CONGRESSMAN NORM DICKS
6th District - Washington State

BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION

NORM DICKS, a native of Bremerton, Washington, was first elected to Congress in November 1976. Educated in Bremerton-area elementary and secondary schools, Rep. Dicks was graduated from the University of Washington in 1963. He received his Juris Doctor degree from the University of Washington School of Law in 1968 and later that year joined the staff of Senator Warren G. Magnuson. He served as Legislative Assistant until 1973, when he became the Senator's Administrative Assistant. He resigned from that post in early 1976 to begin what was a successful campaign for Congress in Washington State's 6th Congressional District, and he has been re-elected in every election since that time.

IN CONGRESS
Having received a rare first-term appointment to the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. Dicks currently serves as a senior member of that Committee. He is a member of three key Appropriations Subcommittees – Defense, Interior and Military Construction – which are all related to the interests of Washington State.  In the 108th Congress he serves as the Ranking Democratic Member of the Interior Appropriations Subcommittee which places him in a leadership position on federal environmental and natural resource policies as well as Indian Affairs.  At the outset of this session of Congress, Rep. Dicks was also appointed the Select Committee on Homeland Security, and he currently serves as a member of two Subcommittees:  Infrastructure & Border Security and Intelligence & Counterterrorism.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
Rep. Dicks has been an influential moderate Member of Congress on defense and national security issues. During the 1980's he was involved in all of the major arms control debates in Congress, and was appointed to serve as an official observer to the US-Soviet arms reduction talks because of his expertise. His familiarity with highly classified defense programs led to his appointment in 1990 to the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, on which he served for eight years. From 1995 through 1998, he served as the ranking Democratic Member of the House Intelligence Committee, and in 1998 was named the Ranking Democrat on a special Select Committee investigating technology transfer to China. Rep. Dicks was awarded the CIA Director’s Medal, among other honors, upon completion of his service on the Intelligence Committee in late 1998.

The Environment has always been a high priority for Rep. Dicks, who has served on the Interior Appropriations Subcommittee during his entire tenure in Congress. In 1984 he was responsible for a key addition – the Clearwater area– to the Washington Wilderness bill and he has consistently succeeded in funding other critical additions to National Parks and roadless areas in Washington State. In the late 1980s and early 1990s he was involved in the regional effort to develop a response to the listing of the Northern Spotted Owl, which resulted in reductions of timber harvesting on federal lands. During the Clinton-Gore Administration, he worked with all of the relevant federal agencies to assemble a program of federal assistance to affected forest workers and timber communities, which has totaled more than $1.2 billion in the past six years and which continues today.   He also worked with the Clinton-Gore Administration to bring federal assistance to the west coast states to address the listings of threatened salmon runs.  Perhaps his biggest environmental achievement came in September, 2000, as Rep. Dicks wrote a landmark bill that created a new federal lands conservation trust.  The doubling the nation's commitment to preserving threatened parklands and protecting wildlife over a six year period.  

At home, he has been known as an aggressive champion of economic development funds for local communities, and he was successful in bringing Urban Development Action Grants and other federal programs to spur the revitalization of downtown Tacoma and to re-develop the waterfront areas of Bremerton. He launched the effort to restore Tacoma’s Union Station by turning it into a federal courthouse, and was a major advocate for locating a branch campus of the University of Washington in downtown Tacoma. Rep. Dicks was also the instigator of a landmark land claims settlement, as he led the effort to resolve land claims made by the Puyallup Tribe that were clouding titles to important port, industrial and residential property in Pierce County. After years of negotiations, the settlement agreement was reached and Rep. Dicks introduced the legislation which authorized and appropriated the federal share of the settlement. In Bremerton, has worked with the Navy and the local community to build new housing and to create incentives for improving the existing housing stock. He co-chaired an effort to preserve and restore the Admiral Theatre, and is currently supporting the concept of a downtown/waterfront retail development that will boost the city’s tax base and improve the quality of life for Navy personnel stationed at Bremerton. Rep. Dicks’ amendment to a highway reauthorization bill created a separate federal program for ferry system funding, which has provided for the start of a new fast ferry run from Bremerton-to-Seattle.

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS
Rep. Dicks currently serves on the Congressional Advisory Council of the Henry M. Jackson Foundation and on the Board of Advisors of the National Bureau of Asian ResearchHe is a member of the Washington State Bar and District of Columbia Bar, and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. In Washington State, he serves as an honorary member of Rotary and Kiwanis clubs in his district, and as a member of the Puget Sound Naval Bases Association.

PERSONAL
Born December 16, 1940, Rep. Dicks is married to the former Suzanne Callison. They have two children, David and Ryan.

THE SIXTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
The Sixth Congressional District extends
from Tacoma, 30 miles south of Seattle, across the Tacoma Narrows to Kitsap, Mason, Jefferson and Clallam Counties, encompassing most of the Olympic Peninsula and the western coast of Washington State. It includes downtown and North Tacoma, Gig Harbor, Port Orchard, Bremerton, Port Townsend, Sequim, Port Angeles, Forks, Aberdeen, Hoquiam, Montesano and Shelton.  Tacoma has a thriving Port district, and international trade is an important economic force in the port cities of Hoquiam, Aberdeen and Port Angeles.  Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, located in Bremerton, is the largest employer in Kitsap County.  The 6th District has a large military presence, bordered by McChord Air Force Base and Fort Lewis, and including the Naval Shipyard and Naval Station in Bremerton.  It also contains a large Coast Guard presence, including search and rescue stations, an air station, and a number of Coast Guard cutters.   One of the environmental highlights of the 6th District is Olympic National Park, which annually ranks near the top of the National Park System in visitor attendance.  

 

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