the 102d Congress
1. Ban Striker Replace AGN
2. $ for Homeownership FOR
3. Tax Rich/Cut Mid Cls.AGN
4. FY93/$15B Def. Cut AGN
avt^pid
Key Votes of the 103d Congress
ner's view
it-oMiving
Iment.
seven, all
icven won,
1 certainly
1
Lee and his
>ian. Voting
jle fams. w
.
55; median
,025 (69%)
,060 (31%)
est Q ^ - r ,
i-90^Union
H House of
jl7 LibertyS. Plum St.,
m CommodElementary,
ement Rela. Office Sysr
> CEI
C
8
82
0
85
1. Family Leave
Election Results
1992 general
1992 primary
1990 general
AGN
5. Handgun Wait/7-Day AGN
6. Overseas Mil. AbortionAGN
7. Obscn. Art NEA $ Ban FOR
8. Death Pen. from Jury FOR
2. Deficit Reduction
John A. Boehner (R)
Fred Sennet (D)
John A. Boehner (R), unopposed
John A. Boehner (R)
Gregory V. Jolivette (D)
AGN
9. Use Force in Gulf FOR
10. US Mil. Abroad $ Cut AGN
11. Limit SDI Funds AGN
12. Cuba Trade Embargo AGN
3. Stimulus Plan
AGN
176,362
62,033
(74%)
(26%)
($530,835)
($6,730)
99,955
63,584
(61%)
(39%)
($732,765)
($114,852)
NINTH DISTRICT
Seventy years ago Toledo was one of America's boom towns. The 1920s here was "a decade of
fabulousfigures,"Harlan Hatcher wrote: the Willys-Overland plant employed 25,000 workers
and turned out an auto every 30 seconds; the city built $20 million coal and iron ore docks; the
Libbey-Owens-Ford merger made Toledo, with good local supplies of natural gas and sand, the
nation's biggest glass manufacturer; the city built a new museum and transcontinental airport.
Toledo had long been well-situated, where the Maumee River empties into Lake Erie, where two
dozen rail lines connected it with the East Coast and Chicago and the coalfieldsof Kentucky
and West Virginia. It was well-positioned to be one of the centers of the brash rising auto
industry, a national leader when it produced the Jeep in the 1940s. But in the late 1970s and
early 1980s, auto company management allowed the union to bid wages and benefits too high
while the union allowed management to let quality get too low, to the point that consumers
would not buy enough American-made cars for the industry to survive without vast subsidy or
major shrinkage. Subsidy, beyond the temporary Chrysler loan and a few small trade barriers,
was not forthcoming, and so Toledo and other auto-dependent cities went through tough times:
contrast the confident, growing city of the 1920s with the Toledo that sadly saw the tasteful
Portside Festival Marketplace close in 1990.
Ohio's 9th Congressional District is centered on Toledo; as the city's population has stagnated,
it has spread east to theflatlandsof Ottawa County, south to Bowling Green State University,
and west to rural Fulton County. Toledo has been heavily Democratic since CIO unions
organized the plants in the late 1930s; the collapse of the auto industry so unnerved the district
that in 1980 it voted for Ronald Reagan and elected a Republican congressman, but in 1982 it
became solidly Democratic again, electing Democrat Marcy Kaptur, who has held the seat ever
iince.
Kaptur spent eight years as an urban planner in Toledo, then got a job in the Carter White
House; she was shrewd enough to return to Toledo in 1982 when no one else wanted to run for the
House seat. She has beenfixatedcontinually on trade issues especially those regarding the
Japanese; from her planning days she seems to assume that if government could just set down
enough rules, Toledo and similar areas could go back to the days before the late 1970s shakeout.
She has been a leader in prohibiting top government officials from representing foreign interests
for a year after they leave government, and in 1993 will introduce measures to cover more
government officials with even tougher restrictions—a 5-year ban on representing any foreign
interest and a permanent ban on representing any foreign government or political party. She has
pressured the Japanese to buy more American auto parts and at the same time is leery of
�Uibana University, Urbana 852
Wilberforce University, Wilberforce 809
Wittenberg University, Springfield 2,377
spapers, total circulation (in all districts)
^Bellefontaine Examiner 10,328
Chillicothe Gazette 15,175
Ciuleville Herald 7,227
Columbus Dispatch 261,086
Dayton Daily News 174,309
Lancaster Eagle-Gazette 16,953
Xenia Daily Gazette 10,111
Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Columbus (60%) and Dayton (40%)
WWAT, Chillicothe (None)
WTJC, Springfield (None)
Cable television systems, total subscribers
Coaxial Communications; Columbus 73,539
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Fairborn 14,980
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Kettering 65,000
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Lancaster 12,924
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Springfield 25,300
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Xenia 9,613
Dimension Cable Services; Chillicothe 16,000
Dimension Cable Services; Washington 6,800
Warner Cable Communications Inc.; Columbus 107,394
Military installations, 1991
Bee kley Municipal Airpon Air Force Guard Station, Springfield 335
Wnght-Patterson Air Force Base, Fairborn 15,533
inesses and other major employers
Honda of America Mfg.; Marysville; motor vehicles 6,370
Navistar Intl. Transportation Corp.; Springfield; truck assembly 1,500
U.S. Veterans Affairs Dept.; Chillicothe; hospital 1,416
Community Hospital of Springfield; Springfield 1,258
Anchor Hocking Corp.; Lancaster; glass/glassware 1,150
Mei cy Medical Center of Springfield; Springfield 1,133
Du Pont E. I. De Nemours & Co.; Circleville;
plastics/synthetics 1,108
Babcock & Wilcox Co./Diamond Power Specialty Co. Div.;
Lancaster; navigation equipment 1,000
FL Aerospace Corp.; Urbana; aircraft pans 1,000
General Electric Co./Lighting; Circleville; electric lighting
913
Lancaster-Fairfield Community Hospital; Lancaster 910
Systems Research Laboratories; Dayton; research services 900
Harsco Corp./BMY Combat Systems Div.; Marysville; motor
vehicles/equipment 850
Medical Center Hospital; Chillicothe 800
Greene Memorial Hospital Inc.; Xenia 800
Thomson Consumer Electronics; Circleville; audio/video
equipment 700
Cooper Industries Inc.; Springfield; motors/generators 700
J. B. Hunt Transport Inc.; Springfield; trucking services 695
Paccar Inc.; Chillicothe; motor vehicles/equipment 670
redit Life Companies Inc.; Springfield; holding offices 645
. T. H. Parts Industries Inc.; St. Paris; motor vehicle parts 640
Ranco Inc.; Plain City; controlling devices 600
City of Fairborn/Board of Education; Fairborn 550
Drackett Inc.; Urbana; soaps/cleaners 525
586 Ohio
8th District
Southwest — Hamilton; Middletown
Butler County is the anchor of this southwestern Ohio
district, which has changed shape several times in recent
redistrictings but always remained solidly Republican.
Butler contains more than half the district's population and
two medium-sized manufacturing centers along the Great Miami
River—Hamilton (population 61,000) and Middletown (population 46,000). Steel, paper, automobile bodies, machine tools and a
variety of other metal produas are made in the two cities.
Most of what few minorities there are in this district live in
the two cities; Hamilton is 7 percent black and Middletown is 11
percent black. The rest of the district is about 1 percent black.
All other minorities make up about 1 percent of the district.
But both Hamilton and Middletown have lost population in
recent years. Most of Butler County's 291,000 residents live not
in the two cities but in suburban communities and small towns
such as Oxford, the home of Miami University's 16,000 students.
Population expansion in Butler County's suburban territory,
just north of the Cincinnati beltway, has made the county one of
the state's fastest-growing, and the new arrivals have escalated a
rightward trend in the local Republican Party.
Ronald Reagan carried Butler in 1980 with 62 percent of the
vote, and increased that to 73 percent in 1984. In 1988, George
Bush carried Butler with 69 percent of the vote, well above his
statewide average of 55 percent. He beat Bill Clinton here by 19
points in 1992, winning 49 percent of the vote. In recent years the
county has elected some of the state's most conservative
Republican legislators.
The other half of the 8th's residents live outside Butler
County in a string of fertile Corn Belt counties running north
along the Indiana border and east toward Springfield. The land is
flat and the roads are straight. Once leaving the Miami Valley in
northern Butler, a motorist can drive north through the 8th along
Route 127 without more than an occasional slight turn of the
steering wheel.
Corn and soybeans are major cash crops in the rural counties.
Poultry and livestock also are moneymakers. In recent years,
Darke and Mercer counties have been the leading Ohio counties
in farm income.
Mercer, the southern half of which remains in the 8th, was
settled by German Catholics and is the only county in the district
with much of a Democratic heritage. But Mercer likes its
Democrats conservative. It has not backed the party's presidential candidate since 1968.
Shelby County and a bit of southwestern Auglaize County
were added to the 8th in the last redistricting. Shelby voted
heavily for Bush and Ross Perot in 1992, giving them 44 percent
and 29 percent of the vote, respectively, to Clinton's 26 percentPerot's best whole-county total in the district.
Election Returns
Democrat
8th District
Republican
1992
President*
House
75,189 (29.3%)
62,033 (25.9%)
120,847 (47.2%)
176,362 (73.8%)
1990
Governor
61,303 (36.0%)
109,028 (64.0%)
1988
President
Senate
67,146 (30.7%)
106,948 (48.9%)
151,391 (69.3%)
111,879 (51.1%)
'Von for Pem was 59,937
(2}4%).
�Demographics
Warner Qble
181,000
Warner Qble
Warner Qble
Warner Qble
Warner Qble
Population 570,<X)1
Percent change from 1980 11.296
Communications Inc.; Cincinnati/Blue Ash
Communications
Communications
Communications
Communications
Inc.; Greenville 5,102
Inc.; Lewisburg 8,500
Inc.; Piqua 8,800
Inc.; Troy 7,422
Land area 2,728 square miles
Population per square mile 209
Counties, 1990 population
Auglaize (pt.) 10,680
•Butler 291,479
Darke 53,619
Mercer (pt.) 34,005
Miami 93,182
Montgomery (pt.) 2,908
Preble 40,113
Shelby 44,915
Cities, 1990 population (10,000
Fairfield (pt.) 39,729
Greenville 12,863
Hamilton 61,368
Middletown (pt.) 45,991
or more)
Oxford 18,937
piq a 20,612
Sidney 18,710
Troy 19,478
U
Race and Hispanic origin
White 96.296
Black 2.896
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut. 0.196
Asian or Pacific Islander 0.796
Other 0.296
Hispanic origin 0.596
Ancestry
American 7.396
Dutch 3.096
English 14.596
French 4.596
German 47.996
Irish 17.396
Italian 2.696
Polish 1.296
Scotch Irish 1.896
Scottish 1.996
Universities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Edison State Community College, Piqua 3,325
Miami University, Oxford 15,836
Miami University-Middletown, Middletown 2,038
Miami University-Hamilton, Hamilton 2,073
Southern Ohio College, Fairfield 368
Wright State University, Celina 880
Newspapers, total circulation (in all districts)
Dayton Daily News 174,309
Greenville Daily Advocate 8,261
Piqua Daily Call 8,857
Richmond Palladium-Item 19,821
Sidney Daily News 12,164
Troy Daily News 10,841
Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Dayton (8396) and Cincinnati (1796)
WKOI, Richmond (None)
Cable television systems, total subscribers
Continental Cablevision of Ohio; Huber Heights 37,422
Heritage Cablevision; Coldwater 5,600
TCI of Ohio; Fairfield 11,000
TCI of Ohio; Hamilton 21,107
TCI of Ohio; Middletown 24,663
Viacom Cablevision-Dayton Inc.; Dayton 52,900
Warner Qble; Sidney 6,800
Businesses and other major employers
Armco Steel Co.; Middletown; steel produas 5,600
Champion Intl. Corp./Hamilton Mill; Hamilton; paper mills
1,900
Stolle Corp./Norcold Div.; Sidney; metal services 1,850
Copeland Corp.; Sidney; refrigeration 1,800
Huffy Corp.; Celina; bicycles 1,770
Honda of America Mfg.; Anna; motor vehicles 1,700
Ohio Qsualty Insurance Co.; Hamilton; fire/marine/casualty
insurance 1,660
Crown Equipment Corp.; New Bremen; industrial equipment
1,646
Allied-Signal Inc.; Greenville; motor vehicle equipment 1,300
Cincinnati Financial Corp.; Hamilton; fire/marine/casualty
insurance 1,250
Hobart Corp.; Troy; food preparaton equipment 1,200
Hobart Brothers Co.; Troy; elearical welding apparatus 1,200
U.S. Postal Service; Cincinnati 1,000
Champion Intl. Corp./Nationwide Paper Div.; Hamilton;
paper/wood products 1,000
Fort Hamilton-Hughes Memorial Hospital; Hamilton 967
Piqua Memorial Medical Center; Piqua 900
Baker Concrete Construaion; Monroe; concrete work 800
Corning Inc.; Greenville; glass/glassware 800
B. F. Goodrich Co./Aerospace & Defense Div.; Troy; aircraft
parts 750
Mercy Hospital of Hamilton; Hamilton 695
City of Hamilton; Hamilton 675
Friendly Ice Cream Corp.; Troy; dairy produas 650
Allied Produas Corp.; Coldwater; credit institutions 650
Roadway Express Inc.; Cincinnati; trucking facilities 600
Reynolds & Reynolds Co.; Celina; business forms 600
County of Butler; Hamilton 600
Wilson Memorial Hospital; Sidney 596
Stouder Memorial Hospital Assn.; Troy 545
9th District
Northwest — Toledo
Toledo is an old port city, one whose more recent fortunes
have risen and fallen, and fallen further, with the health of the
automobile industry. But by the beginning of the 1990s, it was
Wall Street, not Detroit, that had undermined Toledo's economy.
The city had climbed back from the depths of the early 1980s
recession by mid-decade, and there was some cause for optimism. A Jeep plant and a General Motors transmission faaory
were operating at full capacity; unemployment in Toledo slipped
below 10 percent in 1986.
The optimism ceased as a wave of corporate takeovers and
restruaurings by out-of-town interests weakened such major
Toledo glass producers as Owens-Illinois and Owens-Corning,
causing thousands of job losses.
Undergirding Toledo's economy are the several crude oil and
gas pipelines that terminate there, and the refineries they feed.
Ohio
587
�STOKES CD-11
�American Assn of Community Colleges
F D R L RELATIONS
EEA
03:25:01 P
M
Run Dane: 05/20/93
Page: 75
Terminal: T24
Selection: A C M M E S IN C N . DISTRICT
AC EBR
OG
#
C
C
NM
AE
CLEE
OLG
CITY/STATE
ZIP
^l^o
01964
07
01130
Raymond S Wilkes
.
TLPOE
EEHN
FX
A
Ohio University-Lancaster
Lancaster O
H
A3130
(614)654-6711
(614)687-9497
07 Albert A. Salerno
Clark State Comnunity College
Springfield O
H
45505
(513)325-0691
(513)328-6142
08
Kenneth A. Yowell
Edison State Comnunity College
Piqua O
H
45356
(513)778-8600
(513)778-1920
09
Larry G McOougle
.
Northwest Technical College
Archbold O
H
43502
(419)267-5511
(419)267-3688
U of Toledo-Ccenm & Tech Coll
Toledo O
H
43606
(419)537-3311
(000)000-0000
080HIO
00192
090HIO
00924
02218
09
05034
09
Patricia Ann Dalke
Mercy College of N Ohio
W
Toledo O
H
43624-1197
(419)259-1279
(000)000-0000
01706
09
Daniel H Brown
.
Owens Technical College
Toledo O
H
43699
(419)666-0580
(000)000-0000
01600
11
Jerry Sue Owens
Cuyahoga C District
C
Cleveland O
H
44115
(216)987-6000
(216)566-5977
13
Roy A. Church
Lorain County C
C
Elyria O
H
44035
(216)365-5222
(216)365-6519
130HI0
00940
�MARCY KAPTUR (D-9TH-0HI0)
*
+
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
CSX CORPORATION
DANA CORPORATION
DAYTON HUDSON CORPORATION
DU PONT E I DE NEMOURS AND CO
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
GENERAL MILLS INC
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS CORP
ROADWAY SERVICES INC
THE KROGER CO
UNISYS CORPORATION
UNITED TECHNOLOGIES CORP
44 0
1000
285
57 5
23 0
980
850
5000
3 50
4100
1155
272
210
2960
MARTIN HOKE (R-10TH-OHIO)
* ALUMINUM COMPANY OF AMERICA
* BANC ONE CORPORATION
* CHAMPION INTERNATIONAL CORP
* EATON CORPORATION
* (GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
* GEORGIA-PACIFIC CORPORATION
* HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY
* J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
* MARRIOTT CORPORATION
* PEPSICO INC
* SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
3100
292
525
1025
1000
319
225
700
265
400
450
-LOUIS STOKES (D-11TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
^GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
MORRISON KNUDSEN CORP DEL CORP
ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL CORP
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
SUPERVALU INC
TRW INC
WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORP
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
MANTUA MANUFACTURING CO.
