Amy Handlin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Assemblywoman Amy Handlin
Assemblywoman Amy Handlin

Amy Handlin born January 28, 1956) is an American Republican Party politician, who serves in the New Jersey General Assembly, where she represents the 13th legislative district, having taken office on January 10, 2006. Handlin was elected to the Assembly on November 8, 2005, filling the seat of fellow Republican Joseph Azzolina whom she defeated in the GOP primary.

Handlin was elected to the Monmouth County Board of Chosen Freeholders in 1989 and re-elected in 1992, 1995, 1998, 2001 and 2004. Previously, she served as Deputy Mayor and Township Committeewoman in Middletown Township.

Dr. Handlin is a former Commissioner on the New Jersey State Commission on Higher Education and Chair of Monmouth County's Communities Against Tobacco Coalition. Named 2003 Elected Official of the Year by the Northern Monmouth Chamber of Commerce, she has also been honored by the American Cancer Society of New Jersey, Prevention First, 180:Turning Lives Around and many other public health organizations for her work to reduce teen smoking. Dr. Handlin has also served on the boards of the New Jersey League of Women Voters and the American Association of University Women, among others. She is a past recipient of the Legislative Award of the New Jersey Environmental Federation, the Humanitarian Award of Brandeis University Women, the Rose and Scroll Award of the New Jersey Association of Women Business Owners, and numerous other citations for civic leadership. Dr. Handlin, the author of Whatever Happened to the Year of the Woman? Why Women Still Aren't Making It to the Top in Politics, has also been a columnist for the New Jersey Reporter, a public-affairs magazine.

A founding member and former Chair of the Monmouth County Advisory Commission on Women, Dr. Handlin is a member of the national board of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs and Vice President of Community Relations for the Jewish Federation of Greater Monmouth County. A past Chair of the Central Jersey Israel EXPO, she has also co-chaired the United Jewish Communities' Northeast Leadership Conference.

She is currently Associate Professor of Marketing at Monmouth University and a former Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Public Issues. Dr. Handlin is a graduate of Harvard University, holds an MBA from Columbia University and a Ph.D. in Marketing from New York University. Handlin resides in Middletown Township, where she lives with husband David, son Daniel and daughter Rebecca.

[edit] District 13

Each of the forty districts in the New Jersey Legislature has one representative in the New Jersey Senate and two members in the New Jersey General Assembly. The other representatives from the 13th Legislative District for the 2006-2008 session are:

[edit] External links

Current members of the New Jersey General Assembly
This box: view  talk  edit

1: Albano (D), Van Drew (D)
2: Blee (R), Whelan (D)
3: Burzichelli (D), Fisher (D)
4: Mayer (D), Moriarty (D)
5: Perez (D), Roberts (D)
6: Greenwald (D), Lampitt (D)
7: Conaway (D), Conners (D)
8: Bodine (R), Chatzidakis (R)
9: Connors (R), Rumpf (R)
10: Holzapfel (R), Wolfe (R)

11: Corodemus (R), Kean (R)
12: Beck (R), Panter (D)
13: Handlin (R), Thompson (R)
14: Baroni (R), Greenstein (D)
15: Gusciora (D), Watson Coleman (D)
16: Bateman (R), Biondi (R)
17: Chivukula (D), Egan (D)
18: Barnes (D), Diegnan (D)
19: Vas (D), Wisniewski (D)
20: Cohen (D), Cryan (D)

21: Bramnick (R), Munoz (R)
22: Green (D), Stender (D)
23: Doherty (R), Karrow (R)
24: Gregg (R), McHose (R)
25: Carroll (R), Merkt (R)
26: DeCroce (R), Pennacchio (R)
27: Hackett (D), McKeon (D)
28: Stanley (D), Truitt (D)
29: Caraballo (D), Payne (D)
30: Dancer (R), Malone (R)

31: Epps, Jr. (D), Manzo (D)
32: Prieto (D), Quigley (D)
33: Vega (D), Stack (D)
34: Giblin (D), Oliver (D)
35: Pou (D), Steele (D)
36: Scalera (D), Schaer (D)
37: Johnson (D), Huttle (D)
38: Gordon (D), Voss (D)
39: Rooney (R), Vandervalk (R)
40: O'Toole (R), Russo (R)

Democrat (49 seats) | Republican (31 seats)