Misplaced Pages

Pat Garofalo

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 184.8.174.54 (talk) at 05:25, 10 March 2014. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 05:25, 10 March 2014 by 184.8.174.54 (talk)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Pat Garofalo
Member of the Minnesota House of Representatives
from the 58B district
36B (2005–2013)
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 4, 2005
Preceded bySteve Strachan
Personal details
Born1971 (age 53–54)
Saint Paul, Minnesota
Political partyRepublican Party of Minnesota
SpouseJulie
ChildrenAlex and Abby
ResidenceFarmington, Minnesota
Alma materMankato State University (B.S.)
Occupationnetwork engineer, legislator.Dumbass

Patrick Lee "Pat" Garofalo is a Minnesota politician and member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Republican Party of Minnesota, he represents District 58B, which includes portions of Dakota and Goodhue counties in the southeastern Twin Cities metropolitan area.

Education

Garofalo graduated from Rosemount High School in Rosemount in 1989, then went on to Mankato State University in Mankato, earning his B.S. in law enforcement in 1994.

Minnesota House of Representatives

Garofalo was first elected in 2004 and has been re-elected every two years since then. He served as Chairman of the Education Finance Committee from 2011 to 2012. Garofalo was the chief author of the alternative teacher licensure bill, signed into law by Governor Mark Dayton on March 7, 2011. Garofalo also chief authored early education scholarships, vouchers for low income families in K-12 schools, and "Walker-like" collective bargaining reforms. Most recently, he has been a vocal critic of Democratic Party proposals to require solar mandates, unionize home daycare businesses, and allow illegal immigrants to receive instate tuition.


Personal life

Garofalo and his family live in Farmington. He is a network engineer who works on computer infrastructure and IP telephony systems. He was the technology coordinator for Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty's first campaign in 2002.

References

  1. ^ "Garofalo, Patrick "Pat"". Legislators Past & Present. Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved March 27, 2013.