TWO STARS WEST
ZACLON, INC.
2 300
3 650
500
565
1000
3500
400
600
2299
1300
�T<
Louis Stokes
D-Ohio, llth District
Began Service: 1969
2365 Rayburn House
Office Building
Washington, DC 20515-3511
(202) 225-7032
FAX: (202) 225-1339
BIOGRAPHICAL Born: 2/23/25 •Home: Cleveland
• Educ: B.A, C s Western Reserve U.; J.D., Cleveland
ae
State U. • Prof.: Attorney • Rel.: Methodist
KEY STAFF AIDES
Name/Position
Legislative Responsibility
Leslie Atkinson
Admin. Asst.
Frai
A
Joyce Larkin
Press Secy.
Ron
Barbara A. Brown
Exec./Pers. Asst.
(Appts.)
Anm
Lt
Crystal Ford
Assoc. Staff
Pi
Appropriations (Labor/HHS/
Education Subcommittee); D . C ,
Budget, Banking, Education
Andr
Le
Wendell Bugg
Legis. Asst.
Neal O'Hara
Legis. Asst.
Susan
Leg
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Appropriations: VA, HUD, and Independent Agencies, Chairman * District of Columbia • Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies
Gather
Leg
Amanc
Scht
OTHER POSITIONS
Democratic Study Group • Congressional Black Caucus • Environmental and Energy Study Conference • Congressional Arts
Caucus • Ohio Congressional Delegation, Dean * NortheastMidwest Congressional Coalition • Congressional Steel Caucus
• Congressional Human Rights Caucus
DISTRICT OFFICES
m i New Federal Office Bldg.
1240 E. 9th St.
Cleveland, OH 44199
Suite 211, 2140 Lee Rd.
Cleveland Heights, OH 44118
(216) 522-4900
(216) 522-4907
COMM
Educati
Educatio
• Postsec
Small B
nology •.
OTHER
Rural He;
Adoption
DISTRK
1236 Galli
Portsm
© Congressional Yellow Book
�1012
OHI
IO
ELEVENTH DISTRICT
1013
tigating the Iran-contra scandal. In 1991, as ail but one other memoer rotated off, Stokes
^called again to head up Ethics—just in time for the House bank and Post Office scandals.
' not unsinged himself. He recused himself from investigating the bank and admitted he'd
" drawn his account "on occasion"; it turned out he had 551 overdrafts. He did, however, look
?* ho was leaking lists of violators; presumably he saw to it, though he's not saying so, that
""L Ackerman of New York, widely suspected by other members of being the leaker, resigned
^ the committee rather than force an inquiry.
Mokes gave up the Ethics Committee chair in 1993 and is now the sixth ranking Democrat on
J| Appropriations Committee and chairman of the VA-HUD-Independent Agencies SubjLjttee. This covers an odd hybrid of agencies, which tend to get played off against one
^Jiher: Stokes is likely to increase housing money at the expense of space, for example, and to
with his Senate counterpart Barbara Mikulski and Vice President Al Gore, who are more
J^minded. He can be counted on to shepherd minority set-aside programs, like his minority
Solarship program for the CIA and NSA, and a 10% minority set-aside for Supercollider
JJitracts. Of course he works to get projects and money into Cleveland. The irony would come if
teset-aside and race-conscious programs Stokes has concentrated on are ruled unconstitutional
uthe courts as the redistricting law was when he challenged it a quarter-century ago. It is not
if Stokes, a founder of the Congressional Black Caucus, has left behind a paradigmatic
(totion to the problems of black Americans which are still apparent in parts of the 11 th District,
(jthe has over a long haul established a record of honorable and competent public service and
git difficult challenges—an achievement that was in no way guaranteed him when he entered
jditics and public life. He has expressed an interest in running for the Senate in 1994, should
jfetienbaum retire.
#aS
Cleveland, like most great American cities, has grown in great bursts of migration, *t
capitalists' investments suddenly were paying off beyond their wildest dreams and low-Jj?
workers were attracted from ready corners of the country and the world. Cleveland's first g^J
surge of growth started in the 1890s and lasted through the 1920s, as tens of thousands^
immigrants from central and southern Europe arrived here, looking for jobs in steel and autoaM
other factories. Bohemians came to the tight-packed neighborhoods along Broadway, Hungj,,
ians a bit to the northeast, Jews north of University Circle along East 105th Street, Italians h
Little Italy south of Mayfield Road.
As the nation's heavy industries geared up for World War I I and enjoyed years of unexpected
prosperous growth afterward, a second surge of immigrants came, this time blacks from tit
American South. From Cleveland's old black ghetto, south of Carnegie. Avenue downtown to
East 105th, the rapidly increasing number of blacks covered most of the east side by the middle
1960s, with only a few Bohemian and Italian enclaves left east of the Cuyahoga and west of the
city limits. Migration stopped around 1965, but blacks have continued to move out beyond the
city limits to the east side suburbs, including modest East Cleveland and Warrensville Height!
and upper-income Shaker Heights, laid out on broad boulevards by streetcar magnates, the Vaa
Sweringen brothers, in 1905. These surges of migration led to political changes. A succession^
ethnic mayors—Anthony Celebrezze, Ralph Locher—was followed by the election in 1967 and
1969 of Carl Stokes, the nation's first big city black mayor, and Cleveland had racially polarized
city politics for much of the 1970s. Ironically, Cleveland has never had a black majority and
elected its second black mayor, Michael White, in 1989, in large part because the electorateasi
whole preferred his accommodating politics to the plainly more polarizing and reputedly more
unprincipled ways of longtime city Council Chairman George Forbes.
The 11 th Congressional District of Ohio includes most of the east side of Cleveland, plus the
suburbs just to the east, which together have about as many people as the city now. Some of
these—East Cleveland, Warrensville Heights—are mostly black; some—Shaker Heights is the
most notable—have stable black percentages with carefully maintained neighborhoods. Othen
are the natural destination of blacks seeking low-crime neighborhoods and middle-class schoob
not often found on the city side of Cleveland's impressive set of museums and medical centea
This is, of course, a heavily Democratic district, with a solid black majority, and it has bea
represented since 1968 by Louis Stokes, Carl Stokes's brother. The Stokeses come from «
humble background. " I want you to study and get an education," their mother said. "Get
something in your head so you will never have to work with your hands the way I have." Low
Stokes served in the segregated Army in World War I I , got a law degree when practically no la"
firm would hire blacks, and challenged the Ohio congressional district lines when it *»»
considered unthinkable that a black could be elected to Congress.
Able and not afraid of controversy, plagued by his own foibles but so far not mortally, Stoko
has taken on tough assignments in the House. In 1977, after Henry Gonzalez resigned the po*'
fury. Stokes became chairman of the Select Committee on Presidential Assassinations, onwh'O
he supervised responsible hearings and the production of a report that disputed the Warren
Commission findings and concluded that Kennedy "was probably assassinated as a result o
conspiracy." Following .the chagrin caused ^by the film J.F.K., he returned .V. V..^ subject in 1992.
to the
f
~
^
. . ^
p^. . . .
,
,
. . . . .
J
setting up a special commission to look into the matter, and despite Justice P } L n
objections was able to secure release of most of the still secret files on the assassination. In ' '
as the Abscam scandal was breaking. Stokes was called on to chair the Committee on Stan a
of Official Conduct, the official name of the House Ethics Committee. He held that hot po«^
for four years, handling Abscam, the abuse of congressional pages and the charges made aga ^
Geraldine Ferraro when she was nominated for vice president in 1984. In 1987 and 19
chaired of the House Intelligence Committee and a member of the special comtn
#
M e
Ik People: Pop. 1990: 571,295; 15% age 65+; 39% White; 59% Black; 1% Asian; 1% Other; 1%
Kipanic origin. Voting age pop.: 424,100; 55% Black; 1% Hispanic origin. Households: 38% married
wple families; 16% married couple fams. w. children; 41% college educ; median household income:
E1459; per capita income: $12,629; median gross rent: $376; median house value: $58,100.
IW Presidential Vote
Ifoon (D)
IB1I(R)
tan (I)
169,870 (73%)
37,886 (16%)
23,428 (1
1988 Presidential Vote
Dukakis (D)
Bush (R)
176,683 (78%)
48,767 (22%)
1
1
De
art,
h Louis Stokes (D)
Elected 1968; b. Feb. 23, 1925, Cleveland; home. Shaker Heights;
Western Reserve U., 1946-48, Cleveland Marshall Law Schl., J.D.
1953; African Methodist Episcopal Zion; married (Jeanette).
;
Career Army, 1943-46 (WWII); Practicing atty., 1954-68.
Offices: 2365 RHOB 20515, 202-225-7032. Also New Fed. Ofc.
Bldg., 1240 E. 9th St., #2947, Cleveland 44199, 216-522-4900; and
2140 Lee Rd., #211, Cleveland Heights 44118, 216-522^907.
Committees: Appropriations (6th of 37 D): District of Columbia;
Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education; VA, HUD and
Independent Agencies (Chmn ).
�1014
Iff
OHIO
Group Ratings
1992
1991
ADA
95
100
ACLU COPE
100
92
100
CDF
100
90
CFA
100
78
LCV
81
77
National Journal Ratings
1991 LIB - 1991 CONS
Economic
Social
Foreign
92%
ACU
0
0
NTLC
0
NSI
10
COC
1
4
22
^jund
small'"
cast si*
south a
neigh***
The c
t
1992 LIB — 1992 CONS
ReP^'"
from Mc
p iocra
districtm.
brash, sel
and some
other Rep
his partyKasicn
opponentc
from Bush
the Pentag
through th.
With Jon K
exports—w
Budget Coi
ment requi.
successfully
Bill Gradiso
jnd can be t
Kasich set
solid margin
consider a n.
DeWine deel
92%
90% —
en
Key Votes of the 102d Congress
1. Ban Striker Replace FOR
2. $ for Homeownership AGN
3. Tax Rich/Cut Mid Cls. FOR
4. FY93/$15BDef. Cut FOR
5. Handgun Wait/7-Day FOR
6. Overseas Mil. Abortion FOR
7. Obscn. Art NEA $ Ban AGN
8. Death Pen. from Jury AGN
Key Votes of the 103d Congress
I. Family Leave
FOR
2. Deficit Reduction
FOR
9. Use Force in Gulf
10. US Mil. Abroad t r ^ I
11. Limit SDI Funds 5*
12. Cuba Trade Enth^J
3. Stimulus Plan
Election Results
1992 general
1992 primary
1990 general
Louis Stokes (D)
Beryl E. Rothschild (R)
EdGudenas(I)
Two Others
Louis Stokes (D), unopposed
Louis Stokes (D)
Franklin H. Roski (R)
154.718
43,866
19,773
5,267
(69%)
(20%)
(9%)
(2%)
103,338
25,906
(80%)
(20%)
foil
($44? >,
(1191*
T W E L F T H DISTRICT
Five hundred years after its namesake discovered North America (or stumbled on S n Stli* I
a
Island), Columbus, Ohio, is approaching big league status. With its city limits stretchim I
toward farmland at each point of the compass, Columbus is geographically the largest ctn I
Ohio; its metropolitan area, though far smaller than Cleveland's and a bit smallo f
Cincinnati's, is growing more rapidly and has some time since passed the magic millian
Columbus has the advantages of being a state capital, the home of Ohio State University, m I
major white-collar employment town: its big employers include Nationwide [tuunual
multistate giant Banc One. This does not make Columbus quite recession-proof (suit pm I
ment, Ohio State and local defense contractors all shed jobs in 1992), but it has attnoifcl
kind of upscale, enterprising people who produced most of America's growth in the Iflfta
1980s. It is now the home base of The Limited's Leslie Wexner, and the headqumnil
Wendy's. Columbus does have some heavy industry, and watching the 'pork queeiij'>ilk(fc[
State Fair recalls its beginnings as a farm market town. But Columbus would rather vi
the new $43 million Wexner Center for the Visual Arts, a post-post-modem structiw itak I
evoked vast architectural controversy, or, while it was on, Ameriflora '92, the extravsp**" |
show put on to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Columbus's voyage.
J
Columbus politically has always been a Republican city, with an even more M * * I
hinterland. It had few of the Eastern European immigrants and CIO unions tte^J
Cleveland so Democratic; for most of the last 30 years, its mayor has been a RepuN**!
support from a machine redolent of the era of William McKinley (whose statue siBaWJ J
the flat-domed Capitol). Recently, local Republicans have had spirited compaiw j
Democrats, but this was a metro area that preferred George Bush to Bill Clinton in I™ I
TV People: P
Hupanic origin
couple families.
J30.859; per ca
W
2
Prwidential
Cl
'nton (D)
*rw(l).
-*3
•I'
�F'olish 12.2%
Russian 1.3%
Scotch Irish 16
.%
'.Scottish 19
.%
Slovakian 9.0%
Ukrainian 1.9%
Welsh 1.1%
Yugoslavian 1.79
niversities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Baldwin-Wallace College, Berea 4,870
Bryant & Stratton Business Institute, North Olmsted 395
Cuyahoga Community College, Cleveland 22,014
West Side Institute of Technology, Cleveland 367
Newspapers, total circulation (in all districts)
Cleveland Plain Dealer 409,749
Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Cleveland (100%)
WEWS, Cleveland (ABC)
WJW-TV, Cleveland (CBS)
WKYC-TV, Cleveland (NBC)
WQHS, Cleveland (None)
WUAB, Lorain (None)
WOIO, Shaker Heights-Cleveland (Fox)
Cable television systems, total subscribers
Cablevision of Ohio; Brook Park 19,039
Cablevision of Ohio; North Olmsted 10,620
Cox Cable Cleveland; Parma 56,000
North Coast Cable Ltd.; Cleveland 74,000
Businesses and other major employers
Cleveland Clinic Foundation; Cleveland 7,200
LTV Steel Co. Inc./Cleveland Works Div.; Cleveland; steel
products 7,000
Metro Health Medical Center; Cleveland 4,383
General Motors Corp.; Cleveland; metal stampings 4,000
NASA; Cleveland; space research/technology 4,000
American Greetings Corp.; Cleveland; greeting cards 3,000
Fairview General Hospital; Cleveland 2,120
Plain Dealer Publishing Co.; Cleveland; newspapers 1,722
Aluminum Co. of America; Cleveland; metalworking machinery 1,600
Parma Community General Hospital;' Cleveland 1,525
Ohio Bell Telephone Co.; Cleveland; telephone communications 1,500
City of Cleveland/Public Utilities; Cleveland 1,500
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co.; Cleveland; electric services 1,400
County of Cuyahoga/Board of Mental Retardation; Cleveland; job training 1,200
Lakewood Hospital; Cleveland 1,200
Joseph & Feiss Co./Cricketeer; Cleveland; men's suits/coats
1,150
PPG Industries Inc./Coatings & Resins Div.; Cleveland; paint
products 1,100
Cuyahoga Community College; Cleveland 1,100
United Parcel Service Inc.; Cleveland; mail services 1,000
Baldwin-Wallace College; Berea 1,000
City of Cleveland/Fire Dept.; Cleveland 983
Wesdake Health Campus Assn.; Cleveland 965
Morrison Knudsen Corp./Power Industrial Group; Cleveland;
building construction 900
Deaconess Hospital of Cleveland; Cleveland 900
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland; Cleveland 850
Service America Corp.; Cleveland; vending machine operators 800
590 Ohio
Jones Day Reavis & Pogue; Cleveland; legal services 750
Lutheran Medical Center; Cleveland 733
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals; Cleveland 725
Antares Group Inc.; Cleveland; building services 700
County of Cuyahoga/Central Services Dept.; Cleveland 700
Kirkwood Industries Inc.; Cleveland; electric motors 675
City of Lakewood; Cleveland 650
USG Interiors Inc.; Cleveland; partitions/fixtures 600
St. Alexis Hospital & Medical Center; Cleveland 600
Industrial Security Service; Cleveland; business/security services 600
11th District
Cleveland — East Side and Suburbs
One of the axioms of Ohio politics is that to win statewide, a
Democratic candidate must build a 100,000-vote edge in Cuyahoga County. Most of that lead has to be built in the llth, which
is anchored in Cleveland's heavily black East Side. Bill Clinton
picked up a spare 132,000 votes here in 1992 over George Bush,
which allowed him to walk away with Ohio's 21 electoral votes
with nearly a 91,000-vote margin.
