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Heather Mizeur

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Succeeded by
  
David Moon

Name
  
Heather Mizeur

Political party
  
Democratic

Role
  
American Politician


Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Spouse
  
Deborah Mizeur (m. 2008)

Website
  
Campaign website

Party
  
Democratic Party

Heather Mizeur Could Heather Mizeur get an upset win in the primary


Preceded by
  
Peter Franchot Gareth Murray

Born
  
December 6, 1972 (age 51) Blue Mound, Illinois, U.S. (
1972-12-06
)

Alma mater
  
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (did not graduate)

Education
  
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

Similar People
  
Doug Gansler, Delman Coates, Brian E Frosh, Jolene Ivey, Donna Edwards

Maryland house del heather mizeur on her qualifications for governor


Heather R. Mizeur ( ; born December 6, 1972) is an American politician and member of the Democratic Party from the state of Maryland. She has served as a member of the Maryland House of Delegates from January 10, 2007 to January 14, 2015, representing the 20th district in Montgomery County. She was a candidate for Governor of Maryland in the 2014 election but lost the Democratic primary to Lieutenant Governor of Maryland Anthony G. Brown.

Contents

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Youth for heather mizeur


Early life, education and personal life

Heather Mizeur Heather Mizeur Running For Governor Of Maryland

Mizeur was born on December 6, 1972 in Blue Mound, Illinois. Her father, Dale Mizeur, was a welder at the Caterpillar Inc. factory and a member of the United Auto Workers. She attended Blue Mound High School, where she graduated as valedictorian of her graduating class. Mizeur attended the University of Illinois, from 1991 to 1994, but dropped out to pursue a career on Capitol Hill.

Heather Mizeur Maryland gubernatorial hopeful Heather Mizeur to air her

Mizeur married her wife, Deborah, in a private ceremony in 2005 on the Chesapeake Bay. They were legally married in California in 2008. They reside in Takoma Park with their dog Chester, and they also own a 34-acre organic farm in Chestertown, Maryland.

Early career

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Her professional career began with U.S. Reps. Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky (D-PA) and Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX). In 1995, she became Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy II’s (D-MA) Legislative Director. In 1998, Mizeur was named Director of State Affairs at the National Association of Community Health Centers, an organization advocating for improved access to health care for the uninsured. In 2003, she became U.S. Sen. John Kerry's (D-MA) Director of Domestic Policy, and authored much of his health care platform for the 2004 presidential campaign.

Heather Mizeur Marylands Heather Mizeur wants to be first openly gay candidate

Mizeur was first elected to public office in 2003, when she won a seat on the Takoma Park City Council.

Elections

In 2006, Mizeur ran for a seat in the Maryland House of Delegates in District 20, which comprises Silver Spring, Takoma Park, Colesville, and White Oak in southeastern Montgomery County. In the Democratic primary, Mizeur garnered the most votes in a seven-candidate field for three seats, receiving 8,176 votes. She faced only nominal Republican opposition in the general election and was elected by a wide margin.

In 2010, Mizeur and fellow incumbent Delegates Sheila Hixson and Tom Hucker defeated three primary challengers by a wide margin and then won unopposed in the general election.

In both elections, Mizeur secured endorsements from The Washington Post, the Montgomery County Education Association, the League of Conservation Voters,Sierra Club, and NARAL Pro-Choice Maryland, among many others.

Health care

In her first year as a legislator, Mizeur introduced and passed the Family Coverage Expansion Act to allow young adults to stay on family health plans until age 25. In 2009, Mizeur introduced and passed the Foster Kids Coverage Act to extend Medicaid coverage to former foster care youth.

In 2008, Mizeur introduced and passed the Kids First Act to find and cover an estimated 100,000 children who were uninsured but eligible for public coverage. According to the 2009 Joint Chairmen’s Report on Barriers to Enrollment at the Community Level, from July 2008 to December 2009 the Kids First Act helped cover an additional 50,000 children. The Kids First Act was instrumental in delivering more than $75 million in federal health bonus funds for Maryland.

In 2011, Mizeur introduced and passed the Family Planning Works Act to expand family planning services to low-income women at or below 200% of the Federal Poverty Level. The Guttmacher Institute estimates this expansion would have the potential to avert as many as 7,980 unintended pregnancies, 2,650 abortions, and 4,150 Medicaid births annually. The Maryland Department of Legislative Services noted that “general fund savings from those averted births alone could be as much as $39.5 million”. Mizeur co-authored a Washington Post editorial with Republican co-sponsor Delegate Mike Smigiel to champion both the fiscal savings and health benefits to this legislation.

Mizeur also sponsored successful legislation, known as the Prosthetic Parity Act, to improve health benefits for amputees.

Mizeur has received numerous accolades for her health care work:

  • "Good Works Done Well" Award, Primary Care Coalition, 2009
  • Legislator of the Year, MARFY, 2009
  • Health Care Hero, The Daily Record, 2011
  • Dr. Henry and Page Laughlin Distinguished Public Official Award, Montgomery County Medical Society, 2011
  • State Hero Award, National Alliance on Mental Illness Montgomery County, 2011
  • Choice Advocate Award, NARAL Pro Choice Maryland, 2011
  • Legislator of the Year, Maryland Association of Community Services, 2012
  • Job creation

    In 2008, Mizeur introduced and passed legislation alongside Senate President Mike Miller to create the Coordinating Emerging Nanobiotechnology Research (CENTR) in Maryland Program. CENTR is a state-administered grant program for nanobiotechnology projects that develop potential life-saving technologies.

