Legislators in District 61
State Rep. 61A | State Rep. 61B | State Senator | Governor & Lt. Governor
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House District 61A, Rep. Karen Clark (DFL)Legislator First Elected: 1980.Committees: Environment and Natural Resources Finance Division; Finance; Higher Education and Work Force Development Policy and Finance Division; Housing Policy and Finance and Public Health Finance Division (Chair); Ways and Means.
Contact Information: 471 State Office Building, 100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Saint Paul, Minnesota 55155. Phone: (651) 296-0294. E-mail: rep.karen.clark@house.mn. Send an e-mail to this elected official using MCA’s quick & easy Desktop Lobbyist. 2006 MCA Candidate Survey Results: Candidate did not respond to survey. Additional Notes from MCA: May 2000: Rep. Clark voted YES 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. This was a good arts vote. |
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House District 61B, Rep. Neva Walker (DFL)Legislator First Elected: 2000.Committees: Finance; Health and Human Services; Health Care and Human Services Finance Division; Mental Health Division (Chair).
Contact Information: 553 State Office Building, 100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Saint Paul, Minnesota 55155. Phone: (651) 296-7152. E-mail: rep.neva.walker@house.mn. Send an e-mail to this elected official using MCA’s quick & easy Desktop Lobbyist. 2006 MCA Candidate Survey Results: Candidate did not respond to survey. Additional Notes from MCA: None. |
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Senate District 61, Sen. Linda Berglin (DFL)Legislator First Elected: House 1972; Senate 1980.Committees: Finance - Health and Human Services Budget Division, Chair, Capital Investment, Finance, Finance - Public Safety Budget Division, Health, Housing and Family Security, Rules and Administration.
Contact Information: 75 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Capitol Building, Room 309, St. Paul, MN 55155-1606. Phone: 651.296.4261 Send an e-mail to this elected official using MCA’s quick & easy Desktop Lobbyist. 2006 MCA Candidate Survey Results: Candidate did not respond to survey. Additional Notes from MCA: May 2004: As a member of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Berglin opposed the Outdoor and Cultural Heritage Amendment unless it included a new source of tax revenue. We would like to see Sen. Berglin take a more active role in supporting arts funding. May 2000: Sen. Berglin voted YES 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. This 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. |