External links

Members of the Minnesota House of Representatives
93rd Minnesota Legislature (2023–2025)
Speaker
Melissa Hortman (DFL)
Majority Leader
Jamie Long (DFL)
Minority Leader
Lisa Demuth (R)
1A. ▌John Burkel (R) B. ▌Deb Kiel (R) 2A. ▌Matt Grossell (R) B. ▌Matt Bliss (R) 3A. ▌Roger Skraba (R) B. ▌Natalie Zeleznikar (R) 4A. ▌Heather Keeler (DFL) B. ▌Jim Joy (R) 5A. ▌Krista Knudsen (R) B. ▌Mike Wiener (R) 6A. ▌Ben Davis (R) B. ▌Josh Heintzeman (R) 7A. ▌Spencer Igo (R) B. ▌Dave Lislegard (DFL) 8A. ▌Vacant B. ▌Alicia Kozlowski (DFL) 9A. ▌Jeff Backer (R) B. ▌Tom Murphy (R) 10A. ▌Ron Kresha (R) B. ▌Isaac Schultz (R) 11A. ▌Jeff Dotseth (R) B. ▌Nathan Nelson (R) 12A. ▌Paul Anderson (R) B. ▌Mary Franson (R) 13A. ▌Lisa Demuth (R) B. ▌Tim O'Driscoll (R) 14A. ▌Bernie Perryman (R) B. ▌Dan Wolgamott (DFL) 15A. ▌Chris Swedzinski (R) B. ▌Paul Torkelson (R) 16A. ▌Dean Urdahl (R) B. ▌Dave Baker (R) 17A. ▌Dawn Gillman (R) B. ▌Bobbie Harder (R) 18A. ▌Jeff Brand (DFL) B. ▌Luke Frederick (DFL) 19A. ▌Brian Daniels (R) B. ▌John Petersburg (R) 20A. ▌Pam Altendorf (R) B. ▌Steven Jacob (R) 21A. ▌Joe Schomacker (R) B. ▌Marj Fogelman (R) 22A. ▌Bjorn Olson (R) B. ▌Brian Pfarr (R) 23A. ▌Peggy Bennett (R) B. ▌Patricia Mueller (R) 24A. ▌Duane Quam (R) B. ▌Tina Liebling (DFL) 25A. ▌Kim Hicks (DFL) B. ▌Andy Smith (DFL) 26A. ▌Gene Pelowski (DFL) B. ▌Greg Davids (R) 27A. ▌Shane Mekeland (R) B. ▌Bryan Lawrence (R) 28A. ▌Brian Johnson (R) B. ▌Anne Neu Brindley (R) 29A. ▌Joe McDonald (R) B. ▌Marion O'Neill (R) 30A. ▌Walter Hudson (R) B. ▌Paul Novotny (R) 31A. ▌Harry Niska (R) B. ▌Peggy Scott (R) 32A. ▌Nolan West (R) B. ▌Matt Norris (DFL) 33A. ▌Patti Anderson (R) B. ▌Josiah Hill (DFL) 34A. ▌Danny Nadeau (R) B. ▌Melissa Hortman (DFL) 35A. ▌Zack Stephenson (DFL) B. ▌Jerry Newton (DFL) 36A. ▌Elliott Engen (R) B. ▌Brion Curran (DFL) 37A. ▌Kristin Robbins (R) B. ▌Kristin Bahner (DFL) 38A. ▌Michael Nelson (DFL) B. ▌Samantha Vang (DFL) 39A. ▌Erin Koegel (DFL) B. ▌Sandra Feist (DFL) 40A. ▌Kelly Moller (DFL) B. ▌Jamie Becker-Finn (DFL) 41A. ▌Mark Wiens (R) B. ▌Shane Hudella (R) 42A. ▌Ned Carroll (DFL) B. ▌Ginny Klevorn (DFL) 43A. ▌Cedrick Frazier (DFL) B. ▌Mike Freiberg (DFL) 44A. ▌Peter Fischer (DFL) B. ▌Leon Lillie (DFL) 45A. ▌Andrew Myers (R) B. ▌Patty Acomb (DFL) 46A. ▌Larry Kraft (DFL) B. ▌Cheryl Youakim (DFL) 47A. ▌Amanda Hemmingsen-Jaeger (DFL) B. ▌Ethan Cha (DFL) 48A. ▌Jim Nash (R) B. ▌Lucy Rehm (DFL) 49A. ▌Laurie Pryor (DFL) B. ▌Carlie Kotyza-Witthuhn (DFL) 50A. ▌Vacant B. ▌Steve Elkins (DFL) 51A. ▌Michael Howard (DFL) B. ▌Nathan Coulter (DFL) 52A. ▌Liz Reyer (DFL) B. ▌Bianca Virnig (DFL) 53A. ▌Mary Frances Clardy (DFL) B. ▌Rick Hansen (DFL) 54A. ▌Brad Tabke (DFL) B. ▌Ben Bakeberg (R) 55A. ▌Jessica Hanson (DFL) B. ▌Kaela Berg (DFL) 56A. ▌Robert Bierman (DFL) B. ▌John Huot (DFL) 57A. ▌Jon Koznick (R) B. ▌Jeff Witte (R) 58A. ▌Kristi Pursell (DFL) B. ▌Vacant 59A. ▌Fue Lee (DFL) B. ▌Esther Agbaje (DFL) 60A. ▌Sydney Jordan (DFL) B. ▌Mohamud Noor (DFL) 61A. ▌Frank Hornstein (DFL) B. ▌Jamie Long (DFL) 62A. ▌Aisha Gomez (DFL) B. ▌Hodan Hassan (DFL) 63A. ▌Samantha Sencer-Mura (DFL) B. ▌Emma Greenman (DFL) 64A. ▌Kaohly Her (DFL) B. ▌Dave Pinto (DFL) 65A. ▌Samakab Hussein (DFL) B. ▌María Isa Pérez-Vega (DFL) 66A. ▌Leigh Finke (DFL) B. ▌Athena Hollins (DFL) 67A. ▌Liz Lee (DFL) B. ▌Jay Xiong (DFL)

Template:Persondata

Categories: