Eileen S. Naughton | |
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Member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives from the 32nd (pre-2003) & 21st (since 2003) district |
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Incumbent | |
Assumed office January 5, 1993 |
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Preceded by | Michael McEntee (D-32) |
Personal details | |
Born | December 29, 1945 Providence, RI |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Dr. William C. Naughton, D.D.S |
Children | Christine H. Barrington, M.P.A., J.D., Dr. William S. Naughton, D.P.M |
Residence | Warwick, R.I. |
Alma mater | Annhurst College |
Profession | Consultant |
Website | http://www.eileennaughton.com/ |
Eileen Slattery Naughton, is an American consultant and politician from Warwick, Rhode Island. A Democrat, she serves in the Rhode Island House of Representatives, representing the 21st district, which contains the neighborhoods of Conimicut, Hoxsie, and parts of Hillsgrove, including the T.F. Green Airport. She was first elected to the House of Representatives November 3, 1992 and was most recently reelected on November 2, 2010 for a tenth term.
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Eileen S. Naughton was born in Providence, Rhode Island on 29 December 1945. She attended St. Mary Academy - Bay View in the Riverside neighborhood of East Providence, Rhode Island before attending Annhurst College in South Woodstock, Connecticut graduating with a BA degree in 1967. She earned a law degree from the Southern New England School of Law. Naughton has been active in her community in various capacities, serving on the Board of Directors for: Warwick Chamber of Commerce, the Warwick Historical Society, the Warwick Arts Foundation, the Gaspee Days Committee, the Conimicut Village Association, the Ocean State Lyric Opera, TechACCESS, and the Ocean State Business Development Corporation.[1] Naughton and her husband William C. Naughton reside in the Conimicut neighborhood of Warwick at the historic Lockwood Brook Farm, where they raise heritage breed livestock and poultry. She has two children, Christine and William, and six grandchildren.
Naughton was first elected to the House of Representatives 2 November 1992 from District 32, defeating incumbent Michael McEntee in the Democratic primary and Republican Arthur F. Chapman by a margin of 73% to 27% in the general election.[2] Upon downsizing of the House of Representatives from 100 to 75 members in the 2002 election, Naughton ran unopposed and was elected to the 21st District.[3] Naughton was most recently reelected on 2 November 2010 defeating Moderate Party challenger Richard L. Lavallee by a margin of 62.1% to 37.9%, winning in all seven of her precincts.[4]
Beginning in January 1993, Naughton served on the Judiciary committee with a four-year tenure on that committee. She has been serving on the Finance Committee since 1997, and was selected to serve as the chairperson of the Subcommittee on Health and the Environment in 2005. Additionally in 2005, she was selected as a Council of State Governments Henry Toll Fellow, and was appointed as chairperson of the Rules Committee.
In addition to being a long-standing member of the Environment & Natural Resources Committee, Naughton has served on a number of committees and commissions focusing on natural resources and environmental issues. Between 1997 and 2004, she was appointed to serve as a Legislative Commissioner on the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, and as a member of the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council.[5] She served as chairperson of the Legislative Commission on Aquaculture Development (1995–1998),[6] chairperson of the Legislative Commission to Develop and Coordinate a Collaborative Effort to Formulate a Restoration Plan for the North Cape Barge Oil Spill (1999),[7] and chairperson of the Narragansett Bay Trust Study Commission (2003–2004).[8]
She also has served on the Rhode Island Commission on Women,[9] the RI Agricultural Lands Preservation Commission [10] and the RI Economic Policy Council.[11]
Naughton has also engaged in health care policy issues, serving since 2006 as chairperson of a legislative commission to study blood banking of umbilical cord blood in support of adult stem cell research.[12] Since 2008, she has been engaged in national health care policy issues by serving on the Director's Council of Public Representatives for the National Institutes of Health.[13]
During the 2009-10 session of the Rhode Island House of Representatives she serves as the Chairperson of the Rules Committee, Chairperson of the Health and Environment Subcommittee of the Finance Committee, as well as serving on the Environment and Natural Resources, and Labor Committees.[14]
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