This compact district—the smallest and most densely populated in the state—includes poor inner-city areas as well as
middle-class territory farther from the downtown area.
Nineteen percent of the llth's families—and almost a third of
those in its section of Cleveland—live below the poverty line.
Conditions improve out toward the city's eastern suburbs, where
blue and white collars are worn by their diverse black population.
Devastated by the riots of the 1960s, inner-city neighborhoods of Hough and Glenville can claim some new residential
and commercial development, but they still bear the scars of
poverty.
Out toward the lake, this area includes the middle-class, white
ethnic neighborhoods of Collinwood and St. Clare, inhabited by
Italians, and Poles, Yugoslavs and other eastern Europeans.
Overall, the llth is 59 percent black and heavily Democratic.
During the past decade, it has been the most Democratic district
in che state.
Any hopes that Stokes would be made vulnerable when his
district was extended east to take in some white working-class
areas—his old 21st District was 62 percent black—were dashed in
1992 when he pulled down 69 percent of the vote in a field of
four, compared with 80 percent against a single opponent in
1990.
New to Stokes' territory is Euclid, a white, ethnic, workingclass city of 55,000 east of Cleveland. Euclid "is Democratic, but
hardly comfortable with the black part of this district," says a
local observer. A Democrat from Euclid running against Stokes
as an independent in 1992 hoped—in vain—to capitalize on this
sentiment.
Some of the llth's other major suburbs are Cleveland
Heights, Shaker Heights and University Heights (populations
54,000, 31,000 and 15,000).
With a large proportion of Jews and young professionals,
these are among Ohio's most liberal communities. North of
Shaker Heights is Cleveland Heights, many of whose integrated
neighborhoods are a short walk from University Circle, home of
Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland's cultural hub.
From the circle area, commuters drive along historic Euclid
it
fe
�Avenue to their jobs downtown. While the avenue now bears the
marks of poverty, it was known as "Millionaires' Row" at the
turn of the century. Few of the old mansions remain. The one
belonging cojohn D. Rockefeller, founder of Standard Oil, was
razed after his death in 1937.
Election Returns
1 l i b Disirict
1992
President*
House t
Democrat
Republican
169.877 (73.4%)
15-1718 (dO.CWf.)
37.880 (16.4%)
43.866 (19.6%)
1990
Governor
97.965 (60.5%)
63.961 (39.5%)
1988
President
Senate
161,929 (77.4%)
169,824 (78.8%)
48.066 (22.6%)
45,555 (21.2%)
•
VM
for Perol was 2}.42j 110 1%).
greater than 5 % .
fbidepem/enl/'otb<tr is
Demographics
Population 570,901
Percent change from 1980 11.3%
Land area
104 square miles
Population per square mile 5,484
Counties, 1990 population
Cuyahoga (pt.) 570,901
•
Cities, 1990 population (10,000
Bedford Heights 12,131
Cleveland Heights 54,052
Cleveland (pt.) 286,373
East Cleveland 33,096
Euclid 54,875
Maple Heights (pt.) 16,152
or more)
Shaker Heights 30,831
South Euclid 23,866
University Heights 14,790
Warrensville Heights
15,745
Race and Hispanic origin
White 39.8%
Black 58.6%
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut. 0.2%
Asian or Pacific Islander 1.0%
Other 0.5%
Hispanic origin 1.1%
Ancestry
American 2.2%
Czechoslovakian 1.2%
English 4.6%
German 10.2%
Hungarian 2.4%
Irish 6.9%
Italian 5.3%
Polish 4.1%
Russian 2.2%
Scottish 1.0%
Slovakian 2.5%
Yugoslavian 2.4%
Universities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland 8,219
Cleveland Institute of Art, Cleveland 488
Cleveland Institute of Music, Cleveland 427
Cleveland State University, Cleveland 19,220
Dyke College. Cleveland 1,316
ETI Technical College, Cleveland 622
John Carroll University, Cleveland 4,549
Notre Dame College, South Euclid 849
Ohio College of Pediatric Medicine, Cleveland 330
Newspapers, total circulation (in all districts)
Cleveland Plain Dealer 409,749
Elyria Chronicle-Telegram 36,439
Lake County News Herald 53,516
Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Cleveland (100%)
Cable television systems, total subscribers
Cablevision of Ohio; Cleveland Heights 75,000
North Coast Cable Ltd.; Cleveland 74,000
Military installations, 1991
Defense Finance & Accounting Center (Navy), Cleveland
1,651
Businesses and other major employers
University Hospitals of Cleveland; Cleveland 4,400
Case Western Reserve University; Cleveland 3,500
U.S. Transportation Dept.; Cleveland 2,557
BP America Inc.; Cleveland; petroleum refining 2,500
Lincoln Electric Co.; Cleveland; metalworking machinery
2,500
Cleveland State University; Cleveland 2,500
Mt. Sinai Medical Center; Cleveland 2,100
Metrohealth St. Luke's Medical Center; Cleveland 1,900
Blue Cross & Blue Shield Mutual of Ohio; Cleveland; medical
service/health insurance 1,800
Kaiser Foundation; Cleveland; health organizations 1,650
Sherwin-Williams Co.; Cleveland; paint stores 1,500
May Dept. Stores Co./May Co.; Cleveland; variety stores
1,500
U.S. Veterans Affairs Dept.; Cleveland; hospital 1,350
Westinghouse Electric Corp./Naval Systems Div.; Cleveland;
electrical industrial apparatus 1,300
General Motors Corp./Inland Fisher-Guide Div.; Cleveland;
textile products 1,242
TRW Inc./TRW Valve Div.; Cleveland; industrial machinery
1,200
General Electric Co./Lighting; Cleveland; electric lighting
1,200
National City Bank; Cleveland; commercial banks 1,200
U.S. Internal Revenue Service; Cleveland 1,200
Society National Bank; Cleveland; commercial banks 1,100
Transportation Unlimited Inc.; Cleveland; personnel supply
services 1,035
County of Cuyahoga; Cleveland; family services 1,000
Argo-Tech Corp.; Cleveland; aircraft parts 830
Parker Hannifin Corp.; Cleveland; industrial machinery 800
Penton Publishing Corp./Industry Week; Cleveland;
periodicals 800
City of East Cleveland/Board of Education; Cleveland 800
Higbee Co.; Cleveland; department stores 740
Brentwood Hospital; Cleveland 705
Twin Valu Stores Inc.; Cleveland; grocery stores 700
BP America Inc./BP Research; Cleveland; research services
700
National Cleaning Contractors; Cleveland; building services
700
First National Supermarkets; Cleveland; grocery stores 650
Stouffer Corp./Stouffer Tower City Plaza Hotel; Cleveland;
hotel 650
City of Cleveland/Board of Education; Cleveland 615
Premier Industrial Corp./Newark Electronics; Cleveland; electrical goods 600
Riser Foods Inc.; Cleveland; grocery stores 600
Ohio 591
�SAWYER - 14th CD
ED & LABOR
�Ajnerican Assn of Caimunity Colleges
F D R L RELATIONS
EEA
03:25:08 P
M
Run Diite: 05/20/93
Page: 76
TerminaL: T24
Selection: A C M M E S IN C N . DISTRICT
AC EBR
OG
COLLEGE
CITY/STATE
ZIP
TLPOE
EEHN
FX
A
C
D
NM
AE
H
Frederick J. Sturm
Univ of Akron-Cain & Tech Coll
Akron O
H
44325-6002
(216)972-7220
(216)972-5300
15
Harold M Nestor
.
Columbus State Caimunity Coll
Columbus O
H
43215
(614)227-2400
(614)621-3506
02548
16
Tyrone M Turning
.
Univ of Akron-Wayne College
Orrvilie O
H
44667
(216)683-2010
(216)683-1517
00272
16 William A. Anderson
Ohio State Univ-Agr Tech Inst
Wooster O
H
44691
(216)264-3911
(216)262-7634
01282
16
John J. McGrath, Jr.
Stark Technical College
Canton O
H
44720
(216)494-6170
(216)497-6313
18
Julius S Greenstein
.
Central Ohio Technical College
Newark O
H
43055-1767
(614)366-1351
(614)366-5047
18
Craig D Laubenthal
.
Ohio Universi ty-Zanesvi Ue
ZanesviIle O
H
43701
(614)453-0762
(614)453-0706
01720
18
Lynn Willett
Muskingum Area Tech College
ZanesviIle O
H
43701-2694
(614)454-2501
(614)454-0035
00738
18 W R Channell
. .
Belmont Technical College
St Clairsville O
H
43950
(614)695-9500
(614)695-2247
02220
18
Ohio University-Eastern
43950-9724
(614)695-1720
(000)000-0000
IZOHIO
01058
ISOHIO
01564
160HI0
180HI0
01882
James w Newton O
.
H
�THOMAS SAWYER (D-14TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
BANC ONE CORPORATION
GENCORP INC
ILLINOIS TOOL WORKS INC
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
ROADWAY SERVICES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
SUPERVALU INC
THE B F GOODRICH COMPANY
UNION PACIFIC CORPORATION
600
470
240
800
3 625
1185
600
160
220
OTHER USA*NAFTA MEMBERS:
DIEBOLD, INC.
ECOLOGY INTERNATIONAL LTD., CORP.
GENERAL TIRE
MYERS INDUSTRIES, INC.
SMITHERS-OASIS CO.
DEBORAH PRYCE (R-15TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELG CO
ASEA BROWN BOVERI INC
DAYTON HUDSON CORPORATION
DEERE & COMPANY
DIAL CORP
GENERAL-ELECTRIC COMPANYGENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
KMART CORPORATION
MARRIOTT CORPORATION
ROADWAY SERVICES INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
TENNECO INC
THE KROGER CO
UNION PACIFIC CORPORATION
1000
1800
600
275
300
1100
2000
3170
205
700
490
7061
200
690
202
RALPH REGULA (R-16TH-OHIO)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
ABBOTT LABORATORIES
ASHLAND OIL INC
COOPER INDUSTRIES INC
EMERSON ELECTRIC CO
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
J C PENNEY COMPANY INC
PEPSICO INC
SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO
TENNECO INC
625
265
3689
2 50
1150
230
2 34
4 00
500
�Representatives and Staffs • 11-221
Tlliomas C. Sawyer
D-Ohio, 14th District
Began Service: 1987
1414 Longworth House
Office Building
Washington, D C 20515-3514
(202) 225-5231
F A X : (202) 225-5278
BIOGRAPHICAL Bom: 8/15/45 • Home: Akron '
• Educ: B.A./M.A., U. of Akron • Prof.: Ohio House of
FLeps., 1977-83; Mayor of Akron, 1984-86 • Rel.:
Presbyterian
OTHER POSITIONS
Majority Zone Whip • House Democratic Caucus, Committee
on Party Effectiveness • Democratic Study Group, Secretary
• Northeast-Midwest Congressional Coalition, Executive Committee • Arms Control and Foreign Policy Caucus • Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues • Environmental and Energy
Study Conference • Congressional Arts Caucus • Martin Luther
King, Jr., Federal Holiday Commission
DISTRICT OFFICES
411 Wolf Ledges Pkwy.
Akron, OH 44311. . . .
(216) 375-5710
KEY STAFF AIDES
Name/Position
Legislative Responsibility
Kochelle S. Dornatt Ethics, Campaign Finance
Chf. of Staff/
Press Secy.
Dianne Tomasek
Exec. Asst./
Office Mgr.
(Appts.)
Sara Piatt Davis
Legis. Dir.
Education/Labor, Urban Affairs, Budget/Economy/Taxes,
Pensions, Business
Christine Dodd
Legis. Asst.
Health/Welfare, Social Security/Medicare, Medicaid, Social
Services/Child Care, Women's
Issues, Housing
Dill Eldredge
Legis. Asst.
Energy/Environment, Interior,
Judiciary, Public Works, Telecommunications, Banking, Animal Welfare
Puneet Talwar
Legis. Asst.
Space, Foreign Affairs, Defense/Military, Veterans, AIDS,
Agriculture, Transportation
Mary Anne Walsh
Community
Afrs. Coord.
Projects/Grants, District Issues
Ed Washecka
Systems Mgr.
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Education and Labor: Elementary, Secondary, and Vocational
Education • Postsecondary Education and Training • Select
Education and Civil Rights
Foreign Affairs: International Security, International Organizations and Human Rights
Post Office and Civil Service: Census, Statistics and Postal
F'ersonnel, Chairman
Standards of Official Conduct: No subcommittees
© Congressional Yellow Book
Summer 1993
�OHIO
a 200North
'ended
fe had
;e, but
y and
•y only
Election Results
; 1 9 general
92
!
; 1 9 primary
92
nittee,
Energy
n 1993
for the
nasis on
/ in this
:
•
Sherrod Brown (D)
Margaret R. Mueller (R)
Mark Miller (1)
Two Others
Sherrod Brown (D)
Margaret Rose Mathna (D)
Christopher Rothgery (D)
Thomas Muzilla (D)
Ed Boyle (D)
Bernice Kammiller (D)
William VanderWyden, III (D)
Other
Donald J. (Don) Pease (D)
William D. Nielsen (R)
John M. Ryan (1)
19 general
90
134,486
88,889
20,320
8,563
30,820
15,234
4,825
4,237
3,968
3,394
3,054
2,317
93,431
60,925
10,506
(53%)
(35%)
(8%)
(3%)
(45%)
(22%)
(7%)
(6%)
(6%)
(5%)
(5%)
(3%)
(57%)
(37%)
(6%)
($486,354)
($864,338)
($348,032)
($124,483)
] FOURTEENTH DISTRICT
1 Mymer Valley—the name doesn't appear on many maps, but it is being used by at least some
! Ohioans today for an area that was known not so long ago as Rubber Town: Akron. (The name is
• rom the Greek word for high, the same root as Acropolis, because Akron sits on a ridge between
'
, ^ Great Lakes and Mississippi watersheds.) Twenty years ago, Akron was as synonymous to
"ts as Detroit was to cars: Firestone, Goodyear, General Tire, and B. F. Goodrich all had their
^quarters and big tire factories here; the United Rubber Workers had been the big union
Seethe 1930s. The Akron area's population was heavily descended from migrants, some from
«siem Europe but more from West Virginia, who thronged here in the 1910s and 1920s to snap
'Pjobs in the tire factories for 10 or 12 hours a day at the price of smelling burning rubber for
But by the early 1990s, the smell of rubber had long since passed from Akron's air, and the
^age of class conflict had mostly passed from its politics. At first the rubber companies
I
decentralizing their plants; then the European competitors they scorned started making
. """fcy on radials; then, after the oil shock of 1979, the auto market collapsed. The Akron plants
*. antiquated, and the last auto tire plant here was shut down in the 1970s, the last truck and
JPlane tire plants in 1984 and 1985. Genera) Tire was bought by a German firm, and Firestone
8ed with Bridgestone and its headquarters moved to Nashville.
ter polymers: plastics and other hydrocarbons that can be formed or shaped like rubber into
a ' mdustrial products. The first polymer, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), was invented in 1926
%
B. F. Goodrich chemist Waldo Semon, looking to make synthetic rubber, found a
Si erious goo in the bottom of his test tube; the company did not bother to patent it till 1933,
^
iov^ *
'
y b e r e , in pipes and siding and shoes and toys and cartops and stadium
i r ^ Polymers were a natural extension of the rubber companies' business, and now the Akron
"lOt^
Cuyahoga Valley north to Cleveland are called Polymer Valley. Ohio now ships
Hi,^ ' ic resins than any other state but Texas and employs more people in the field than any
"S
California. What Akron doesn't have is the large number of high-wage, low-skill,
i(, d jobs it did in the rubber companies' heyday. What it does have is a more upscale work
^and the b j f growth in the future.
