Legislators in District 28
State Rep. 28A | State Rep. 28B | State Senator | Governor & Lt. Governor
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House District 28A, Rep. Sandy Wollschlager (DFL)Legislator First Elected: 2006.Committees: Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections; Taxes (Vice Chair); Veterans Affairs Division.
Contact Information: 335 State Office Building, 100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Saint Paul, Minnesota 55155. Phone: (651) 296-8635. E-mail: rep.sandy.wollschlager@house.mn. Send an e-mail to this elected official using MCA’s quick & easy Desktop Lobbyist. 2006 MCA Candidate Survey Results: 1. Minnesota’s nearly 1600 non-profit arts and cultural organizations provide access to the arts and support quality of life in every corner of the state. While providing over 22,000 jobs, arts organizations served nearly 4.5 million people in 2004. Answer: Music, Theater, Visual Arts, Literary Arts, Dance, Other. 2. Over the last three biennium the State Arts Board and Regional Arts Council appropriations were cut by 34.5%. These are substantially larger cuts than the cuts to the overall state budget. Would you support an increase in arts funding to restore the cuts that were made, in recognition of the important role the arts and culture play in our economy and in our quality of life? Select One: Enthusiastically Support, Support, Neutral, Opposed. Answer: Enthusiastically Support. 3. During the 2006 legislative session the legislature considered a constitutional dedication of funds for water, hunting and angling and various cultural purposes including the arts. Would you support a similar constitutional amendment in the 2007 legislative session? Select One: Yes, No, Don’t Know Answer: Yes. 4. Research shows that students with high levels of arts participation outperform other students on virtually every measure from standardized tests to community participation, and that learning through the arts has a significant effect on learning in other areas, particularly in the early years. Would you support policies and funding to increase the availability of the arts in our schools? Select One: Enthusiastically Support, Support, Neutral, Opposed Answer: Enthusiastically Support. 5. We would welcome any additional comments you would like to make with regards to the arts in Minnesota. Comments: The Arts are a significant industry in Southeast Minnesota, and I support privately through the Anderson Center in Red Wing and publicly through letters to the editor. Additional Notes from MCA: Rep. Wollschlager received a 2007 Legislative Arts All Star award for her work on behalf of the nonprofit arts. |
| House District 28B, Steve Drazkowski (R)Legislator First Elected: 2007.Committees: Agriculture, Rural Economies and Veterans Affairs; State Government Finance Division; Ways and Means.
Contact Information: 247 State Office Building, 100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Saint Paul, Minnesota 55155. Phone: (651) 296-2273. E-mail: rep.steve.drazkowski@house.mn. Send an e-mail to this elected official using MCA’s quick & easy Desktop Lobbyist. 2006 MCA Candidate Survey Results: N/A Elected In 2007 Special Election Additional Notes from MCA: None. |
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Senate District 28, Sen. Steve Murphy (DFL) Legislator First Elected: 1992.Committees: Finance - Transportation Budget and Policy Division, Chair, Transportation, Chair, Agriculture and Veterans, Business, Industry and Jobs, Capital Investment, Finance, Finance - Agriculture and Veterans Budget and Policy Division.
Contact Information: 75 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Capitol Building, Room 325, St. Paul, MN 55155-1606. Phone: 651.296.4264. Send an e-mail to this elected official using MCA’s quick & easy Desktop Lobbyist. 2006 MCA Candidate Survey Results: 1. Minnesota’s nearly 1600 non-profit arts and cultural organizations provide access to the arts and support quality of life in every corner of the state. While providing over 22,000 jobs, arts organizations served nearly 4.5 million people in 2004. Answer: Music, Theater, Visual Arts. 2. Over the last three biennium the State Arts Board and Regional Arts Council appropriations were cut by 34.5%. These are substantially larger cuts than the cuts to the overall state budget. Would you support an increase in arts funding to restore the cuts that were made, in recognition of the important role the arts and culture play in our economy and in our quality of life? Select One: Enthusiastically Support, Support, Neutral, Opposed. Answer: Enthusiastically Support. 3. During the 2006 legislative session the legislature considered a constitutional dedication of funds for water, hunting and angling and various cultural purposes including the arts. Would you support a similar constitutional amendment in the 2007 legislative session? Select One: Yes, No, Don’t Know Answer: Yes. 4. Research shows that students with high levels of arts participation outperform other students on virtually every measure from standardized tests to community participation, and that learning through the arts has a significant effect on learning in other areas, particularly in the early years. Would you support policies and funding to increase the availability of the arts in our schools? Select One: Enthusiastically Support, Support, Neutral, Opposed Answer: Enthusiastically Support. 5. We would welcome any additional comments you would like to make with regards to the arts in Minnesota. Comments: Actions Speak Louder Than Words. Additional Notes from MCA: May 2004: As a member of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Murphy voted for the Outdoor and Cultural Heritage Amendment, which would have doubled funding for the arts and other cultural programs. Sen. Murphy also voted against attempts to strip arts funding from the bill (a pro-arts vote). The bill was passed (with the arts intact), but it did not pass the full Legislature.2004 Session: Sen. Murphy serves on the Environment, Agriculture and Economic Development Budget Division committee, the committee that decides arts funding in the Senate. May 2000: Sen. Murphy voted to override the Governor’s veto of $1 million in bonding money for the Lanesboro Center for the Arts, and $3 million in planning money for the Guthrie Theatre. The override was successful. A ‘Yes’ vote was a good arts vote. |
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Governor Tim Pawlenty & Lt. Governor Carol Molnau (R)Governor & Lt. Governor first elected: 2002.Contact information: Office of the Governor, 130 State Capitol, 75 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55155. Phone: (651) 296-3391 or (800) 657-3717. E-mail: tim.pawlenty@state.mn.us.
Send an e-mail to this elected official using MCA’s quick & easy Desktop Lobbyist. 2006 MCA Candidate Survey Results: Candidates did not respond to survey. Additional notes from MCA: April, 2006 : In a statement made regarding the Senate passage of the proposed consitutional amendment on conservation, clean water, public broadcasting and the arts, Governor Pawlenty displayed his neglect of the value of the arts: “While I appreciate the Senate’s willingness to vote on this important issue, I hope the bill will be more focused in its final version. Conservation and clean water are too important to be watered down by other issues. While the arts and public broadcasting are important, they do not rise to the level of being in need of dedicated constitutional support.” May, 2005: Governor Pawlenty vetoed a measure to create an official poet laureate in Minnesota, remarking: “Even though we have a state ‘folklorist’, I have concern that this will lead to calls for other similar positions. We could also see requests for a state mime, interpretive dancer, or potter…”. Minnesota would have joined its neighboring states North and South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, and Wisconsin in having an official poet laureate if Pawlenty had not vetoed the bill. |



