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Mary Wendy Roberts

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Preceded by
  
Bill Stevenson

Name
  
Mary Roberts

Succeeded by
  
Jack Roberts

Role
  
American Politician

Nationality
  
American

Party
  
Democratic Party

Political party
  
Democratic


Born
  
December 19, 1944 (age 79) (
1944-12-19
)

Alma mater
  
University of Oregon University of Colorado Boulder University of Wisconsin–Madison

Education
  
University of Colorado Boulder, University of Oregon, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Mary Wendy Roberts (born December 19, 1944) is an American politician from the U.S. state of Oregon.

Contents

A fifth-generation Oregonian, she was the youngest woman, at 27, ever elected to the Oregon Legislative Assembly. She was elected to the Oregon State Senate in 1974. In 1978, at 33, she became the first woman Democrat to win Oregon statewide office, serving for 16 years as Oregon Commissioner of Labor, the chief executive of the state agency that enforces the state civil rights and wage-hour laws, and oversees apprenticeship programs. She was the first woman to be elected to such a position, traditionally held by men, in the United States.

She is a member of the Roberts political family of Oregon, based in Portland.

Early life and career

The first child of Oregon politician Frank L. Roberts and his first wife Mary Louise, Roberts attended Portland grade schools and graduated from West Linn High School in Clackamas County in 1962. She attended the University of Oregon as an Honors College student, earning a BA degree in political science in December 1965. She studied at the Chinese-Japanese Language Institute, University of Colorado Boulder on a full fellowship. She received her MA degree in political science from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Roberts worked as a caseworker with the State Public Welfare Department in Portland and then as a counselor for the Multnomah County juvenile court.

Legislative career

Roberts was elected in 1972 to the Oregon House of Representatives and was appointed in her freshman term to the Joint Ways and Means Committee which controlled the state's budget. She was elected to a term in the Oregon State Senate in 1974. Her legislative achievements included: 1) The repeal of the Tip-Credit law, thus ending the practice of employers counting employees tips to reduce their obligation to pay the state minimum wage, 2) The Natural Death Act which enabled a person to file a “living will” to make binding their wishes on end of life decisions, including prohibiting artificial means to extend life (even though, brain dead, for example). 3) The ban on discrimination on the basis of pregnancy in employment. 4) The Independent Living Subsidy Act, for continued support for teenagers leaving out-of-home placements, such as foster care, transitioning them for independent living if in full-time school or employment and 5) create, site and fund the state's first secure mental health facility exclusively for children and teens, separate from adult institutions.

In the Senate Roberts was one of only three women, the most who had ever served there at once. She noted that it was very much a "men's club" but that the women worked to raise the consciousness of their colleagues. In recognition of Roberts' earnest feminism, the Senate President Jason Boe presented her with one of New York Congresswoman and feminist icon Bella Abzug's famous hats, autographed, and presented with Senate proclamation in front of the entire Senate. Her colleagues on the Ways and Means committee joined her in ridding civil service of job classifications under which males were paid more for performing the same duties as women.

Oregon Commissioner of Labor

Roberts was elected Oregon Commissioner of Labor in 1978 and reelected in 1982, 1986 and 1990. She wrote the law in 1985 creating the first Wage Security Fund in the United States. It guaranteed workers up to $4,000 of owed wages left jobless by business closures. She sponsored the Oregon Family Medical Leave Act, which guaranteed up to 12 weeks job-protected leave to workers—to allow time off for illness, injury or death of a family member. In 1989, she fought for passage of parental leave, enforced by the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. Roberts’ final orders on parental leave cases were upheld by the Oregon Supreme Court on appeal, firmly established case law. Roberts testified on the act in the United States Congress—and the federal act was patterned in part on the state law. When President George H. W. Bush twice vetoed the national bill, Roberts was often quoted in The New York Times, which also published her op-ed column on the subject. Roberts was in the advisory committee to the United States Department of Labor for shaping the national act and it was the first one signed by President Bill Clinton when he took office in 1993.