!4 , * political heritage has been Democratic since the CIO organizing days, modulated by
6
Akron and also National Republican chairman Ray Bliss in the 1950s and
\ tn^
^
d ' n g Summit County, with some variation in district boundaries, have
\
up Ohio's 14th Congressional District, represented by a Republican from 1950 to
includes all of Summit County, except the
'ler of townships, plus the area around Kent (and Kent State University, site of the
1
;
4
tre
tr
n
u
n
1
0
s ever
w
a s
o r
t , l e
p ast
51416
1Ze
ttt
r
s
ns
ls
0 f , o n
t i m e
TOn a n
s u r r o u n
a ( l e
b y
rn
D e m o c r a t s
s i n c e
1 9 7 0
T
h
e
I 4 t h
�OHIO
1020
OHIO
1021
Tom Sawyer (D)
7
25
,, ,^ o „ —ss ^ssr-"-^ ^
0 ,
"ss
congressman, Tom Sawyer, was
first
^ '
f Akron: the Census. Inhissccon,,
L i i d on one issue in the House - he h a d ^
Census and Popu.ation ,
term he inherited the chair of the Post Office ^u
. ^ . ^
^
Census, Statistics and Postal
^
^ . ^
n t . Sawyer has been ,n the forefront^
population-losing districts-just ,n time f « t t e j W
^
.
5h«e who criticize the Census Bureau for do ng
i
accurate than ^
undercounts; "The 1990 census W * * ^ ™
the Census results to the pointo,
one before it," he said. Sawyer ^ ^ ^
^
Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher
^.booenaing and threatening court action againsi ^
Sawyer's case is politically dnv
"o S g i n g adjusted figures " J ^ ^ S . S S ^ t i n . «ke Akron which lost 6%
central cities and industnal areas that have beeni losing w ^
government fund,
?Sc 1980s fear the loss of political representation and form-1 PP^
El esults from publication of the Census counU. The jo
^ ^
statistically valid arguments
for
experts can reasonably> W « J * ™ *
experts insist is statistically valid, t is ar^ issue^o
,
inevitability of such disagreement, P ' " ™ "™ ^
he end, members of Congress w«t
promotes their partisan and p a r o c ^ nte^sts^ In
^
^ ^
apportioned to the states according to^ the^ unadjus
^
^
stments would g,v
Sawyer's demands to use the adjusted count when " «
| a s m.nor.t.es-the
therSgest boost to areas with large numbers £ ' « ^
,
i a and New Yorl
^ S f the population most likdy to have b e e ^ ^ n d ^ o u ^ ^
^
.
would be the beneficiaries, ^ Akwm w n e „ n y
^
S s e S
m e ^ t t S s S t i n ^ l 3. wh.ch would reduce the poht.ca, press,
m a y o r
0
o n
t h e
( n o
t o g o
P
e
Elected 1986; b. Aug. 15, 1945, Akron; home, Akron; U. of Akron,
B.A. 1968, M.A. 1970; Presbyterian; married (Joyce).
Career OH House of Reps., 1977-83; Akron Mayor, 1984-86.
Offices: 1414 LHOB 20515, 202-225-5231. Also 411 Wolf
Ledges Pkwy., #105, Akron 44311, 216-375-5710.
Committees: Education and Labor (9th of 28 D): Elementary,
Secondary and Vocational Education; Postsecondary Education
and Training; Select Education and Civil Rights. Foreign Affairs
(26th of 27 D): International Security, International Organizations
and Human Rights. Post Office and Civil Service (5th of 15 D):
Census Statistics and Postal Personnel (Chmn.). Standards of
Official Conduct (7th of 7 D).
t 0
b
n
0
c o u
n
h
1 9 8 0
a n d
f
l h a t
a d j u s t i n g
f o i
en:
f
itl
i o n e d
w h i l e
t o
0 1
s e l e c t
t h e r e
rt
o p i n | o n
0 1 8
I n
t
h a t
w
e
n
adju
d
u n ( l e r c
S
n
t
e
d
C a
i f o r n
r a n k
n g
R
e
p
u
b
E
o n
ACLU COPE CDF
100
100
83
100
92
CFA
100
72
LCV
63
62
ACU NTLC
4
0
0
—
Eo o i
c n mc
Social
F ri n
oeg
1991 LIB - 1991 CONS
78%
21%
12%
84%
87%
^
assistance to schools t^t
RCRA to allow states to charg,
to his tenure a
s
n
CEI
10
14
1992 LIB - 1992 CONS
78% —
18%
76%
b a c k
It) Votes of the 1024 Congress
1. Bn Striker Replace FOR
a
I $ for Homeownership AGN
5 Tx Rich/Cut Mid Cls. FOR
. a
< FY93/$l5BDef. Cut FOR
5. Handgun Wait/7-Day FOR
6. Overseas Mil. Abortion FOR
7. Obscn. Art NEA $ Ban AGN
8. Death Pen. from Jury AGN
In Votes of the 103d Congress
I Family Leave
FOR
^
COC
38
30
—
19%
t h e
R
N a S Literacy Act of .99, "
^
^
Mathematics and Science Educa on bOl wh.c . P
revise their science and math programs. Sawyer * « "
NSI
30
—
to tional Journal Ratings
t
S
u
Co p Ratings
ru
ADA
,9
92
95
19
91
90
2. Deficit Reduction
FOR
9. Use Force in Gulf AGN
10. US Mil. Abroad $ Cut FOR
11. Limit SDI Funds
FOR
12. Cuba Trade Embargo AGN
3. Stimulus Plan
FOR
Dtction Results
Ethics Committee.
W general
2
"'2 primary
THePeopte: Pop. .990: ™ ™ ™ ^
Hispanic origin. Voting age W - ^ O T .
couple families; 24% marr« couple fa™. •
$28,184; per capita income. $13.VJi. mcui^. e
r
1 0
h i l d r e n
^o- 87% White- 11% Black; 1% Asian; I*
"'O general
£ ^
.
,
educ, median hooseboM
.
value. $59,800.
4
r e n t :
4
%
c o l
S 3 9 4
Tom Sawyer (D)
Robert Morgan
Tom Sawyer (D)
Jack Resnick(D)
Dennis Chrobak (D)
Tom Sawyer (D)
Jean E. Bender (R)
165,335
78,659
54,933
13.109
4,786
97,875
66.460
(68%)
(32%)
(75%)
(18%)
(7%)
(60%)
(40%)
($209,155)
($264,793)
($3,021)
e g e
m e d i a n
h o u s e
^TEENTH DISTRICT
i9»S Fresideniiai Voir
8
1992 r a a i f " * ' '
C \ M M ^
BushWV
Perot (T).
Vo,e
(45%)
81.232 (31%)
(23%)
6 0 0 0 0
Dukakis (D)
Bush(R)
122,8
',|
'
1 0 8
3
Nimbus, the capital of Ohio, is no longer a regional mid-sized city, the place where the bed fell
"James Thiirher's father, the town My Sister Eileen left behind for N e ^ & t k . the college
"*n to which Philip Roth's Newark-born hero was finally able to say g o o d | ^ ^ » u m b u s is now
center of a metropolitan area of more than I million people, the h f l ^ ^ ^ t e r s of major
centers, of financial powers like Nationwide Insurance and Banc OneTand of retailers
�Lakeland Community Hospital; Lorain 980
St. Joseph Hospital & Health Center; Lorain 955
Schneider National Carriers; Seville; trucking services 900
Oberlin College; Oberlin 885
Lucas Aerospace Power Equipment Corp; Aurora; microwave
components 825
Kraftmaid Cabinetry Inc.; Middlefield; millwork 810
Nordson Corp.; Amherst; painting equipment 800
City of Brunswick/School Distria; Brunswick 700
City of Medina/School District; Medina 600
York Intl. Corp.; Elyria; refrigeration 550
B. F. Goodrich Co.; Avon Lake; research services 540
Alien-Bradley Co. Inc.; Twinsburg; electric motors 530
Akron to keep the city reliably Democratic. North of Akron,
suburbs and farmland in northern Summit County provide
Republican votes. Usually, they are too few to overcome the
Democratic advantage in Akron and swing the 14th to the GOP.
Both Jimmy Carter in 1980 and Michael S. Dukakis in 1988 won
Akron by a wide enough margin to carry Summit County
narrowly. Bill Clinton in 1992 won by a comfortable margin.
Election Returns
14rh District
Democrat
Republican
119,144 (45.696)
165,335 (67.5%)
81,603 (31.2%)
78,659 (32.1%)
Governor
88,456 (45.9%)
104,163 (54.1%)
President
Senate
121,763 (52.4«)
146,831 (62.9%)
110,409 (47.6%)
86,584 (37.1%)
1988
Northeast — Akron
The 14th is in a part of Ohio that was built on rubber—tires
in particular. At one time, nearly 90 percent of America's tires
were manufaaured here.
Within the distria's confines in Akron—once referred to as
the "premier faaory town in America"—are the corporate
headquarters of the Goodyear, Goodrich, Firestone and General
Tire companies.
The 14th became one of the most Democratic distrias in the
state on the strength of votes from the blue-collar workers who
kept the rubber factories humming.
But the district's economy is changing. While the major
rubber companies are still important employers, the jobs with a
future are white-collar. The last quarter-century has seen a steady
transfer of manufacturing from the old, high-wage faaories in
Akron to new plants in lower-wage areas of the Sun Belt. Many
Akron residents have left: The city's 1990 population of 223,000
was less than it was more than a half-century ago. Many
downtown storefronts are vacant, and the streets can be eerily
quiet, especially at night.
Akron city leaders have fought to forge a high-tech future for
the city, and they have had enough success that Akron's
unemployment rate in recent years has been lower than that of
some other industrial centers in northern Ohio.
What has kept the city alive through these tough years is this:
While the tire companies have quit manufatturing here, their
headquarters and labs have remained, employing engineers,
scientists and executives who work more with polymers these
days than with rubber.
The resiliency of Akron's smaller businesses has helped as
well. "Much to everyone's surprise, much of the supporting
industry didn't vanish; they found other things to do," says a
local observer. "It could have been a lot worse."
An unintended benefit of the population flight out of Akron
has been that the city is now smaller than its britches. It is an
area with public facilities and a housing stock built to handle far
more people than live here. The city is doing better than others,
such as Youngstown, in the area.
In the boom years of the rubber industry, before World War
II, Akron was a mecca for job-seeking Appalachians. The annual
West Virginia Day was one of the city's most popular events,
and it was said that more West Virginians lived in Akron than in
Charleston.
These days, the Appalachian descendants combine with
blacks, ethnics and the academic community at the University of
President*
House
1990
14th District
1992
'Vett for Perot was 60,338 (23.1%).
Demographics
Population 570,900
Percent change from 1980 10.9%
Land area 499 square miles
Population per square mile
Counties, 1990 population
Portage (pt.) 87,549
Stark (pt.) 3,644
1,144
Summit (pt.) 479,707
Cities, 1990 population (10,000 or more)
Portage Lakes CDP 13,373
Akron 223,019
Barbenon 27,623
Ravenna 12,0(59
Cuyahoga Falls 48,950
Stow 27,702
Kent 28,835
Tallmadge 14,870
Norton (pt.) 11,475
Race and Hispanic origin
White 87.7%
Black 10.9%
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut. 0.2%
Asian or Pacific Islander 1.0%
Other 0.2%
Hispanic origin 0.6%
Ancestry
American 4.8%
Dutch 2.9%
English 15.4%
French 3.1%
German 35.1%
Hungarian 3-2%
Irish 18.7%
Italian 8.3%
Polish 3.9%
Scotch Irish 2.4%
Scottish 2.6%
Slovakian 3.4%
Swedish 1.1%
Welsh 1.9%
Yugoslavian 1.1%
Universities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Kent State University, Kent 24,434
University of Akron, Akron 27,818
Newspapers, total circulation (in all districts)
Akron Beacon Journal 157,049
Canton Repository 58,185
Cleveland Plain Dealer 409,749
Ravenna Record-Courier 20,335
Ohio
595
�#
U.S. job training
bill raises dander
over plan's cost
3y BARBARA MQQNEY
A U.5 Department oJ Labor pro
i^oial to overhaul tile nation's unlimployment system Is drawing
.itrong opposition (rom business
jjroups and the Ohio Bureau o\ Employment Services because of lis
potential to raise the federal unemployment tax.
In eaity February, th« Labor Deportment issued a draft o a bill called the
<
KeNemploymem Act o( 1994. The comprehensive proposal would revamp the
nation's system o( tralnins th« unemployed.
The legislation Is expected to b« introduced In early March tn the U.S. Serv
etc by Sen. Howard Metienbaum. DOhlo. and Sen Edvard Kennedy. DMass.. said Michael Hock, director of
l?gulative ailalrs lor the Ohio Bureau
of Employment S«rv<ce«. A companion
bill would be introduced in the House
Lnda- the proposal, the federal government would establish a new system
ol retrumng workers who are clajiili«d
is permanently displaced by layoffs by
encouraging states to set up one-^top
worker training centers.
The proposed bill also would establish a new !orm ol compensation lor unemployed workers who enter Job-trainprogram* Under a provision called
rttraining Income support, unemployment compeosation would be extended
beyond the 26-week period currently in
piace. The bill UT-HJ rhe added compensanon to 52 weeks.
Th« cost of r"!* iddlclonal support
#
troubles both the Ohto Bureau ol Employment Services, the state's unempJoyment compensaOon and job services agency, as well as employer
Siroupe, Mr Hock said.
"The maiof coneam (or the OBES
ind among trade groups that are (amlliu «ith the proposal a that it would
establish permanent increases in the
f'sderal unemployment tax,'' he said.
The legislation doesn't cail lor (ax increases tn order to pay lor the ej.
tended untmpiovrnenl benefits, but
would .Tamtaifl a federal unemploy.
ment surtax that was supposed to exptra 1998. Mr Hock said
'This proposal basically provides unemployed workers additional income he said. "If Ohio has to pay out sign.:.cantly la/e« amounts, we're worried
about the solvency of the trust fund
But w« don't know how big the Impact
wdlbe."
Debra Bowland. administrator of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Servicea, on Feb 1 wrote the Department of Labor a i 0-page letter
stating objections to the pro
posaL Mr. Hock said the proposal
has been "low profile," though he
expect* It to become a topic of
national debate once it's introduced In Congress.
Business representatives who
are tamlllar with the proposal
have come up with estimates of
It* cosu and art worried about
the proposal's impact on business. Among them U William
Hanigao. vice president of human
resourcea lor the Zagar Inc.. a
machine tool ruanu
lacmrtng concern In Euclid and
a volunteer with the Employers
National Job
Service Council, a national employe group.
Mr. Hanlgan said the proposal
would have the etlect ot raising
federal unemployment taxes. Currently, he said, the tax that's coir
lected [rom employers amounts
C
o
per employee per year.
Employers are taxed 8 on the
%
Qrst *7,000 ot an employee's pay.
The proposal would raise the cap
to *8,$00 per employee, which
would yield 168 in unemployment
tax per employee per y.ear. Mr
Hanigan said.
"That (initial) cost Isn't a big
concern." he said -The big concern la thai rt would be step one
in raising the federal unemployment tax further in the future."
However. Mary Meagher,
spokerwomen lor the Department of Lanor. denied that the
propoaai would entail an in- ,
ciaast in the lederai ur.employ- i
ment tax.
"The deparuner.i made a conscious decision that the program
would rvoi be funded through the
federal unemployment tax," she ;
said. T h e (new) expentJSliires ;
won't exceed the (costs) ottset j
by the change* In (currect) led- \
•ral job training that's proposed
by the legis laiion.'
Still, the IcdexaJ unemployment
tax Isn't the oniy part of the pr> I
posal that Is coming under fire. '
Another concern lor employers !i
that the program would extend
unemployment compensation to
employee* over age 55 even u ;
they tad new lobs.
j
"If the individual gets a |ob at a i
lower wage, they can collect 8 % \
0
o( the' dUterence at Lie coat ;o :
the former employer," Mr Ham- !
gan said.
