Pubdate: Fri, 4 Apr 2008 Source: Superior Daily Telegram (WI) Contact: 2008 Forum Communications Co. Website: http://www.superiortelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3505 Author: Shelley Nelson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) BOYLE WON'T RUN AGAIN State Rep. Frank Boyle, D-Summit, announced this morning that he won't be seeking re-election in the fall. Boyle has served as the 73rd District Assemblyman for the last 22 years. "It has been a tremendous run, and I have enjoyed it immensely," Boyle wrote in a prepared statement. "But the time has come for me to retire and enjoy each and every day with my family." Boyle was known by many as a political maverick -- a straight shooter who didn't mince words and didn't change his position just because he traveled from Superior to the state's Capitol. He was never afraid to take on the controversial issues in which he believed. He was among the founders of northern Wisconsin's annual grassroots "Superior Days" lobbying effort and helped organize the Wisconsin Coalition for Peace and Justice when the President George H.W. Bush went to war with Iraq. His first bill after taking office, based on an experiment taking place in Duluth, made arrest mandatory in cases of domestic abuse. But his proudest accomplishment in 22 years in office was the state's biodiversity bill, which redefined how state forests are use. Boyle stood firm on controversial issues, from medical marijuana to death with dignity and campaign finance reform. Failing to achieve campaign finance reform, he said, is among his biggest disappointments after watching how the people's business is now being auctioned to the highest bidder because of paid lobbyists. Leaving office is "a bittersweet decision," he said this morning. But he's making plans to spend time climbing mountains -- literally -- before his legs give out, collect shells along the Atlantic coastline and spending time with his family, including his granddaughter, Mary. "I didn't stay with him for 22 years because he's a jerk," Boyle's Madison assistant, Mary Lou Kelleher, said this morning. "He truly cared about people, and I think that's what I saw most in him. ... He preferred people just call him 'Frank.' He was down to earth, easy to talk with. He was always upfront about how he felt about things. It was common for me to tease him and tell him 'why don't you be a little more upfront with people.'" Kelleher said she considers Boyle a friend. Boyle gained a reputation for being the "flower man" at the state Capitol, Kelleher said. He would stop at the local farmer's market or a flower shop and come back with flowers he would pass out to men and women alike at their offices. "It's been a pleasure working with Frank Boyle," said Mayor Dave Ross, a Republican. "I have respected Frank because he plays no games, he doesn't have two messages," one for the district and one for Madison. "Frank has never not fulfilled a promise he's made when it comes to a number of issues," Ross said. While Ross and Boyle couldn't have differed more on core political views, and have had a number of differences of opinion, they worked together on a number of issues, including payday lending, a statewide smoking ban and Leah's Law. "He got it. He understood it. And fought hard for us in Madison to get Leah's Law as far as it has gotten," Ross said. The bill, a result of a grassroots effort by surviving friends and family of Superior murder victim Leah Gustafson, would create a violent offender registry similar to the similar one for sex offenders. In late February, the bill cleared the Assembly Committee for Criminal Justice. "Frank has been a real friend," Ross said. "I've enjoyed my relationship with him ... I'm going to miss Frank. He's a straight shooter." It's one of the things Kelleher said she is going to miss about Boyle when he steps down in January, following the next election. "I have enjoyed meeting and working with the people of the 73rd Assembly District," Boyle said. "While some of us didn't always agree, it is my hope that the citizens appreciated the fact that I was clear about my stance on the issues, rather than sitting on the proverbial political fence." "I'm proud of the issues I have taken on, whether those issues became law or simply needed to be discussed in the public arena," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake