Susan Garrett

Susan Garrett is a former Democratic member of the Illinois Senate, who represented the 29th District from 2003 to 2013, and the 59th district of the Illinois House of Representatives for four years previously.[1] The 29th district includes all or parts of Bannockburn, Deerfield, Des Plaines, Fort Sheridan, Glencoe, Glenview, Highland Park, Highwood, Knollwood, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mount Prospect, Niles, Northbrook, Park Ridge, Prospect Heights and Riverwoods.

Susan Garrett
Garrett with Governor Pat Quinn
Member of the Illinois Senate
from the 29th district
In office
2003–2013
Preceded byKathy Parker
Succeeded byJulie Morrison
Member of the Illinois House of Representatives
from the 59th district
In office
1999–2003
Preceded byMary Beattie
Personal details
Born (1950-02-11) February 11, 1950
Lake Forest, Illinois
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Scott Garrett
ResidenceLake Forest, Illinois

Redistricting by Democratic legislators following the 2000 census made veteran Republican senator Kathy Parker, vulnerable, and Garrett won the seat in 2002.[2] While in the Illinois House, Garret proposed to limit campaign contributions from government employees to politicians for whom they worked, as well as from special interests, and upon election to the state Senate, she was named vice chair of the Government Ethics Reform Committee.[3] In July 2011, Garrett announced she would not seek re-election to the state senate in 2012.

Personal background

Garrett lives in Lake Forest with her husband, Scott. They have two adult children, Brett and Elizabeth. Garrett received her bachelor's degree in Political Science from Lake Forest College in 1994, and worked as a marketing consultant before becoming a full-time legislator.[4]

gollark: Speaking of that, did you know the E-ink Kindle devices actually run a weird Linux distribution which is *also* very insecure?
gollark: I *honestly* think I could probably do a better job, although maybe they somehow can't fit security or sane programming into the resource-constrained environment.
gollark: It's got a `ps` command, which apparently just passes on whatever you pass it to the shell (???) so you can do `ps ; sh` and, well, get root access.
gollark: I've got an unused ADSL routermodemboxthing which you could get a root shell on with a really trivial exploit in its telnet interface (because of course it has that).
gollark: I wouldn't really trust that for anything sensitive, since routery things tend to be *horribly* insecure.

References


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