1
1
:
�Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Cleveland (100%)
WAKC-TV, Akron (ABC)
i.ible television systems, total subscribers
Marks Cablevision Inc.; Akron 13,283
TCI of Ohio; Kent 12,799
Warner Cable of Akron; Akron 93,000
Businesses and other major employers
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.; Akron; tires 5,708
Kent State University; Kent 4,000
Akron General Medical Center; Akron 2,275
University of Akron; Akron 2,145
Loral Corp./Loral Defense Systems; Akron; aircraft 2,000
Children's Hospital & Medical Center; Akron 1,796
Babcock & Wilcox Co.; Barberton; steam generators 1,000
Bridgestone/Firestone Inc.; Akron; tires 1,550
Aircraft Braking Systems Corp.; Akron; aircraft parts 1,300
Barberton Citizens Hospital Inc.; Barberton 1,300
St. Thomas Medical Center; Akron 1,275
Ohio Edison Co.; Akron; electric services 1,200
Little Tikes Co.; Hudson; toys/sporting goods 1,100
County of Portage; Ravenna 1,100
Roadway Express Inc.; Akron; trucking services 1,055
General Tire Inc.; Akron; tires 1,000
Sterling Inc./Shaw's Jewelry; Akron; retail stores 1,000
Superior Staffing Inc.; Akron; personnel supply services 1,000
Robinson Memorial Hospital; Ravenna 974
Coca-Cola Bottling of Northern Ohio; Akron; beverages 900
Associated Materials Inc.; Cuyahoga Falls; aluminum products 800
Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co.; Akron; tires 800
Yellow Freight System Inc.; Richfield; trucking services 800
U.S. Postal Service; Akron 780
Cuyahoga Falls General Hospital; Cuyahoga Falls 725
Consolidated Freightways Corp.; Richfield; trucking facilities
700
United Transport Industries; Rootstown; trucking services
640
Knight-Ridder Inc./Akron Beacon Journal; Akron; newspapers 615
State of Ohio/Transportation Dept.; Ravenna 610
Twin Valu Stores Inc.; Cuyahoga Falls; department stores
600
Fabri-Centers of America Inc./Jo-Ann Fabrics; Hudson; retail
stores 600
First National Bank of Ohio; Akron; commercial banks 600
County of Summit; Akron 600
Allstate Insurance Co.; Hudson; insurance services 550
candidates to draw more than two-thirds of the vote.
Apart from the large university vote—Ohio State has 54,000
students—the major pocket of Democratic strength in the
district is the western section of Columbus. Sandwiched between
the Scioto River and the Ohio State Hospital for the Insane are
netehborhoods of lower-income whites of Appalachian heritage.
The 15th includes far less of heavily black eastern Columbus
than it did in the 1980s. Only 6 percent of the 15th's portion of
Columbus is black, compared with 43 percent of the 12th
Distrf^t's section.
Th^ 15th includes the blue-collar communities in the southeast portion of Franklin County, which enhance the Democratic
vote, but just slightly.
The 15th does not include the heart of downtown Columbus,
with the state Capitol and the offices of Ohio's major banking
and commercial institutions. But with nearly two-thirds of
Franklin County's land area, the district contains most of the
region's expanding service base, which includes several large
high-tech research centers.
Columbus isVo tourist attraction. Swarms of visitors descend
on the city only i t Ohio State Fair time in August and on the
half-dozen Saturdays in the fall when the Ohio State Buckeyes
are playing footbaliW home.
But the area has gained a reputation as a good place to raise a
family. During the 19705, it was the only major urban center in
Ohio to gain populatiort; It now boasts 633,000 residents overall,
with 348,000 of them in\the 15th.
In the 1980s recession years, the service-industry-oriented
economy of Columbus suffered, but its suffering paled in
comparison to that of manV other Ohio cities.
In the latest round of redistricting, the 15th picked up what
parts of Madison County it diduiot already have and also bit the
northwestern corner from Pickaway County. While Madison
compares with Franklin in size, it \s far less densely populated: It
has only 80 residents for each of its 465 square miles; Franklin
County has 1,780 people for each M its 540 square miles.
Consequently, Franklin County liolds 92 percent of the
distria's residents and Madison Countftcontains only 6 percent.
The other 2 percent are in Pickaway Cbunty to the south.
Election Returns
15th District
Qntral
'em Columbus and Suburbs
Of the two districtrthat divide Ohio's capital, Columbus, the
15th—on Columbus' wehern side—traditionally has been the
ore Republican. AlthougfKthis district includes most of the
ademic community at Ohio >tate University, the Democratic
cite there is offset by the solid\Republican areas in northern
Columbus and the rock-ribbed Republican suburbs west of the
Olentangy and Scioto rivers. In Up^er Arlington and similar
affluent suburbs, it is not unusual for\Republican presidential
596 Ohio
\
Republican
President*
House t
95,627 (35.796)
94,907 (37.8%)
1990
Governor
64,821 (42.4%)
N87,960 (57.6%)
1988
President
Senate
63,763 (34.9%)
88,431 (49.7%)
llV754 (65.1%)
89^39 (50.3%)
'Volt for Perot was ^2,413 (19-6%).
15thbistrlct
Democrat
1992
\
119,355 (44.6%)
\ 110,390 (44.0%)
\lndependentlother is greater (hart y%.
Demographics
Population 570,902
Percent change from 1980 10.9%
Land area 873 square miles
Population per square mile 654
Counties, 1990 population
Franklin (pt.) 523,512
Madison 37,068
Pickaway (pt.) 10,322
�(
�Through March 31, 1994
Program Year 1993 T i t l e I I I Discretionary Grant Awards
(July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994)
STATE: OKLAHOMA
Date
Sec.
Approval
Project or
Company
12/22/93
Sequoyah Fue l s , Union
Metal, Cimarron Federal
Savings and
S.O.L.A. Optical
Funding
$216,000
Number to be
Served
120
Location &
Cong. District
Situation
Adair, Cherokee, Haskell,
Mcintosh,
Muskogee,
Okmulgee,
Sequoyah,
Tulsa, and
Wagoner Counties
CDs: l & 2
428 workers d i s located from 4
companies due t o
a decline i n the
State's economy.
�BOREN
FINANCE
�REA Congressional Committee
Summary Sheet
Sen. David Boren (D-OK)
SR-453
202/224-4721
Committee:
Finance
Recent Legislative History
(Y indicates voted with DOL position)
Budget Amendment
N
Budget Reconciliation
N
Budget Resolution Adoption
Y
EUC #4
Y
Goals 2000
Y
Electoral Information:
% of Vote in last election Labor $ as % of total contribs.-
Kerrey/Brown Amendment
NAFTA
School -to-Work
Stimulus Package
N
Y
Y
Y
83%
0%
Other Information Acquired and Available:
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Counties/Cities within CD's
Counties/Cities with above average unemployment rates (highlighted in yellow)
REA related newspaper articles and editorials organzied by state
Community and Technical Colleges by CD
1993 Title III Discretionary Grant awards by state and CD
Racial/Ethnic make up of district
Major media in district
Major employers by CD
Pro-NAFTA Businesses by State and CD
Businesseses supporting REA (highlighted in green)
Major layoffs by state (partial)
�Senators and Staffs - 1-13
David L. Boren
KEY STAFF AIDES
Name
Position
David Cox
Admin. Asst.
Dan Webber
Press Secy.
Beth Byrd
Exec. Asst. (Appts.)
Bettie Hastey
Office Mgr.
Joe Harroz
Legis. Dir.
Beth Garrett
Bobby Cater
Legis. Asst.
Brian Ellis
Legis. Asst.
Eric Liu
Legis. Asst.
Greg Robbins
D -Oklahoma
Reelection Year: 1996
Legal/Tax Counsel
Legis. Asst.
Began Service: 1979
SR-453 Russell Senate
Office Building
Washington, DC
20510-3601
(202) 2 2 4 - 4 7 2 1
TDD : (202) 224-2741
OGRAPHICAL
: 4/21/41
^Tom Seminole
ome:
Educ: B.A., Yale U.;
M.A., Oxford U.
(Rhodes Scholar);
J.D., U. of Okla.
Prof.: Attorney; Prof, of
Government;
Governor of Okla.,
1975-79
Rel.: Methodist
Legislative Responsibility
.
Budget, Energy, Congressional Reform,
Campaign Finance Reform
Taxes, Judiciary, Social Security, Unemployment Compensation, Welfare, National
Service
Social Programs, Indian Affairs, Science/
Technology, Immigration, Housing,
Telecommunications, Defense
Agriculture Committee; Environment, Interior
Foreign Relations, Health Care, Trade, Commerce
Labor, Small Business, Transportation, Governmental Affairs, Veterans, Education,
Banking, Arts/Humanities
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Committee
Subco'mmittee(s)
Agriculture, Nutrition, and
Forestry
Domestic and Foreign Marketing and Product Promotion,
Chairman • Agricultural Credit •Agricultural Production and
Stabilization of Prices
Finance
Taxation, Chairman • Energy and Agricultural Taxation • International Trade
Joint Organization of
Congress, Co-Chairman
No subcommittees
Joint Taxation
No subcommittees
OTHER POSITIONS
Senate Democratic Steering Committee • Senate Coal Caucus • The Congressional Military Reform Caucus • Congressional Competitiveness Caucus • Senate Rural Health Caucus • Congressional Arts Caucus
STATE OFFICES
Suite 350, 621 No. Robinson, Oklahoma City, OK 73102
211 E. Oak, Seminole, OK 74868
Suite 1820, Mid-Continent Tower, 409 So. Boston, Tulsa, OK 74103
© Congressional Yellow Book
(405) 231-4381
(405) 382-6480
(918) 581-7785
Summer 1993
•iit
�SENATORS
I M . D«»kl Lyk Boren (D) - O K .
Elected 1978, seat up 1996; b. Apr. 21, 1941, Washington, D.C;
home, Seminole; Yale, B.A. 1963, Rhodes Scholar, Oxford U.,
1965, U. of OK, J.D. 1968; United Methodist; married (Molly).
Careen OK Natl. Guard, 1968-74; OK House of Reps., 1968-74;
Prof, and Chmn., Dept. of Govt., OK Baptist U., 1968-74; Practicing atty.; OK Gov., 1974-78.
Offices: 453 RSOB 20510, 202-224-4721. Also 621 N. Robinson,
#350, Oklahoma City 73102, 405-231-4381; 409 S. Boston, #1820,
Tulsa 74103,918-581-7785; and 211 Oak St., Seminole 74868,405382-6480.
Committees: Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry (3d of 10 D):
Agricultural Credit; Agricultural Production and Stabilization of
Prices; Domestic and Foreign Marketing and Product Promotion
(Chmn.). Finance (3d of 11 D): Energy and Agricultural Taxation;
International Trade; Taxation (Chmn.). Joint Committee on the
i of Congress (Chmn. of 12). Joint Committee on Taxation (3d of 5).
i
AIU
^
ACLU CDF COPE
55
60
50
55
42
CFA
67
50
LCV
42
33
ACU
35
45
National Journal Ratings
1991 LIB — 1991 CONS
Economic
34% — 64%
Social
38% — 61%
Foreign
54% — 44%
NTLC
29
—
NSI
80
—
COC
50
56
CEI
35
38
1992 LIB - 1992 CONS
48% — 51%
51% — 48%
41% — 57%
Key Votes of the 10 2d Congress
1. $ for Homeownership FOR
2. Have Cap Gains Debate AGN
3. Remove Budget Walls FOR
4. Ban Striker Replace AGN
5. Clarence Thomas Nom. FOR 9. Use Force in Gulf A S l
CU
6. Lmt Death Row Appeal FOR 10. Keep Salvador Aid AG*
7. Handgun Wait/5-Day FOR 11. Cut $1B from SDI H
8. Abortion Gag Rule
FOR 12. Override China MFN R
Key Votes of the 103d Congress
1. Family Leave
FOR
2. HIV Immigrants
Election Results
1990 general
1990 primary
1984 general
David Lyle Boren (D)
Stephen Jones (R)
David Lyle Boren (D)
Virginia Jenner (D)
Manuel Ybarra (D)
David Lyle Boren (D)
William E. (Bill) Crozier (R)
FOR
3. Clinton Budget
735,684
148,814
445,969
57,909
25,169
906,131
280,638
(83%)
(17%)
(84%)
(11%)
(5%)
(76%)
(23%)
F(
(S1.59IJDM)
(SI 40.912)
($1,192,0:61
(S6.92M
�1-100 -
tors J
Staffs
Dav d Pryor
KEY STAFF AIDES
Name
Position
Frank Thomas
D -Arkansas
Reelection Year: 1996
Began Service: 1979
:SR*267 Russell Senate
Office Building
Washington, DC
20510-0402
(202) 224-2353
Admin. Asst./State
Dir.
Dep. Admin. Asst.
Pate Felts
Damon Thompson Press Secy.
Office Mgr./Systems
Jackie Parker
Admin.
Kirk Robertson
Legis. Dir.
Desten Broach
Legis. Aide
Legislative Responsibility
Bobby Franklin
Steve Glaze
Mike Hodson
Steve Ronnel
Lrgis. Aide
Legis. Aide
Legis. Aide
Legis. Aide
Staci Stockburger
Legis. Aide
Leslie Chalmers
Banking, Budget, Judiciary, Antitrust, Criminal Law, HUD
Agriculture, Trade
Taxes/IRS Oversight
Rules/Procedure
Military Reform/Defense, Veterans, Foreign
Affairs
Labor, Energy/Environment, Commerce/
Science/Transportation
Exec. Asst. (Appts.)
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Committee
Agriculture, Nutrition, and
Forestry
Subcommittee(s)
Agricultural Production and Stabilization of Prices, Chairman
• Domestic and Foreign Marketing and Product Promotion
• Nutrition and Investigations
Finance
Private Retirement Plans and Oversight of the Internal Revenue
Service, Chairman • Medicare and Long-Term Care • Taxation
Governmental Affairs
Federal Services, Post Office, and Civil Service, Chairman
• Oversight of Government Management • Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations
Aging (Special), Chairman
No subcommittees
Joint Organization of
Congress
BIOGRAPHICAL
Born: 8/29/34
Home: Camden
Educ: B.A./LL.B., U. of
Ark.
Prof.: Attorney;
Newspaper Publisher;
U.S. House of Reps.,
1966-73; Governor of
Ark., 1975-79
Rel.: Presbyterian
No subcommittees
OTHER POSITIONS
Senate Democratic Conference, Secretary • Senate Democratic Steering Committee • Senate
Democratic Policy Committee, ex officio • Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Business Roundtable, Chairman • Senate Tourism Caucus • Concerned Senators for the Arts • Congressional Arts Caucus, Treasurer • Senate Footwear Caucus • Senate Coal Caucus • The Congressional Military Reform Caucus • Migratory Bird Conservation Commission
STATE OFFICES
3030 Federal Bldg., Little Rock, AR 72201
Summer 1993
© Congressional Yellow Book
(501) 324-6336
�B E S E - 3rd C
RWTR
D
WY & MAS
AS
EN
�American Assn of Cormunity CoUeges
FEDERAL RELATIONS
03:25:13 P
M
Run Date: 05/20/93
Page: 77
Terminal: T2i
Selection: AACC MEMBERS IN CONG. DISTRICT
COLLEGE
CITY/STATE
Ct
C
D
NM
AE
01054
18
Edward I . Florak
Jefferson Technical College
SteubenvU.l-e O
H
.43952
(614)264-5591
(614)264-1338
01^.98
19
John K. Mahan
Kent State Univ-Ashtabula
Ashtabula O
H
U00A
(216)964-3322
(216)964-4269
aa<\7&
19
Ralph R. Doty
Lakeland Caimunity
Mentor O
H
44060-7594
(216)953-7000
(216)953-1692
Dean P. VanTrease
Tulsa^dunior College
Tulsa O
K
74135
(918)622-5100
(918)631-7910
ZIP
TLPOE
EEHN
FX
A
19OHI0
totlege
01 OKLAHOMA
00£78
01
020ICLAHOMA
01284
Richard H. Mos>*r
Rogers State College
Claremore O
K
74017-2099
(918)341-7510
(918)342-3811
00806
02
Jerry D / X a r r o l l
Northeastern O A 4 M College
K
Miami O
K
74354
(918)542-8441
(918)542-9759
02216
•
02
02
Qehnis Tanner
Bacone College
Muskogee O
K
74403-1597
(918)683-4581
(000)000-0000
JJ2 Robert E. Klabenes
Oklahoma State Univ-Okmulgee
Okmulgee O
K
74447-3901
(918)756-6211
(918)756-1315
02
Carl 0. westbrook
Connors State College
Wamer O
K
74469
(918)463-2931
(918)463-2233
Clyde R. Kindell
Murray State College
Tishomingo O
K
73460-3130
(405)371-2371
(405)371-9844
46
0026
030<LAHOMA
00918
03
�American Assn of Conmunity Colleges
F D R L RELATIONS
EEA
03:23:16 P
M
Run Date: 05/20/93
Page: 78
Terminal: T24
Selection: A C M M E S IN C N . DISTRICT
AC EBR
OG
CLEE
OLG
C
D
NM
AE
0382't
03
John Campbell
Oklahoma State University
Stillwater O
K
74078
(405)744-5000
(405)744-8871
01460
03
B i l l H. H i l l
Eastern Oklahoma State College
WiIburton O
K
74578
(918)465-2361
(918)465-2431
00992
03
Carmen A. Notaro
St Gregory's College
Shawnee O
K
74801
(405)273-9870
(000)000-0000
020013
03
James J. Cook
Seminole Junior College
Seminole O
K
74868
(405)382-9950
(405)382-3122
005115
04
LarrV^W. Nutter
Rose State College
Midwest City O
K
73110-2799
(405)733-7311
(405)733-7399
0117H
04
Stephen R Hens ley
.
