Jan Faiks

Janice O. "Jan" Faiks (November 17, 1945 – April 10, 2017) was an American politician.

Faiks was born at Mitchel Air Force Base in New York and attended Choctawhatchee High School. She studied math at Florida State University and earned a master's degree in counseling psychology from University of Alaska Anchorage. She taught in the Anchorage School District from 1968-78 and served two terms in the Alaska Senate, from 1982–90, including as its first female president in 1987 and 1988. She was one of the key legislators who created the Constitutional Budget Reserve (CBR), a savings fund for surplus tax revenues to be utilized in leaner periods.

After losing the Republican primary in 1990, she moved to Washington D.C. with her husband, Lloyd Jones, also a former Alaska state Senator. She earned a degree from the Georgetown Law Center. Faiks lobbied for PhRMA, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, retiring in 2013.[1]

Death

In 2016, she was diagnosed with brain cancer. She died in Amelia Island, Florida, where she and her husband had relocated, on April 10, 2017. She was 71 years old.[2][3]

gollark: Okay, fine, hold on while I pull up the PotatoBIOS source.
gollark: I could probably add a "force no _G setting" mode to potatOS, but everything would break.
gollark: There was that one time I built a well-hidden rootkit which would randomly edit local variables using debug in programs.
gollark: CC also has debug and bytecode, which are !!FUN!!.
gollark: I mostly work around that by making my programs store vast amounts of state on disk. Which they should do anyway in case of e.g. power failure.

References

  1. Rosen, Yereth (April 10, 2017). "Jan Faiks, first woman to preside over Alaska state Senate, has died". Alaska Dispatch News. Retrieved April 11, 2017.
  2. "100 Years of Alaska's Legislature: Jan Faiks". Alaska Legislature. Retrieved April 10, 2017.
  3. "Former Alaska Senate President Jan Faiks Dies in Florida". US News and World Report. Associated Press. April 10, 2017. Archived from the original on April 10, 2017. Retrieved April 10, 2017 via Kansas City Star.


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