Roberts was an early champion of civil rights protections, on the basis of sexual orientation, winning state awards for leadership. She worked against abuses of migrant labor, getting legislation passed to address needs for better inspection of farm labor camps, civil rights protections, and more housing. Other awards came from Hispanic, human resources and women’s rights groups.

Roberts was a member of international delegations: the United States Department of Labor delegation to the International Conference on Innovations in Apprenticeship in Paris, the United States delegation to China, 1980 and 2000, sponsored by the American Council of Young Political Leaders, at the behest of the United States State Department—and a school-to-work apprenticeship program in Germany, which she created, in partnership with the state of Upper Saxony. She was a speaker at President Jimmy Carter’s re-election kickoff dinner and at the 1980 Democratic National Convention. Roberts was president of the National Association of Government Labor Officials and of the National Apprenticeship Program Board. She was profiled in the 1983 book Images of Oregon Women, by Ellen Nichols. Roberts ran for Oregon Secretary of State in 1992, and lost to incumbent Democrat Phil Keisling.

Two years later, in 1994, Mary Wendy Roberts was defeated for Labor Commissioner by Republican Jack Roberts, no relation.

Post-elective career

After elective office, Roberts managed real estate investments, operated a health and personal development business with her husband, and worked as a consultant to law firms on wage/hour and civil rights law. Roberts helped found and served on the Board of Directors of Green Village Schools (www.greenvillageschools.org), a nonprofit that built and funded primary schools (for boys and girls) in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. She has given speeches to help raise money for breast cancer exams for low-income women.

Personal life

Roberts married Richard Prentice Bullock in November 1976, had one child, Alexandra, born in 1980, while she was in office as Oregon Commissioner of Labor, but divorced her first husband in 1984. She married Edward E. “Rhett” Simpson in December 1994. She battled breast cancer in 2002.

The Roberts political family of Oregon

A number of Oregon state legislators and statewide officeholders in the last half of the 20th century bore the surname Roberts, including Mary Wendy Roberts. Based in Portland, they started with Frank L. Roberts and either were his spouses or children, or the spouses of clan members.

The abundance of people with the Roberts name was often confusing to the public and media. Those related to Frank Roberts were liberal Democrats, but one, Mary Wendy Roberts, was defeated in a statewide office by a Republican opponent named Roberts (Jack Roberts, who was not related. Here is a list of the related family members:

  • Frank Livezey Roberts (1915–1993) Oregon House 1967–71. Oregon Senate, 1975–93. Married three times. Married 2) Betty Roberts, 3) Barbara Roberts.
  • Betty Roberts (1923–2011) Oregon House, 1965–69. Oregon Senate, 1969–77. Judge, Oregon Court of Appeals, 1977–82. Associate Justice, Oregon Supreme Court, 1982–86. Candidate for Governor of Oregon, 1974. Democratic nominee for United States Senate, 1974
  • Keith Skelton (1918–1995) Oregon House, 1957–73. Husband (#3) of Betty Roberts, 1968 til his death.
  • Barbara Roberts (born 1936) Oregon House, 1981–85. Oregon Secretary of State, 1985–91. 34th Governor of Oregon, 1991–95. Married to Frank Roberts, 1974 until his death.
  • Mary Wendy Roberts (born 1944) Oregon House, 1973–75. Oregon Senate, 1975–79. Oregon Commissioner of Labor, 1979–95. Candidate for Oregon Secretary of State 1992. First daughter of Frank Roberts and Mary Louise Roberts.
  • Richard Bullock (born 1951) Oregon Senate, 1979–1982. Husband of Mary Wendy Roberts, 1976–84.
  • Leslie Roberts (born 1948) Second daughter of Frank Roberts and Mary Louise Roberts. Multnomah County circuit court judge, 2007 to present.
  • Rex Armstrong Oregon Court of Appeals Judge, 1994–present. Married Leslie Roberts in 1984.
  • References

    Mary Wendy Roberts Wikipedia