Western Oklahoma State College
Altus O
K
73521
(405)477-2000
(405)521-6154
CITY/STATE
ZIP
TLPOE
EEHN
FX
A
040KLAHC
0OIAOA
5K.HM
00116
05
James Hooper
Oklahoma State U-Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City O
K
73107
(405)947-4421
(405)945-3325
01280
05
Joe M Kinzer
.
Northern Oklahoma College
Tonkawa O
K
74653
(405)628-2581
(405)628-5260
..HM
IA0A
0070fl
06
Larry F. DeVane
Redlands Cormunity College
El Reno O
K
73036
(405)262-2552
(405)262-7960
03982
06
Hans Brisch
Oklahoma St Regents for Hi E
d
Oklahoma City O
K
73105-4503
(405)524-9100
(405)524-9230
0045*
06
Bob Gaines
Oklahoma City C
C
Oklahoma City O
K
73159^
(405)682-1611
(405)686-1159
�OKLAHOMA
1045
Rep. BiU Brewster (D)
Elected 1990; b. Nov. 8, 1941, Ardmore; home, Marietta; Southwestern OK St. U., B.S. 1964; Baptist; married (Mary Sue).
Career: Army Reserves, 1968-71; Co-owner, Brewster Angus
Farms, 1968-present; Pharmacist, Owner, Colleyville Drug Inc.,
1964-77; OK House of Reps., 1982-90.
Offices: 1727 LHOB 20515, 202-225-4565. Also 900 N. Mississippi, #B, Ada 74820, 405-436-1980; 118 Fed. Bldg., McAlester
74501, 918-423-5951; and 123 W. 7th Ave., #206, Stillwater 74074,
405-743-1400.
or; some
stly rural
as it was
aother is
to jobs in
esort and
ities, and
^publican
a solidly
n in 1992
e. For 30
House his
candidate
andidates
candidate
> who was
' his Kerrot former
IphA
str^P
;andidacy.
: House he
M Clinton
e
;d an early
posed Btu
} Kerrey is
jart in the
new jobs.
92.
Committees: Ways and Means (23d of 24 D): Oversight; Social
Security.
Group Ratings
1992
1991
ADA ACLU COPE CDF
60
35
50
50
20
—
67
60
LCV
25
23
ACU NTLC
48
0
45
—
NSI COC
100
75
—
60
CEI
33
28
National Journal Ratings
1992 LIB — 1992 CONS
1991 LIB — 1991 CONS
58%
41%
46% — 5 %
4
Economic
55%
49% — 5 %
0
44%
Social
62%
44% — 50%
38%
Foreign
Key Votes of the 102d Congress
1 Ban Striker Replace AGN 5. Handgun Wait/7-Day AGN
.
9. Use Force in Gulf FOR
2 $ for Homeownership FOR 6. Overseas Mil. Abortion FOR 10. US Mil. Abroad $ Cut FOR
3. Tax Rich/Cut Mid Cls. FOR 7. Obscn. Art NEA $ Ban FOR 11. Limit SDI Funds AGN
4. FY93/$15B Def. Cut FOR 8. Death Pen. from Jury AGN 12. Cuba Trade Embargo FOR
Key Votes of the 103d Congress
1 Family Leave
.
AGN 2. Deficit Reduction
Election Results
1 9 general
92
ner. Indian:;
anic origin
ilege educ.
;dian house
CFA
47
56
I'M: primary
1990 general
Bill Brewster (D)
Robert W. Stokes (R)
Bill Brewster (D), unopposed
Bill Brewster (D)
Patrick K. Miller (R) .
FOR
3. Stimulus Plan
AGN
155,934
51,725
(75%)
(25%)
($386,144)
($6,338)
107,641
26,261
(80%)
(20%)
($446,766)
FOURTH DISTRICT
425 (50*i!
357 ( 0 1
5*1
The^cxnghtly treed hills west ofsOklahoma City and north 6Hhe Red Riverfilledup rapidly
•»ih farrnetvin the early years of tlmxentury,filteringnorth from^xas, past the well-watered
ixecn lands of the.east toward the bare Dfown pasturelands of the southwest. These were young
people with largefetmlies,and in the years.since this land has emptied out^as children have
trwn up and moved elsewhere and fewer hands are needed for farming. People^in southwest
Oklahoma instead have accbqiulated Wound majoi^government institutions: the state capital of
Oklahoma City; Norman, home^Cthe l)Jniversity of Oklahoma; Lawton, to the southwest, home
�1044
OKLAHOMA
THIRD DISTRICT
West of Arkansas and just north of Texas, Little Dixie is the most recognizably southern p&njj
Oklahoma. It was settled between 1889 and 1907 by white southerners, most of them poor,»aa$
county names (Leflore, Pontotoc) were taken directly from Mississippi. It remains mostly ns$
today and, like the rural Deep South, by no means as poor or bedeviled by racial tension as it vu
three decades ago. A private economy that has produced jobs is one reason; anolhei k
government, which built interstate highways and turnpikes connecting many people to job*
more vibrant metropolitan areas, and dam-made lakes have spurred the creation of resort tut
retirement communities.
The 3d Congressional District of Oklahoma includes most of the Little Dixie counties, not
juts up into the center of the state into the old university town of Stillwater, which is Republiao
territory, to include enough people to meet the population standard. It remains a s l t y
orU
Democratic constituency, delivering a solid plurality for Arkansas neighbor Bill Clinton in I99J
and, except for a few peripheral counties, has never had a Republican representative. For 3
0
years, until his retirement in 1976, it was represented by Carl Albert, speaker of the House h»
last six years and majority leader for nine years before that.
The current congressman, Bill Brewster, was chosen in an old-fashioned, multi-candidau
primary when incumbent Wes Watkins ran for governor (and lost) in 1990. The candidate*
relied less on television than on personal campaigning and local support networks. One candidate
was Lieutenant Governor Robert Kerr 111, grandson of Senator Robert Kerr (1949-63) who w »
a
legendary for his political clout and boldness in using his position to enrich himself and his KerrMcGee company. Establishing residence in the hills near the Arkansas border, he got former
Speaker Albert's endorsement. The other main contender was Brewster, a registered pharmacist, Angus cattle raiser, and an accomplished state legislator whose campaign was struck b
y
tragedy when two of his children died in a plane crash the same day he announced his candidacy
Brewster won the August primary 51%-41%, and won in November with ease. In the House h
e
has had a fairly moderate record, and was one of 22 Democrats to vote against the Clinton
stimulus package in March 1993. He got a seat on Ways and Means in 1993 and scored an early
victory there when President Clinton agreed to move the collection point for his proposed Btu
tax from utilities to customers' actual bills. As the only pharmacist in the House (Bob Kerrey is
one in the Senate, and of course Hubert Humphrey was too), he hopes to play a part in the
healthcare debate. He favors the balanced budget amendment and tax incentives for new jobs
Against 25-year old teaching assistant Robert Stokes, Brewster won with 75% in 1992.
Natkoct J
l.eonomic
Social
foreign
try Votes of
t Ban Strike
I S for Hor
» Tax Rich/
4 FY93/Slf
try Votes ol
I Family L
ttrction Re
IW2 geners
The People: Pop. 1990: 524,287; 56% rural; 1 % age 65+; 83% White; 4 Black; 1 % Amer. Indian;
6
%
1
1 Asian; 1 Other; 1 Hispanic origin. Voting age pop.: 388,151; 4 Black; 17c Hispanic origin
%
%
%
%
Households: 60% married couple families; 2 % married couple fams. w. children; 35% college educ;
7
median household income: $18,394; per capita income: $9,635; median gross rent: $294; median house
value: $35,800.
1992 Presidential Vote
Clinton (D)
Bush(R)
Perot (1)
94,753 (41%)
77,040 (34%)
55,973 (24%)
1988 Presidential Vote
Bush(R)
Dukakis (D)
98,425 (50%)
97,357 (50%)
W2 prima
IW0 gener
FOURT
The very ]
with farm
green lam
People wi
grown up
Oklahom
Oklahom
�Cherokee Nation Tribe Oklahoma; Tahlequah; elearonic
components 800
Northeastern State University; Tahlequah 716
U.S. Veterans Affairs Dept.; Muskogee; hospital 700
Eastern State Hospital; Vinita 685
Indiana Glass Co./Bartlett-Collins Co.; Sapulpa;
glass/glassware 517
Unarco Industries Inc.; Wagoner; wood produas 515
and Le Flore counties also have significant coal reserves. Coa:
mining now accounts for a fraaion of its previous share of the
area's economy, but high-sulfur bituminous coal is still mined in
those counties.
Election Returns
3rd District
Democrat
Republican
1992
President*
House
94,763 (41.4%)
155,934 (73.8*)
77,054 (33.6%)
51,725 (24.5%)
3rd District
1990
Senate
Governor
130,524 (87.2%)
101,683 (71.0%)
19,127 (12.8%)
41,605 (29.0%)
Southeast — "Little Dixie"
1988
President
97,216 (49.8%)
98,172 (50.2%)
1986
Senate
Governor
87,040 (54.9%)
87,281 (58.1*)
71,510 (45.1%)
62,909 (41.9%)
The only distria in the state that lacks a major urban area, the
3rd sprawls across southeastern Oklahoma, with a three-county
appendage on its northern end. The largest city in the 3rd,
Stillwater (Payne County) has 36,700 people. Only two other
cities in the distria, Shawnee (Pottawatomie) and Ardmore
(Carter), have more than 20,000 people.
Oklahoma's southeastern distria historically has been its
most reliably Democratic. Since becoming a state in 1907, the
"Little Dixie" region has never eleaed a Republican to the
House. The area was settled largely by migrants from Texas and
Arkansas, and its voters are conservative Democrats. The 3rd was
one of two Oklahoma distrias Bill Clinton won in 1992.
In eleaions for offices below the presidency, most voters in
the 3rd harbor little sympathy for the GOP. The most reliable
territory for a Republican is along the distria's northern corridor,
which has more in common with more-Republican northern
Oklahoma than with Little Dixie. In the three southern counties
George Bush carried in 1988—Pontotoc, Carter and Le Flore—
Democratic nominees for Senate and governor easily won in
competitive 1986 contests, as well as in the more lopsided 1990
races. Bush won only three 3rd Distria counties in 1992, all in
the northern corridor.
Although the 3rd has a significant energy industry, with
several counties producing oil and natural gas, Little Dixie
largely missed out on the oil discoveries that brought wealth—
and Republicanism—to central and western Oklahoma. Wracked
by rural depression in the 1920s and again in the 1980s, this
region is the least prosperous area of Oklahoma today. The 3rd
has four of the five counties with the highest poverty rates in the
state.
Primarily rural, the 3rd relies on farming and livestock to fuel
its economy. Beef cattle, chickens and hogs are raised throughout the 3rd. Tyson Foods, with headquarters in nearby Springdale, Ark., is building a $50 million hog-breeding complex in
Holdenville (Hughes County). Bryan, Hughes and Love are
among the nation's leading peanut-growing counties.
Timber is harvested in the Ouachita National Forest, in the
southeastern part of the 3rd. In the south, truck farmers send
their produce to the Campbell Soup factory just over the border
in Paris, Texas.
Ardmore has a large, modern Uniroyal Goodrich tire factory.
Many district residents who live on the outskirts of Oklahoma
City work at Tinker Air Force Base (in the 4th Distria).
Oklahoma's maximum-security prison is in McAlester (Pittsburg County). The inmates' two-day rodeo in late summer has
become a popular annual attraaion. Lake Texoma in the
southwest is a popular summer vacation destination.
The names of Coal and Pittsburg counties are reminders that
coal was once mined in abundance in eastern Oklahoma; Latimer
'Volt for Perot was 55,974 (24 4% ).
Demographics
Population 524,264
Percent change from 1980 4.0%
Land area 17,964 square miles
Population per square mile 29
Counties, 1990 population
Atoka 12,778
Bryan 32,089
Carter 42,919
Choaaw 15,302
Coal 5,780
Hughes 13,023
Johnston 10,032
Latimer 10,333
Le Flore 43,270
Lincoln 29,216
Love 8,157
Marshall 10,829
McCurtain 33,433
Murray 12,042
Pawnee (pt.) 13,685
Payne 61,507
Pittsburg 40,581
Pontotoc 34,119
Pottawatomie 58,760
Pushmataha 10,997
Seminole 25,412
Cities, 1990 population (10,000 or more)
Ada 15,820
McAlester 16,370
Ardmore 23,079
Shawnee 26,017
Durant 12,823
Stillwater 36,676
Race and Hispanic origin
White 83.4%
Black 4.0%
American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut. 11.4%
Asian or Pacific Islander 0.6%
Other 0.5%
Hispanic origin 1.4%
Ancestry
American 9.6%
Dutch 4.8%
English 11.9%
French 3-2%
German 18.9%
Irish 22.0%
Italian 1.4%
Scotch Irish 2.4%
Scottish 1.3%
West Indian 1.2%
Universities/colleges, 1990-1991 enrollment
Carl Albert State College, Poteau 1,253
East Central Oklahoma State University, Ada 4,183
Eastern Oklahoma State College, Wilburton 1,784
Murray State College, Tishomingo 1,251
Oklahoma 609
�4
Oklahoma Baptist University, Shawnee 1,847
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater 19,827
Seminole Junior College, Seminole 1,486
Southeastern Oklahoma State University, Durant 3,971
St. Gregory's College, Shawnee 271
Newspapers, total circulation (in all districts)
Ada Evening News 9,195
Denison Herald 10,941
Ft. Smith Southwest Times Record 41,089
McAlester News-Capital & Democrat 11,733
Oklahoman & Times 215,876
Stillwater News Press 9,587
Tulsa World/Tulsa Tribune 192,748
Commercial television stations, affiliations
ADI: Ardmore-Ada (43*), Oklahoma City (24%), Tulsa (15%),
Shreveport-Texarkana (10%) and Ft. Smith (9%)
KHBS, Fort Smith (ABC)
KTEN, Ada-Ardmore (ABC)
KXII, Ardmore & Sherman-Denison, Texas (CBS)
Cable television systems, total subscribers
Cablecom of Ardmore; Ardmore 9,700
Cablevision of Stillwater; Stillwater 8,873
Falcon Telecable; Shawnee 8,500
Post Newsweek Cable; Ada 6,850
TCI of Oklahoma; Mcalester 7,051
Military installations, 1991
McAlester Army Ammunition Plant, Lawton 1,042
Businesses and other major employers
Oklahoma State University/Fort Reno Experiment Station;
Stillwater 3,709
State of Oklahoma/Transportation Dept.; Ada 3,000
Oklahoma State University; Stillwater 2,500
Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co.; Ardmore; tires 1,945
Blue Bell Inc./Wrangler; Seminole; outerwear 1,350
Tyson Foods Inc.; Broken Bow; meat products 1,200
Brunswick Corp.; Stillwater; engines/turbines 1,000
Weyerhaeuser Co./Southern Div.; Wright City; lumber materials 730
Weyerhaeuser Co./Paper Co.; Valliant; sawmills 700
Charles Komar & Sons Corp.; McAlester; undergarments 550
Valley View Hospital; Ada 546
cotton harvesting. Jackson, Comanche, Stephens and Grady
counties also grow wheat.
Despite price fluctuations, the energy industry has become
important to the 4th's economy over the past 20 years. The gasand oil-producing Anadarko Basin extends down from the 6th
District into Comanche and Stephens counties. Halliburton
employs about 2,500 people in Duncan (Stephens County) for
oil-drilling research, development and manufacturing for its
worldwide drilling enterprise.
