Lisa Callan

Lisa Layton Callan (born April 3, 1970) is a Democratic member of the Washington House of Representatives representing the State's 5th House district for position 2.

Lisa Callan
Member of the Washington House of Representatives
from the 5th district
Assumed office
January 14, 2019
Preceded byPaul Graves
Personal details
Born (1970-04-03) April 3, 1970
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materNorthern Arizona University (B.Sc)
Position2

Career

Callan has a bachelor's degree from Northern Arizona University in mathematics and computer science. She worked as an engineer at Boeing and then as a software developer in the technology sector. She served on the Issaquah School Board.[1] [2]

Callan won the general election in November 2018 to a secure a seat in the Washington House of Representatives. She secured fifty-two percent of the vote while her closest rival, Republican Paul Graves, secured forty-eight percent.[3]

gollark: MPL?
gollark: There is also the "secondary processor exemption" thing, which caused the Librem people to waste a lot of time on having a spare processor on their SoC load a blob into the SoC memory controller from some not-user-accessible flash rather than just using the main CPU cores. This does not improve security because you still have the blob running with, you know, full control of RAM, yet RYF certification requires solutions like this.
gollark: It would be freer™, in my opinion, to have all the firmware distributed sanely via a package manager, and for the firmware to be controllable by users, than to have it entirely hidden away.
gollark: So you can have proprietary firmware for an Ethernet controller or bee apifier or whatever, but it's only okay if you deliberately stop the user from being able to read/write it.
gollark: No, it's how they're okay with things having proprietary firmware *but only if the user cannot interact with it*.

References

  1. "About Lisa – LISA CALLAN FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE". web.archive.org. 2018-12-18. Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  2. "lisacallan – LISA CALLAN FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE". Retrieved 2019-03-20.
  3. "Washington Election Results - Election Results 2018 - The New York Times". nytimes.com. Retrieved 16 November 2018.
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