Rick Dancer | |
---|---|
Born | Hillsboro, Oregon, USA | June 30, 1959
Education | Pacific University |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, politician |
Notable credit | KEZI anchor |
Spouse | Kathy |
Children | 2 |
Website | http://rickdancer.com/ |
Rick Dancer (born June 29, 1959) is an American journalist and politician in the state of Oregon. Born in the city of Hillsboro, he was a longtime anchor for KEZI television in Eugene. Among his other activities as anchor, he covered the Thurston High School shooting. He later left broadcasting to run as a Republican for Oregon Secretary of State, losing in the general election to Democrat Kate Brown in 2008.
Rick Dancer was born on June 29, 1959, to Roy and Betty Dancer in Hillsboro, Oregon. [1] [2] [3] He grew up there with three sisters and lived in Hillsboro for his first 24 years, [3] graduating from Hillsboro High School in 1977. [4] In high school he worked for the local Copeland Lumber store before attending college at Pacific University in neighboring Forest Grove. [3] Dancer graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in communications from Pacific in 1983. [3] In Hillsboro, he married Kathy at the United Methodist Church that same year, and they had two sons, Jess and Jake. [3] [5]
After college Dancer moved to the southern Oregon Coast in 1985 and was a reporter in Coquille and Coos Bay at KCBY. [4] [6] [7] Dancer then moved to Eugene, Oregon, in 1987 and worked as a television reporter for KVAL-TV. [6] [7] After a few years he moved to KEZI in 1989, the ABC affiliate in Eugene and continued as a reporter until becoming an anchor a year later. [8] [9] In 1998, he was one of the first reporters to arrive at Thurston High School in Springfield after the shooting spree by Kip Kinkel. [2] [10] While covering the story he started to cry while on camera, which angered him, but led to additional interviews with students as they felt he cared about the students. [2] In February 2008, he announced he was leaving KEZI in order to run for public office. [9]
The day after leaving television, he official started his campaign for Oregon Secretary of State as a Republican. [9] He won the primary unopposed and then faced Democratic state senator Kate Brown in the fall election. [1] His campaign focused on advocating for converting the Secretary of State position into a non-partisan position, and also supported Ballot Measure 65 that would have created an open primary system. [11] He ran on the premise of being an outsider having never been in office before, while Brown touted her experience in public office. [8]
Dancer raised around $365,000 in his campaign through late October, compared to around $750,000 for Brown. [12] The biggest of his contributions came from timber companies. [12] Dancer pulled within six percentage points in polling in late October. [11] Brown won the November general election defeating Dancer and Pacific Green Party candidate Seth Woolley. [13] Dancer garnered 785,740 votes compared to 873,968 for Brown. [14] Dancer was mentioned as a possible candidate to run for the Republican nomination for Governor of Oregon in 2010. [15]
Dancer is part of a group of filmmakers who began production in 2010 on a documentary film about former U.S. Senator Mark O. Hatfield. [16] [17]
Mark Odom Hatfield was an American politician and educator from the state of Oregon. A Republican, he served eight years as Governor of Oregon, followed by 30 years as one of its United States senators, including time as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee. A native Oregonian, he served in the United States Navy in the Pacific Theater during World War II after graduating from Willamette University. After the war he earned a graduate degree from Stanford University before returning to Oregon and Willamette as a professor.
David B. "Dave" Frohnmayer was an American attorney, politician, and academic administrator from Oregon. He was the 15th president of the University of Oregon, serving from 1994 to 2009. His tenure as president was the second-longest after John Wesley Johnson. He was the first native Oregonian to run the University of Oregon. Frohnmayer previously served as Oregon Attorney General from 1981 to 1991, and subsequently served as dean at the University of Oregon School of Law before serving as president of the university. He served in an "of counsel" attorney role with the Oregon law firm, Harrang Long Gary Rudnick P.C.
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Hillsboro High School is a public high school in Hillsboro, Oregon, United States, and is the oldest high school in the Hillsboro School District. The current campus was built beginning in 1969. Prior to this, the first campus opened in 1913 at 3rd Avenue and Grant Street; the second campus, built in 1928, was located downtown at 6th Avenue and Lincoln Street, where J.B. Thomas Middle School stood until 2009. Currently 1,195 students attend the school in grades 9–12. The official school colors are blue and white with red and black as accents, and the mascot is the Spartan.
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The Independent Party of Oregon (IPO) is a centrist political party in the U.S. state of Oregon with more than 140,000 registrants since its inception in January 2007. The IPO is Oregon's third-largest political party and the first political party other than the Democratic Party and Republican Party to be recognized by the state of Oregon as a major political party.
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