The 1980s plummet in oil prices had a dramatic impact on
much of the 4th, which had previously thrived on oil. As in many
energy-dependent communities in the Southwest, banks and
savings and loans failed during the decade. Oil prices bottomed
out in 1986, but they have not approached the 1981 level of $32
per barrel.
With a population of about 81,000, Lawton is the third-largest
city in Oklahoma (although it trails second-largest Tulsa by more
than 280,000). Connected by an interstate turnpike to Oklahoma
City and Wichita Falls, Texas, Lawton is the commercial center
of southwest Oklahoma. Goodyear's tire and rubber plant—one
of the largest factories in the state—employs more than 1,800.
The city of Norman has slightly more than 80,000 people and
is home to the University of Oklahoma (20,800 students). The
university's new energy center conducts research into oil-drilling
techniques and alternative fuels. The university and such government-sponsored research programs as the National Severe Storm
Laboratory are attracting high-tech industries.
On the southern border, the Red River, which marks the
frontier between Texas and Oklahoma, has spawned considerable aggravation and acrimony over the years because of its
capricious disregard for the states' boundaries. The river changes
course whenever it floods, which results in hundreds of acres of
farmers' land ending up in the other state. Some disputes have
led to gunfire.
Bedroom communities have sprouted along 1-44 from
Chickasha into Oklahoma County. Suburban Moore, outside the
Oklahoma City limits in Cleveland County, grew by 15 percent in
the 1980s; it is strongly Republican. Elsewhere, though, lies
conservative Democratic terrain. Democratic statewide candidates usually carry the 4th.
Election Returns
4th District
Southwest; Part of Oklahoma City
The military is a ubiquitous force in the 4th, and Rep.
Da ve McCurdy, elected to a seventh term in 1992, has worked
to keep it that way from his senior position on the Armed
Services Committee. Altus Air Force Base, in Jackson County,
is one of the Air Force's principal pilot training bases. The
Army's Fort Sill is on the northwest side of Lawton (Comanche
County). The district stretches north and east into Oklahoma
County (Oklahoma City) to snare within its confines Tinker Air
jorce Base. With a combined civilian and military staff of
most 27,000, Tinker is the largest single-site employer in the
state.
Agriculture and energy are the other dominant industries.
Tillman and Jackson counties are among the nation's leaders in
610
Oklahoma
4th District
Democrat
1992
President*
House
72,613 (33.3%)
140,841 (69.6%)
90,467 (41.4%)
58,235 (28.8%)
1990
Senate
Governor
111,283 (82.4%)
80,085 (63.3%)
23,788 (17.6%)
46,358 (36.7%)
1988
President
71,766 (41.7%)
100,417 (58.3%)
1986
Senate
Governor
53,966 (43.4%)
64,373 (55.0%)
70,338 (56.6%)
52,713 (45.0%)
'Vott for Perot wai 53,92/
(24.7%).
Demographics
Population
524,265
Percent change from 1980 3.6%
Land area 8,087 square miles
Population per square mile 65
Republican
�OREGON
^
\
�Through March 31, 1994
Program Year 1993 T i t l e I I I Discretionary Grant Awards
(July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994)
STATE: OREGON
Location &
Cong. D i s trict
Situation
250
Counties o f :
Benton, Coos,
Crook, Curry,
Deschutes,
Douglas, J e f f e r s o n , Klama t h , Lake,
Linn
CDs 1,2,4,5
2,458 d i s l o c a t i o n s from t h e
t i m b e r and f i s h ery i n d u s t r i e s
$172,310
(82)
same as above
t o a s s i s t 82 d i s located timber
workers e n r o l l e d
i n the previous
grant with further retraining
Moore B u s i ness Forms
$350,000
75
Counties o f :
Marion, Polk,
Y a m h i l l , and
Washington
CDs: 1 & 5
130 workers d i s l o c a t e d by t h e
c l o s u r e o f Moore's Business
Forms and Systems
i n Salem.
Timber I n d u s try
$513,365
96
Jackson &
Jospehine
counties
CDs 2 & 4
The 8 t h g r a n t t o
a s s i s t workers
d i s l o c a t e d from
timber related
industries i n
Oregon.
$2,135,675
421
Funding
Date
Sec.
Approval
P r o j e c t or
Company
8/13/93
Timber 6
$1,100,000
9/29/93
Timber 7
11/15/93
2/1/94
State Totals
Number to be
Served
�RECENT MAJOR LAYOFFS
Oregon:
Company
Location
No. Affected
Benefits Received
General impact on the Communitv
Trojan Nuclear
Portland
1,100
EWWAA & TAA
N/A
Precision
Castparts
Portland
400
EDWAA
N/A
Glen Brook
Nickel Co.
Riddle
262
N/A
N/A
�PA
CKWOOD
�REA Congressional Committee
Summary Sheet
Sen. Bob Packwood (R-OR)
SR-259
202/224-5244
Committee:
Finance
Recent Legislative History
(Y indicates voted with DOL position)
Budget Amendment
N
Budget Reconciliation
N
Budget Resolution Adoption
N
EUC #4
N
Goals 2000
Y
Kerrey/Brown Amendment
NAFTA
School -to-Work
Stimulus Package
N
Y
Y
N
Electoral Information:
% of Vote in last election 52%
Labor $ as % of total contribs.0%
Other Information Acquired and Available:
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Counties/Cities within CD's
Counties/Cities with above average unemployment rates (highlighted in yellow)
REA related newspaper articles and editorials organzied by state
Community and Technical Colleges by CD
1993 Title III Discretionary Grant awards by state and CD
Racial/Ethnic make up of district
Major media in district
Major employers by CD
Pro-NAFTA Businesses by State and CD
Businesses supporting REA (highlighted in green)
Major layoffs by state (partial)
�THE OREGOMAN. MONDAY MARCH 14. 1994
Clinton Cabinet hurries
to organize job training
By DAVID 5. BRODEB
T
he "]ob$ summit" of mdustriil runons that
has drawn PrMldent Clinton. Vice President
Al Gore and other top administration officials
to Detroit is another example of loaders O
naily catching up to the people.
American familiesflguredout by the middle of the
Buah administration that the layoffs hitting thsm. theirfriendsand
their commumdes were not just
anoUier swing in the familiar upand-down business cycle. When
jiant tirms such as General Motors. Du Pont. Boeing and IBM announced rosmietunnsa of their
work forces that eliminated thousands of Jobs at a swoop, there was
a sense of finality that chilled people's hopes.
The anxiety bred by those layoffs
BRODER
was a major mason that George
Bush is no longer president Even
& the economic recovery that began in Bush's final year
gainsracmentum,Clinton knows the "struaural unemployment" problem remains to be solved.
The administration response to this challengo has
been impressive, but history susgests that this may be
oven a tougher nut to crack than the tasks Clinton has
taken on with health care reform, welfare reform and
making government more efndent.
The bureaucratic battlefields of Washington and the
nation are littered with the bones of previous job-training and employment programs that were touted is
promising — oniy to fail in their goals.
The record does not intimidate Labor Socrotary Robert Roich, the point man on these problems. "\ am uunrident." he said in an mtervtow. "There are working models in Hamden. Conn., in Baltimore, in Louisvillo. Ky. m
S'jnnyvais. Calif. And we are building real accountaDdity standard! Into the system "
Skapncs would question rus self-assuredness, but
Last year, three-founhs of the layoffs
involved permanent job losses.
99
Reich has managed to do some things tl-.at, Washi.-.g- .
;on terras, are unprecedented. He reached across the jurisdictional moat of the Washington Mall and found m
Education Secretary Dick Riloy a partner who was wi^ing to overcome the traditional Jeaiousies between ihwr
departments.
Their collaboration has produced a school-tc-work
transition bill, passed In slightly dilTarent forms oy '.r.e
House and Senate and soon to reach the president s
desk. The two departments will use the modestly funded
bill to get botiar coordination at the state and local '.evels of work-related high school programs for the 7 per
3
rent of students who do not go on to get four-year caUegc
degrees.
Far more ambldous Is the "ro-employmenc plan
troduced at the White House last week. It addresses :
problem that everyone acknowledges; The nature o: ion
lessness has changed. As Reich said, the OUT on t i'/item
of unemployment benefits was designed to "provide
something to tide you over until you got the old job pacs.
again ... after a recession."
But last year, three-fourths of the layoffs involved per
manent Job losses. The £36 billion that state and s'edersi
governments spent that year on regular and cmcrgencv
'incmployment benefits kept people ailoat. but rare'.y r.d
much to help them find new jobs. As a result, ar. -nprec
odentedly high 20 percent of the unemplcyed have csen.
out of work ror more than sw months.
Reich's stratefty calls for eliminanng the spc-ca. e..
gibility requirements lor several of the existlr.? JODtraining programs — r«quirements that slow do*-, .ua
off workers who want to acquire new skills, "'.r. '.r.-.s c-y
and age,'' he said, "it shouldn't matter why you .
your job."
Davui S. Broder it a potiiicnl wnur and culumnisi for
Th* WasAmgion Post.
He would merge laid-otT workers into a single prsgnr
�/VfT/cW Prrss Uaald. Thursday Manh 10, 1994 f.5A
NATION
Clinton outlines new jobs program
• The president says the existing unemployment
system is for an economy that no longer exists.
Associated
Press
WASHINGTON - President Clininn ;)sk(-(l Congress on Wednesday
In replace the "crazy q u i l t of
separate programs" that serve the
unemployed with one stop career
centers offering counseling, job
plarcment and (raining.
Al a While House ceremony. Clinlon urged Congress to spend $13
billion over five years to consolidate
more than l!i<i federal jobs programs
that are operated by 2-1 agencies.
"The existing system i'or unemploymenl and training is simply
Uioki n in Ihe sense that, it was
drs' .'ind Inr an eeounmv that, no
longer exists," Clinton said "It was
designed basically just to hold people
. . . until their old jobs came back."
Some R e p u b l i c a n s w e r e
skeptical
Sen Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas,
the ranking (JOP member of the
Senate Labor and Human
Resources Committee, called Clin
ton's plan "only a gesture, and an
expensive one at that, towards
reforming the federal job training
system."
Clinton wants the government to
identify those unlikely to get their old
jobs back and refer them to counseling and retraining programs.
Federal statistics show that three
of four workers laid off in 1093 did not
expect to get their jobs back.
Extended jobless benefits - up to
18 months - would be provided for
displaced workers learning new
skills. Those deciding to open their
own businesses could receive benefits while the new enterprises got off
the ground.
The legislation also would allow
community colleges and other local
groups to compete with govern
ment run programs for federal dol
lars to retrain dislocated workers.
"The existing training system, as
the members of Congress know, is a
crazy quill of separate programs that
too often puts bureaucracy first and
leaves Ihe customers, the unem
ployed workers, bewildered." Clinton
said.
roiil.md Ptcss Hnald, Fruiav. Manh I I . 1994 P^B
Former Loring base
to become center
for job training
LIMESTONE - The U.S. Department of Labor has decided l o
Inc-a'e a Jou Corps Center a t ^ j j n g
it Ulrim
Air Force RaseTTVIaine's U,
tors announced Thursdav
Sens Oeorgr Mitchell and William Cohen said the decision was a
big step forward in Ihe economic
redevelopment of the base, which
will close in about six months.
The Job Corps program currently serves about 6.>,(H)0 students
annually in 108 centers across the
country.
r
Labor Secretary Robert Reich
said $11 billion ot ttie program's cosf
would be in federal discretionary
spending while the remaining $2
billion would be mandatory spend
ing The $2 billion would fund
extended unemployment benefits for
those in training programs.
Once enacted into law. mandatory
programs are funded automatically
every year and Congress must
figure out how to pay for them.
These programs, such as Medicare,
represent the fastest growing por
tion of the federal budget
Discretionary programs must get
congressional funding every year or
shut down
Not a single COP member of
Congress attended the. White House
reremnnv
�Ponkmd Press Herald. Tuesdm, March 8. 1994 ^SA
Clinton to unveil
plan for jobless
• The Workforce Security
Act will emphasize
retraintng.
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - President Clinton will propose a $13 billion plan to
remake the nation's unemployment
system Wednesday. The proposal
will include long-term jobless benefits for workers in training.
Clinton will outline his Workforce Security Act during a White
House briefing. It will allow community colleges and other local
groups to compete with government-run programs for federal dollars to retrain dislocated workers,
said Doug Ross, assistant secretary
of labor for employment and
training.
"We want to take what is a fairly
passive employment system.. .and
turn it into a very active re-employment system." Ross said.
One object of the latest proposal
will be early identification of. those
unlikely to get their old jobs back.
They could get referrals to counseling and retraining programs.
Labor Secretary Robert Reich has
been advocated a massive retraining
effort.
The Clinton program would cost
$13 billion overfiveyears.
It would replace a system where
workers often are required to look
for a new job to maintain unemployment and other benefits, but rarely
given job search assistance or training that might make them more
marketable.
The president will unveil his, plan
just days before ministers from the
world's most economically powerful
nations meet in Detroit next week
for a conference on worldwide
unemployment
Clinton willrecommendcombining all existing state and federal
unesmployment programs into onestop career centers where the
unemployed could apply for benefits.
Robert Reich
Labor secretary advocates retraining
receive counseling and sign up for
training, Ross said
Those entering training programs
that lasted more than the 26 weeks
unemployment compensation benefits paid could receive extended
benefits.
Another feature would encourage
employers to reduce worker hours
across the board rather than lay off
employees.
For instance, a company with
1,000 employees might cut the hours
of all its workers by 10 hours a
week rather than lay off 250 workers.
The employees could then receive
unemployment benefits to make up
the lost income.
�Stje (Oregonian
founaoa Dec. 4. 1350. isiaDiisneo as a daily FeO. 4. 1361. The Suncay Oregonian esnclisned
One 4 :38i. Pucisnea datlvand Sunoay oy the Oregonian Publishing Co..
1320 S w. Broadway, Poniana. Oregon 97201
FRED A. STICKEL, Publisner
PATRICK F. STICKEL. President
WILLIAM A. MILLIARD Editor
DENNIS L. ATKIN. Advertising Director
SANDRA M. ROWE. = <ecutive Eaitor
PATRICK L. MARLTON. Circulation Director
PETER K. BHAT1A. Managing Editor
ROBERT M. LANDAUER. Editorial Page Editor
J
MONDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1994
Retool retraining effort
Thtre s too much of a good thing in oxtrlapping programs
acific N'orthwesterners don't
need to be convinced of the importance of worker retraining.
What's going on in this region's timber towns is reminder
enough that workers will need to
learn new skills — sometimes many
times in a lifetime — to keep pace in a
changing U.S. economy and increasingly competitive global marketplace.
President Clinton focused on this in
his State of the Union address.
In an odd and troubling way. the
federal government doesn't need convincing either. At Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield's request, the General Accounting Office recently looked at the
federal government's employment
training efforts and found 154 programs spending $25 billion.
That's too much of a good thing. Not
because the government shouldn't be
spending $25 billion on employment
training, but because of what the GAO
found out about those 154 programs.
Many of them, the agency told the
Oregon Republican, are serving the
same populations with the same services. The lowest level of overlap is
four programs that serve refugees and
P
older workers. The highest is the 18
programs serving veterans. In between are the nine federal employment assistance programs that target
the economically disadvantaged.
This overlap in client populations
and programs brings with it troubling
amounts of administrative overlap.
The nine programs serving the economically disadvantaged did so with
"separate yet parallel" delivery structures, the GAO found. This eats up
tight federal dollars on bureaucracy,
though the GAO didn't put afigureon
the wasted resources.
"The overlap we found among the
nine programs. . .." the GAO concluded, "is an example of how such
overlap can occur at each level of government — federal, state and local —
and potentially add administrative
costs."
That's frightening. Comforting is
the fact that Hatfield, the Senate Appropriations Committee's ranking minority member, has much to say
about how these programs are funded
and is planning hearings on this excess of employment training bureaucracv.
�THE OREGONIAN. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 3. 1994^
Clinton participated in a panel discussion in which he heard from beneficiaries of several existing training
programs and operators of some.
Cynthia Scott, a former welfare
recipient, said social workers never
offered encouragement when she
sought training for the vocational
nursing job she now holds in San
Antonio, Texas.
In fact, "they made it very difficult for me to continue," said Scott,
•The president wants a system a 35-year-old single mother of three
where the unemployed can seek teen-age sons. "It was very discourtraining and benefits at one site aging."
