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GOV. CHRIS GREGOIRE continued She has continued to target investments in
education, expand health care coverage to those most in need and worked to
create family-wage jobs. Governor Gregoire introduced and won approval in
2005 for a landmark transportation package to create jobs and address
critical challenges with our roads and bridges. She established a dedicated
fund to reduce class sizes, helped increase enrollments at our colleges and
universities, and protected vital social services for the state’s most
vulnerable individuals and families.
Governor Gregoire’s hands-on approach has led
to an unprecedented agreement among the insurance industry, medical
profession and others to break the impasse on medical malpractice. She also
helped broker an agreement among multiple parties to create water storage
management programs for the Columbia River, ending a 25-year stalemate that
benefits farmers, industrial users and local communities.
Governor Gregoire has not stopped working to
make Washington even better. Building on her successes, she has made it
clear there is still work to do. She continues to work to make government
more efficient; lead the way to reduce health care costs and ensure that all
Washington children have health insurance by 2010; and create a seamless,
world-class education system from pre-school through graduate school.
Governor Gregoire’s hard work in Olympia is
an extension of her lifetime of service to the people of Washington.
Prior to serving as governor, Governor
Gregoire served three terms as Attorney General — the first woman to be
elected to the position in Washington. She worked tirelessly on children’s
issues and led a statewide program that resulted in a comprehensive reform
of the state’s juvenile system. She worked to pass a tough new ethics law
for state government and to find alternatives to litigation in resolving
legal disputes. And, after the landmark tobacco settlements, Gregoire was
named the most influential attorney general in the country by the Campaign
for Tobacco-free Kids.
As Attorney General, Gregoire also led the
effort to protect privacy and combat identity theft. She led a legislative
effort to strengthen identity theft victims’ rights — a law that now helps
prosecute identity thieves and makes it easier for victims to restore their
good names.
In the wake of the Enron scandal, Gregoire
led the effort to recoup $97.5 million lost by Washingtonians in Enron
bonds. Gregoire investigated Enron and other companies engaged in illegal
business practices in the Western power market. And she investigated and
sued drug companies for violating antitrust laws by illegally manipulating
the price and availability of prescription drugs.
While director of the Washington Department
of Ecology, Gregoire negotiated the safe cleanup and permanent storage of
radioactive waste at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. The site is heralded
as the largest environmental cleanup project in the world.
Chris O’Grady was raised in Auburn,
Washington, by her mother, who worked as a cook to support the family. She
rode horses, picked blueberries and learned the value of hard work and a
good education. After graduating from Auburn High School, Chris entered the
University of Washington. She graduated with a teaching certificate and
Bachelor of Arts degree in speech and sociology. She met her husband, Mike,
in September 1971 when they both worked for the Washington Department of
Social and Health Services. Chris received her law degree in 1977 from
Gonzaga University.
Chris and Mike have two daughters, Courtney
and Michelle. Courtney is an attorney and Michelle just graduated from
college with a major in environmental science.
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