Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
405-521-5774
For Immediate Release: May 5, 2008

Senator Kathleen Wilcoxson stands on her soapbox to address
her fellow members. The petite
lawmaker from District 45 in Oklahoma City was honored in the Senate
on Monday for her 12 years
of service in the Legislature. Wilcoxson is one of five senators
who are term-limited this year.
Sen. Wilcoxson Honored by State Senate
State Sen. Kathleen
Wilcoxson’s efforts to promote education reform and innovation
will long be remembered as her legacy in the Oklahoma Legislature.
Wilcoxson was honored by the State Senate on Monday. She is completing
her twelfth and final session in the Legislature due to term limits.
“At every step of the way, Senator Wilcoxson has fought
for Oklahoma’s children with a vision of creating an education
system that would help those children, and the generations to follow
have the greatest opportunities possible,” said Senate Co-President
Pro Tempore Glenn Coffee. “She has served her district and
our state with honor and dedication.”
The Oklahoma City Republican is a former Oklahoma City Teacher
of the Year, and is a Doctor of Education in Curriculum and Instruction.
In 1982, she was appointed by President Ronald Reagan to the National
Advisory Council on Adult Basic Education, and in 1996, she followed
in the footsteps of State Sen. Helen Cole, winning the District
45 seat.
“Helen Cole was my friend and my mentor, and I consider
myself truly blessed to have had her guidance and support,”
Wilcoxson said. “I do not know of a more intelligent, ethical
and compassionate public servant, and I am tremendously grateful
for the trust that Helen, my friends and family, and all the citizens
of District 45 placed in me when I first began this journey.”
Wilcoxson urged her fellow members to continue her efforts to
pass education reform—especially in promoting policy to improve
student achievement in math, reading and science, and to help increase
the numbers of students who complete high school.
“As a state, we should applaud our achievements, but we
must always be honest about our shortcomings—otherwise we
will never correct them and we will never move forward,” Wilcoxson
said. “We cannot be satisfied with the status quo—too
many children are falling between the cracks. When we acknowledge
that fact and truly embrace bold reforms that will result in excellence
in education, then we will see individual and collective success
and achievement we had never before imagined. It is a cause I have
been proud to advocate in the Senate, and one I will continue to
fight for in the years to come.”
Among the special guests attending Monday’s ceremony were
Wilcoxson’s husband, Lynden, and her daughter and son-in-law,
Stacy and Jeff Salem. Also attending were Alma Johnson, Don and
Sandy Johnson, David and Beth Johnson, Phyllis and Gene Williams,
Margie Galt, David Cole, Alana VanOver, Bert Gowdy, Lynden Wilcoxson,
Ralph and Janice Wilcoxson, Barbara Gowdy and many others.
The farewell ceremony concluded with a reception in the Senate
lounge.
For more information
contact:
Sen. Wilcoxson's Office: (405) 521-5618

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