She learned about the program,
Project QUEST, through a commuBy ROBERT NAYLOR JR.
nity group.
The Associated Press
"Three years from now, I don't
WASHINGTON - President Clin- want to here another Cynthia Scott
ton on Wednesday urged streamlin- story," Clinton responded, adding
that his proposals would allow "oneing the way America deals with
those out of work, proposing "one- stop shopping" where those out of
work could apply for benefits, get
stop shopping" where the jobless
can apply for benefits, get counsel- counseling and sign up for training
programs.
ing and seek training.
"The welfare office ought to be the
In an appearance at a daylong emwork office; it ought to be the job
ployment training conference spontraining office," he said.
sored by the Labor Department,
Clinton said also that he would ask
Linda Lyons Butler, a job
Congress to increase federal spendplacement specialist with Tradeswoing on job training, even while purmen of Philadelphia, said those out
suing elimination of as many as 100
of work were often discouraged by
programs and spending cuts in anthe number of places they must
other 300.
visit.
"In a time in which we have to cut
"The last thing you need is to go
domestic spending, we have to find
from pillar to post and then not get
more money to spend on this," he
all the information you need," she
said.
said.
The president said he would ask
Clinton said he expected some obCongress to end what he called frag- jections in Congress to his plan to
mented federal programs in favor of
eliminate some programs. It already
one system of funding successful
is coming from some black members
local efforts.
of Congress upset with his plan to
eliminate the Targeted Jobs Tax
"We need one pot of money," he
Credit. The 12-year-old program
said.
gives employers tax credits for hirSecretary of Labor Robert Reich
ing disadvantaged workers.
has said the administration plans to
Rep. Ed Towns, D-N.Y., said the
scuttle some weaker programs decredits had been largely responsible
signed to help people find jobs and
for businesses in many communities
use the money saved on an expanded effort to retrain those out of work
"actively looking for economically
because of industrial restructuring,
disadvantaged youth, those on welliberalized trade or environmental
fare and the disabled as potential
policies.
employees."
But Reich said studies had shown
The White House also is expected
that employers would have hired
to recommend that the nation douthe workers anyway and that the
ble the $1.5 billion it now spends to
credits are ineffective.
help dislocated workers.
"There are better ways to ensure
that employers hire additional workers," he said. "We are seeking additional funds for job training and job
search assistance for disadvantaged
adults and teens and putting the
money where we know it works."
Jobless
reforms
urged ^>
�12/03/93
12:23
®617 565 2076
USDL/01 PA/BOSTON
01 PA W S
AH
3002/002
Portland Press Herald, Tuesday, Nmember 30, 1993 p\
Administration plans toencourage
unemployed to relocate for work
gressional battle over extending
Instead, administration officials
unemployment benefits to
are working on legislation seeking to
WASHINGTON - Pessimistic whose regular benefits have
provide better information to unemabout the prospects of Jurther deznonsfrated that there is
extending jobless benefits, aie Clin- money or political support for addi- ployed people across the country
ton administration is planning a shift tional aid - much of which goes to about job prospects and training
opportunities in other regions.
in approach that would help the people who continue looking for
Legislation the administration
long-term unemployed move to work in their region while waiting for intends to introduce next year would
locales where job prospects are the economy to improve.
coordinate various federal and state
better.
"The cupboard is practically job-training opportunities so that
unemployed Lilividuals are aware of
Reich saiU in a meeting with a
lijhnrfiPtTftarvRnkn. Rfiich bare,"group of reporters.
a wider range of options.
small
said Monday that the recent con-
Los Angeles Times
�4A Portland Press Herald, Wednesday, February 17, 1993
lions are vital to Clinton plan,
ibor secretary tells AFL-CIO panel
1
The New Yorfe Times
even trying to create unions." He
BAL HARBOUR, Fla. - Labor called the labor movement "the most
Secretary Robert _B^ Reich told articulate, indeed the only voice of
organized labor's "leaders Tuesday thefront-lineworker in America."
Reich came to court unions that
that unions are vital to the adminis0
tration's hopes for economic gave President Clinton about 1
million votes for their support of the
growth.
Reiche said he intends to help economic plan Clinton will introduce
them regain the power they have today. Despite refusal to assure the
unions of unequivocal support for
been losing for decades.
In a discussion lasting nearly issues they consider vital - like
three hours at the annual winter lifting President Reagan's ban on
meeting of the AFL-CIO executive hiring the air-traffic controllers discouncil, Reich, who has emerged as missedforstriking illegally in 1981
the most influential labor secretary and on raising the minimum wage
in economic policy in at least a from $4.25 - the leaders liked
generation, said management has just about everything they heard.
gained an unfair advantage in
Vincent R Sombretto, National
resoh/ing conflicts with unions.
Association of Letter Carriers presi"Undoubtedly, we need to restore dent, called the session "the most
a level playingfieldin this country," extraordinary executive council
Reich told reporters following his meeting I've attended in the last 12
discussions with the unions. "In the years.... He sees collective bargainID years," he said, "working mening as a key element to nising the
women have been penalized for standard of living in this country."
4A Portland Press Herald,
Saturday, February 20, 1993
Job training access
wotild be expanded
under new program
WASHINGTON - ^ator^Segst
tary Rcibert B. Reich saicTFriday that
the Clinton administration plans to
consolidate the existing hodgepodge
of govsmment programs to assist
displaced workers. He also said he
believes access to the programs
should be greatly expanded.
Reich, who has been put in charge
of the consolidation, said anyone
who toses a job without hope of
regaining it should be eligible for
training assistance, job search counseling and special government payments to support them during their
retraining.
^ ^ } ( somebodyfeelsthat they want
^^npcove their living standard, the
^Hprnment should do everything
THR it can do to help that person,"
Reich said
THE BURLINGTON FREE PRESS
FEBRUARY 17, I91i
Reich retreats
on worker training
In a retreat from another of
President Clinton's campaign
pledaes, the administration has
decided not to push for legi*lation requiring a minimum level
of corporate spending on worker
training. Labor Secretary Robert
Rcicfr said Tuesday.
"
"At this particular point in
time, I'm not convinced that a
mandate is appropriate," Reich
said after meeting with the nation's labor leaders.
Organized labor wants corporations to commit more resources to worker training, but
the business comm unity is loathe
to accept spending levels mandated by Waahingtm.
THE BURLINGTON FREE PRESS
FEBRUARY 20. 1993
^ / )
Streamlining
planned for
job training
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Labor
Secretary Robert Reich said Friday that the Clinton administration plans to consolidate the
existing hodgepodge of government programs to assist displaced
workers, and that he believes
access to the programs should be
greatly expanded.
Reich, who has been put in
charge of the consolidation, said
anyone who loses a job without
hope of regaining it should be
eligible for training assistance,
job search counseling and special
government payments to support
them during their retraining.
"If somebody feels that they
want to improve their living standard, the government should do
everything that it can do to help
that person," Reich said. "If you
quit jobs and you want to be
retrained for a better job, you
ought to get help in that respect
as well."
The economic plan President
Clinton unveiled this week calls
for $4.6 billion of added spending
to assist displaced workers over
the next five yeah.* Birf 'Labor
Department officials said the administration is seeking new budget authorization of $9.2 billion
during the next five years to help
• displaced workers, not all of
which would be spent during that
period.
Reich said the need to help
displaced workers is rapidly expanding. With waves of corporate
. layoffs, a growing number of jobs
are disappearing permanently, he
said. Many more displacements
will follow as more defense cuts
kick in and if the proposed North
American Free Trade Act takes
effect, he said.
�Senators and Staffs - 1-97
Packwood
KEY STAFF AIDES
Name
Position
Elaine Franklin
Karen Belding
(503-326-3370)
Bobbi Munson
Jackie Wilcox
Jill Luckett
Chf. of Staff
State Dir.
Chris Miske
R -Oregon
Reelection Year: 1998
Legis. Asst.
Press Asst.
Exec. Asst.
Legis. Dir.
Marcia Ohlemiller Legis. Asst.
Began Service: 1969
SR-259 Russell Senate
Office Building
Washington, DC
20510-3702
Pamela Piflier
Legis. Asst.
Penny Schiller
Ginny Worrest
Legis. Asst.
Legis. Asst.
Pamela Stevens
!!
IOGRAPHICAL
orn: 9/11/32
ome: Portland
Educ: B.S., Willamette
U.; LL.B., N.Y.U.
Prof.: Attorney
Rel.: Unitarian
Ports/Maritime, Communications, Aviation,
Railroads
Budget, Economy, Defense, Labor, Foreign
Relations
Family/Women's Issues, Judiciary, Civil
Rights, Immigration
Banking/Housing/Urban Affairs, Privatization, Civil Service, Governmental Affairs,
Mass Transit
Education, Timber, Energy, Interior, Rules
Health, Small Business, Arts, Senior Citizens,
Oceans, Agriculture, Environment, Columbia
Gorge, Highways
Appts. Secy.
(202) 2 2 4 - 5 2 4 4
TDD: (202) 224-7520
Legislative Responsibility
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS
Committee
Subcommittee(s)
Commerce, Science, and
Communications, Ranking Minority Member • Foreign CornTransportation
merce and Tourism • National Ocean Policy Study • Surface
Transportation
Finance, Ranking Minority
Member
International Trade • Medicare and Long-Term Care • Taxation
• Ex officio member of all other subcommittees
Joint Taxation
No subcommittees
OTHER POSITIONS
Senate Republican Policy Committee • Senate Wednesday Group • Senate Tourism Caucus
• Senate Republican Task Force on Health Care • U.S. Coast Guard Academy, Board of
Visitors • Environmental and Energy Study Conference, Executive Committee
STATE OFFICES
Suite 240, 101 S.W. Main St., Portland, OR 97204 .
© Congressional Yellow Book
(503) 326-3370
Summer 1993
�Sen. Bob Packwood (R)
Elected 1968, seat up 1998; b. Sept 11, 1932, Portland; home.
Portland; Willamette U., B.A. 1954, NY U., LL.B. 1957; Unitarian; divorced.
Careen Law Clerk, OR Supreme Court, 1957-58; Practicing
atty., 1958-68; OR House of Reps., 1963-69.
Offices: 259 RSOB 20510, 202-224-5244. Also 101 SW Main St..
#240, Portland 97204-3210, 503-294-3448.
Committees: Commerce, Science and Transportation (2d of 9 R)'Communications (RMM); Foreign Commerce and Tourism; Surface Transportation. Finance (RMM of 9 R): International Trade;
Medicare and Long-Term Care; Taxation. Joint Committee on
Taxation (4th of 5).
Group Ratings
1992
1991
ADA
60
50
ACLU CDF COPE CFA
67
90
50
50
—
100
67
33
LCV
25
13
ACU NTLC
33
56
43
—
National Journal Ratings
1991 LIB — 1991 CONS
Economic
41% — 58%
Social
5 % — 43%
6
Foreign
3 % — 60%
9
NSI
90
—
COC CEI
30
40
60
45
1992 LIB - 1992 CONS
45% — 54%
44% — 54%
47% — 51%
OREGON
Key Votes of the 102d Congress
I <forHomeownership AGN
, nave Cap Gains Debate FOR
Remove Budget Walls FOR
4 Ban Striker Replace FOR
5. Clarence Thomas Nom. AGN
6. Lmt Death Row Appeal FOR
7. Handgun Wait/5-Day FOR
8. Abortion Gag Rule AGN
K»y Votes of the 103d Congress
l Family Leave
FOR 2. HIV Immigrants
Ikcrion Results
t W general
< 2
I*)2 primary
t««6 general
Bob Packwood (R)
Les AuCoin (D)
Others
Bob Packwood (R)
John De Zell (R)
Stephanie Jones Salvey (R)
Randy Prince (R)
Valentine Christian (R)
Others
Bob Packwood (R)
Rick Bauman (D)
FOR
1061
9. Use Force in Gulf FOR
10. Keep Salvador Aid FOR
11. Cut $1B from SDI AGN
12. Override China MFN AGN
3. Clinton Budget
717,455
639,851
18,727
176,939
61,128
27,088
20,358
10,501
3,397
656,317
375,735
(52%)
(47%)
(1%)
(59%)
(20%)
(9%)
(7%)
(4%)
(1%)
(63%)
(36%)
AGN
($8,034,249)
($2,629,397)
($6,523,492)
($64,139)
�Sen. Bob Packwood (R)
ian; divorced.
..
Creen Law C.e*. OR Supre.e Ccjt,, 1957-58: Praccn,
atty 1958-68; OR House of Reps., 1963-69.
Offices: 259 RSOB 20510, 202-224-5244. Also 101 SW Ma.nSU
1240, Portland 97204-3210, 503-294-3448.
Conrnritte*, Co^erce. Science and T r o n s p o r w j n ^ ^
Commun.cations (RMM); ^ J f i ^ ^ Z S h *
faceTransportaUon. Finance (RMM of 9 R). interna
^
Medicare and Long-Term Care; Taxat.on. Jen, Comm
Taxation (4th of 5).
Group Ratings
AD\
1992
60
1991
50
XCLV
67
-
CDF COPE CFA
50
50
90
33
67
100
LCV
25
13
ACU
33
43
1991 LIB-1991 CONS
41% — 58%
56% 43%
39% _
60%
OREGON
Key Votes of the 102d Congress
I. $ for Homeownership AGN
2 Have Cap Gains Debate FOR
3. Remove Budget Walls FOR
4. Ban Striker Replace FOR
5. Clarence Thomas Nom. AG N
6. Lmt Death Row Appeal FOR
7. Handgun Wait/5-Day FOR
8. Abortion Gag Rule AGN
Ky Votes of the 103d Congress
e
1 Family Leave
FOR 2. HIV Immigrants
Election Results
1 9 general
92
' 1 9 primary
92
m general
Bob Packwood (R)
Les AuCoin (D)
Others
Bob Packwood (R)
John De Zell (R)
Stephanie Jones Salvey (R)
Randy Prince (R)
Valentine Christian (R)
Others
Bob Packwood (R)
Rick Bauman (D)
NSI
90
_
COC
^
60
1992 L I B - 1992 CONS
45% _
54%
. 44% — 54%
47% 51%
National Journal Ratings
Economic
Social
Foreign
NTLC
56
FOR
1061
9. Use Force in Gulf
FOR
10. Keep Salvador Aid FOR
11. Cut SIB from SDI AGN
12. Override China MFN AGN
3. Clinton Budget
717,455
639,851
18,727
176.939
61,128
27,088
20,358
10,501
3,397
656,317
375,735
(52%)
(47%)
(1%)
(59%)
(20%)
(9%)
(7%)
(4%)
(1%)
(63%)
(36%)
AGN
($8,034,249)
($2,629,397)
($6,523,492)
($64,139)
A3
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Michael Waldman
Description
An account of the resource
<p>Michael Waldman was Assistant to the President and Director of Speechwriting from 1995-1999. His responsibilities were writing and editing nearly 2,000 speeches, which included four State of the Union speeches and two Inaugural Addresses. From 1993 -1995 he served as Special Assistant to the President for Policy Coordination.</p>
<p>The collection generally consists of copies of speeches and speech drafts, talking points, memoranda, background material, correspondence, reports, handwritten notes, articles, clippings, and presidential schedules. A large volume of this collection was for the State of the Union speeches. Many of the speech drafts are heavily annotated with additions or deletions. There are a lot of articles and clippings in this collection.</p>
<p>Due to the size of this collection it has been divided into two segments. Use links below for access to the individual segments:<br /><a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=43&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=2006-0469-F+Segment+1">Segment One</a><br /><a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=43&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=2006-0469-F+Segment+2">Segment Two</a></p>
Creator
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Michael Waldman
Office of Speechwriting
Date
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1993-1999
Identifier
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2006-0469-F
Extent
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Segment One contains 1071 folders in 72 boxes.
Segment Two contains 868 folders in 66 boxes.
Provenance
A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.
Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files
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William J. Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
Format
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Adobe Acrobat Document
Still Image
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Original Format
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paper
Dublin Core
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Title
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[Reemployment Act] [Binder 1] [1]
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Office of Speechwriting
Michael Waldman
Is Part Of
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Box 41
<a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/show/36403"> Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7763296">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
Identifier
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2006-0469-F Segment 1
Provenance
A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.
White House Staff and Office Files
Publisher
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William J. Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
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Adobe Acrobat Document
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Preservation-Reproduction-Reference
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6/3/2015
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7763296
42-t-7763296-20060469F-Seg1-041-008-2015