Phyllis Erickson
Phyllis Erickson (Democrat) represented
[the 2nd] district comprising portions of Pierce
and Thurston Counties in the House of
Representatives. Elected in 1972, she served
for five terms.
Born 1923, in Texas, Erickson studied at
the University of Utah and received her B.A.
and Master's degrees in Social Work.
She passed away, November
27, 2013
Erickson first ran for office in 1961, after
several years of volunteer community work,
and won election to the Franklin-Pierce
County school board. She served as
chairwoman and member of the board for six
years. During that time she joined the League
of Women Voters, and in 1967 became their
State Legislative Chairwoman.
An experienced lobbyist for open
government, Erickson knew she would make
a good legislator. Issue-oriented, rather than
party-oriented, Erickson chose to campaign
as a Democrat because she tended to vote
Democratic, though her husband was a
Republican precinct committeeman. Among
the issues she advocated in her campaign
were: Public Disclosure, the automatic
redistricting commission, tax reform and the
ERA.
Representative Erickson resigned in
1981 to successfully run for a position on the
Pierce County Council. It [wa]s her belief that the
participation of women in legislative
decision-making ... made closed-door,
smoke-filled room, power struggles less
frequent. She and her husband, Jack, had
four children.
--Political Pioneers, The Women Lawmakers