Joy Marshall (revisited)
November 2004: The daughter of a Unitarian minister
in Birmingham, Michigan, Joy Marshall grew up walking picket lines. "By
age six or seven, I was aware of social issues," she recalls, "civil
rights, women's rights, and farm worker issues." After college at the
University of Michigan, Marshall spent three years teaching middle
school in Chicago, "the hardest job in the world!" Only later, when she
was waiting tables, did she find her calling. "God sent me a labor
organizer, Barbara Lewis," she explains. "I found what I was meant to
do: fight for economic justice." Her first paid political work was
Mayor Harold Washington's reelection campaign. She spent three years
with Citizen Action/Illinois in Chicago, then moved to Eugene in 1990
and worked three years with Oregon Fair Share before taking a break to
care for daughters Maggie and Claire. "I still worked part-time on
campaigns," she notes. "Raising the minimum wage in '96 was the
proudest moment of my life." Marshall returned to full-time work in
2001, and now serves as director of Oregon Stand for Children
(www.stand.org), credited with successful school-funding campaigns in
Eugene and Portland this year.
2018 update: Marshall is currently Lane County
Director of Stand for Children. "The main thing I'm working on is
raising high school graduation rates by providing career and technical
education," she says. "Kids who take those classes graduate 15 points
higher." Stand for Children was the principal sponsor of Oregon Ballot
Measure 98, expanding career technical education, college-level
education opportunities, and dropout-prevention strategies in schools,
that was approved by two-thirds of voters in 2016. "Our guiding
principle is always serving the kids," she says, "giving them concrete
skills to get a job out of high school, or helping them see
possibilities."
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 13 December 2018
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