    In a Washington Post editorial opposing the 2012 plan to expand gambling in Maryland, Mizeur outlined her economic priorities for Maryland.

    In 2012, Mizeur worked with the Maryland Energy Administration in 2012 to create a Biomass Heating Grant Pilot Program to enable homeowners to purchase EPA-certified wood and pellet stoves.

    Environment

    Delegate Mizeur has been a high-profile supporter of stronger regulations on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. In 2010, she authored a Baltimore Sun op-ed, “Water on fire,” calling attention to the drilling practice. In 2011, she introduced the Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Act to require strict safety studies on fracking in Maryland. Mizeur’s bill passed the House but failed in the Senate. However, Mizeur’s bill led to creation of the Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Initiative under a gubernatorial Executive Order. Mizeur serves on the Initiative’s Commission, which is charged with studying the environmental, economic, and health impacts of fracking.

    In September 2011, Mizeur authored a Democratic National Committee resolution pressuring the president to reject the proposed Keystone XL pipeline. Two months later, she was a featured speaker at the 12,000-person KXL rally in Washington, DC to protest the pipeline.

    The Baltimore Sun has labeled her “one of the leading environmental advocates in the General Assembly” for her work on the environment.

    Education

    Mizeur serves as Vice Chair of the Education and Economic Development Subcommittee, which has primary jurisdiction over the state’s $12.7 billion K-12 and higher education budget. During her time as Vice Chair, K-12 public education funding has increased by more than $400 million and higher education funding increased by $350 million.

    In 2012, Mizeur voted against a proposal to shift teacher pension costs to County governments.

    Marriage equality

    As one of nine LGBT legislators in the Maryland General Assembly, Mizeur has been a vocal supporter for marriage equality. She has written editorials urging Maryland to enact same-sex marriage and worked with several national LGBT organizations to affirm marriage equality on Maryland’s Question 6 referendum. Mizeur’s floor speech during the 2011 debate on the Civil Marriage Protection Act went viral after it was picked up by national LGBT blogs.

    Government transparency

    In 2010, Mizeur introduced the Maryland Open Government Act which sought to post General Assembly committee votes online; eliminate an $800 fee and enable free public access to the General Assembly's "up-to-the-minute" bill tracking service; post General Assembly committee agendas a day in advance; webcast committee hearings; and bring greater transparency to the proceedings of the state Board of Public Works. The bill was ultimately referred to an interim summer study that lead to adoption of many of these reforms.

    In 2011, Delegate Mizeur introduced a bill that created the Joint Committee on Transparency and Open Government.

    Committees, task forces, boards and commissions

    Mizeur serves as a senior member of the House Appropriations Committee, which has jurisdiction over the state budget. In 2011, she was appointed the Vice Chair of the Education & Economic Development Subcommittee.

    In addition to her role as Vice Chair, Mizeur is a member of the Montgomery County House Delegation. She also serves on the Maryland Medicaid Advisory Committee, the Marcellus Shale Safe-Drilling Initiative Advisory Commission, the Maryland Affordable Housing Trust, and the Joint Committee on Transparency and Open Government.

    In 2009, Mizeur was appointed to the White House Task Force of State Legislators for Health Reform, where she advised the Obama administration on state best practices to be included in the Affordable Care Act.

    Presidential elections

    In 2004, Mizeur served as Maryland State Director for the Kerry-Edwards campaign in the presidential election. In 2006, she was elected as one of Maryland’s Democratic National Committee members. In 2009, President Obama appointed Mizeur to the DNC’s Executive Committee.

    As a DNC member, Mizeur was a superdelegate in the 2008 Democratic presidential primary. In an effort to support the party above any of the candidates, Mizeur opted to stay neutral. In explaining her decision to stay neutral for as long as she did, Mizeur said, “We have a democracy, not a monarchy. We're not about coronating candidates." When it became clear that he would win the nomination, Mizeur endorsed Barack Obama on June 4, 2008, saying, “It's time for everyone to rally around our nominee. I intend to pledge my support for Barack Obama. I am going to extremely enthusiastically support him."

    United States Senate elections

    In March 2016, Mizeur announced her endorsement of Chris Van Hollen over Donna Edwards for U.S. Senate. In a Baltimore Sun article, she stated, "there is a huge difference between the candidates seeking to replace U.S Senator Barbara Mikulski, and Chris Van Hollen wins by a landslide."

    2014 gubernatorial election

    Mizeur was a candidate in Maryland's 2014 gubernatorial election. Reverend Delman Coates was her running mate. Mizeur has co-sponsored a bill to legalize, tax and regulate marijuana in Maryland. On January 31, 2014 she received the support of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. She has also received the endorsements of the Maryland National Organization for Women, the Sierra Club, and the Women's Campaign Fund.

    References

    Heather Mizeur Wikipedia