Michael O. Moore

Michael O. Moore (born January 17, 1963) is an American politician from Millbury, Massachusetts, who serves as the Massachusetts state senator for the Second Worcester District. The district comprises the senator's hometown of Millbury, as well as seven other communities including parts of the city of Worcester. He is member of the Democratic Party who has served in the Massachusetts Legislature since January 7, 2009.[1]

Michael Moore
Moore in 2020
Member of the Massachusetts Senate
from the 2nd Worcester district
Assumed office
January 7, 2009
Preceded byGuy Glodis
Personal details
Born
Michael O. Moore

(1963-01-17) January 17, 1963
Millbury, Massachusetts
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Ellyn Moore
Children2
EducationQuinsigamond Community College (BA)
Western New England College (MCJ)
Signature
WebsiteOfficial website

Education

Michael Moore is a graduate of Millbury Memorial High School, Quinsigamond Community College and Western New England College. He holds a master's degree in criminal justice from Western New England College.[2]

Early career

Born and raised in the town of Millbury, Michael Moore devoted his entire adult life to public service. A graduate of the Waltham Police Academy, he began his 22-year law enforcement career as a Massachusetts Environmental Police officer, eventually becoming an investigator in the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office.[3]

In 2005, he was appointed Assistant Deputy Superintendent at the Worcester County Sheriff’s office, where he oversaw the Community Service Program, inmate reintegration program, and senior citizen community outreach safety programs.[4] Under his leadership, the Sheriff's Office created the Worcester County TRIAD senior citizen program, working to identify and address senior citizen safety concerns in individual towns throughout the county with programs that include house numbering, 911 Cell Phone Bank, Beacon of Light, File for Life, and many more.[5] Michael Moore was also responsible for development of the Area Law Enforcement Response Transmission (ALERT) program, which sends a daily email out to law enforcement officials on recently released inmates, and the Responsible Fatherhood Initiative, a Department of Revenue sponsored program that confirms parenthood of inmates to reduce welfare fraud.[6] The Community Service Program saved Worcester County cities and towns over $3.8 million in labor costs.[7]

Elected to the Millbury Board of Selectmen in 2001, Senator Moore served three terms improving the quality of life in the town where he grew up.[8] In 2004, during his tenure on the board, The Shoppes at Blackstone Valley, the largest economic development project in Millbury history, opened, expanding the town's commercial tax base by approximately $1 million annually.[9] He was overwhelmingly re-elected to the Board of Selectmen in 2004 and 2007.[10]

Legislative career

Michael Moore was elected to represent the people of the Second Worcester District in the Massachusetts Senate in November 2008, earning 60% of the vote.[11]

During his first term, Senator Moore chaired the Joint Committee on Community Development and Small Businesses, overseeing legislation to protect the Commonwealth's small and family-owned businesses.[12] Moore also served as Vice Chair of the Joint Committee on Elder Affairs, and sat on the Joint Committee on Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture, the Senate Committee on Bonding, Capital Expenditures, and State Assets, and the Senate Committee on Post Audit and Oversight.[13]

Moore speaks on the Massachusetts Senate floor, in 2015

Senator Moore also serves on various boards and legislative advisory committees advocating for issues such as higher education, Central Massachusetts or issues of statewide importance for the. Currently, he serves on the Advisory Board for the Dr. Lillian R. Goodman Department of Nursing at Worcester State University, is a member of the Massachusetts Workforce Investment Board, acting-Senate Chairman of the Central Massachusetts Legislative Caucus, a member of the Biotech Caucus and a member of the Manufacturing Caucus. Moore is also a vice-Chair of the Council of State Governments' Eastern Regional Conference's Education Committee. He also serves as the Co-Chairman of the Council of State Governments' Intergovernmental Affairs Committee and Chair of the Council of State Governments' Eastern Region Education Committee. He is a member of the New England Board of Higher Education Legislative Advisory Committee and serves on the Council of State Governments' Federalism Task Force[14] and is a member of the Council of State Governments' International Committee.[15]

Towns represented

Senator Moore represents the Second Worcester District, comprising eight communities in Central Massachusetts. The district includes the towns of Auburn, Grafton, Leicester, Millbury, Shrewsbury, Upton, precincts 2 and 4 in Northbridge, and wards 5-7 and precincts 1 and 5 in ward 8 of the city of Worcester.[16]

Current committee membership

Senator Moore serves on nine legislative committees in the Massachusetts Legislature.

  • Joint Committee on Higher Education (Chair)
  • Joint Committee on Public Safety and Homeland Security (Vice Chair)
  • Senate Committee on Ways and Means
  • Joint Committee on Ways and Means
  • Joint Committee on Labor and Workforce Development
  • Senate Committee on Intergovernmental Affairs
  • Senate Committee on Post Audit and Oversight
  • Senate Committee on Bonding, Capital Expenditures and State Assets
  • Special Senate Committee on Opioid Addition Prevention, Treatment and Recovery Options
gollark: That sounds mean.
gollark: People just jump to the flashy idea of stock markets without even considering why you might want them.
gollark: There's not really such a thing as a business independent from its main owner, accounting, or even particularly formalized loans.
gollark: We don't have any of the rest of the economic infrastructure for it because nobody cares.
gollark: This will not work. It has repeatedly not worked. Would you like to know why?

See also

References

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