Naomi Jakobsson

American politician
Naomi Jakobsson
Member of the Illinois House of Representatives
from the 103rd district
In office
January 2003 (2003-January) – January 2015 (2015-January)
Preceded byRick Winkel
Succeeded byCarol Ammons
Champaign County Recorder of Deeds
In office
December 1984 (1984-Dec) – December 1996 (1996-Dec)
Preceded byWilma Maloch
Succeeded byBarbara Frasca
Personal details
Born (1941-09-28) September 28, 1941 (age 82)
Somerville, New Jersey
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseEric
ChildrenEight Children
ResidenceUrbana, Illinois
Alma materUniversity of Illinois
ProfessionFull Time Legislator

Naomi D. Jakobsson (born September 28, 1941) was a Democratic member of the Illinois House of Representatives, who represented the 103rd District from 2003 to 2015. The 103rd District encompasses Urbana, and Champaign.[1][2]

Early life, education and career

Jakobsson earned her bachelor's degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1977 and went on to earn her master's degree in Teaching English as a Second Language in December 1979 from the same institution.[3] From 1979 to 1984 she worked as an English as a Second Language teacher for the Urbana School District.

Jakobsson began her public career in 1984, when she was elected Champaign County Recorder of Deeds. She would serve as Champaign County Recorder of Deeds from 1984 to 1996. From 1996 to 1998 she served as the executive director of A Woman's Fund, a domestic violence shelter, and from 1999 to 2002 she worked for the university YMCA and the university YWCA first as development officer and then as executive director.[4] As of 2002 Jakobsson served on the board of the Illinois Children's Home and Aid Society, as the Urbana Human Relations Commissioner, and on the board of the Champaign County Habitat for Humanity.[3]

Illinois General Assembly

Naomi was elected to represent the 103rd District in 2002.[4] Jakobsson chaired the House Human Services Committee. Additionally, she served on the House Committees for Higher Education, Adoption Reform, Appropriations - Elementary and Secondary Education, and Appropriations - Higher Education.[5] As a legislator Naomi has been active in sponsoring and supporting legislation that concerns the University of Illinois, the environment, and women's health.[6] She voted against HB 148.

Personal life

Naomi is married and is the mother of eight children, two by birth and six by adoption.[3] Her son, Garret, died due to frontotemporal dementia, a neurodegenerative disease, in 2013 aged 46. Jakobsson had been at vigil by his bedside when she received word that a poll of members of the Illinois House showed that she was needed to cast the decisive vote in Springfield on the marriage equality bill she had co-sponsored. Her husband drove her to Springfield to cast that vote. During her drive to Springfield one member shifted his position, so the measure actually passed by two votes. Garret died approximately fifteen minutes before her return to him.[7]

References

  1. ^ Illinois House District #103 Map
  2. ^ "The Voter's Self Defense System".
  3. ^ a b c Naomi's Background
  4. ^ a b Illinois House Democrats Naomi Jakobsson Homepage
  5. ^ Illinois House Democrats List of Committees
  6. ^ Illinois House Democrats List of Sponsored Bills
  7. ^ Dave McKinney (2013-11-06). "Tears of sadness, joy after same-sex marriage vote". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2013-11-07.

External links

  • Representative Naomi D. Jakobsson (D) 103rd District at the Illinois General Assembly
    • By session: 98th, 97th, 96th, 95th, 94th, 93rd
  • Naomi Jakobsson for State Representative
  • Profile at Vote Smart
  • Naomi D. Jakobsson at Illinois House Democrats
  • v
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103rd General Assembly (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Emanuel Chris Welch (D)
Majority Leader
Robyn Gabel (D)
Minority Leader
Tony McCombie (R)
  1. Aaron Ortiz (D)
  2. Elizabeth Hernandez (D)
  3. Eva-Dina Delgado (D)
  4. Lilian Jiménez (D)
  5. Kimberly du Buclet (D)
  6. Sonya Harper (D)
  7. Emanuel Chris Welch (D)
  8. La Shawn Ford (D)
  9. Yolonda Morris (D)
  10. Jawaharial Williams (D)
  11. Ann Williams (D)
  12. Margaret Croke (D)
  13. Hoan Huynh (D)
  14. Kelly Cassidy (D)
  15. Michael Kelly (D)
  16. Kevin Olickal (D)
  17. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz (D)
  18. Robyn Gabel (D)
  19. Lindsey LaPointe (D)
  20. Bradley Stephens (R)
  21. Abdelnasser Rashid (D)
  22. Angelica Guerrero-Cuellar (D)
  23. Edgar Gonzalez Jr. (D)
  24. Theresa Mah (D)
  25. Curtis Tarver (D)
  26. Kam Buckner (D)
  27. Justin Slaughter (D)
  28. Robert Rita (D)
  29. Thaddeus Jones (D)
  30. Will Davis (D)
  31. Mary E. Flowers (D)
  32. Cyril Nichols (D)
  33. Marcus C. Evans Jr. (D)
  34. Nicholas Smith (D)
  35. Mary Gill (D)
  36. Kelly M. Burke (D)
  37. Patrick Sheehan (R)
  38. Debbie Meyers-Martin (D)
  39. Will Guzzardi (D)
  40. Jaime Andrade Jr. (D)
  41. Janet Yang Rohr (D)
  42. Terra Costa Howard (D)
  43. Anna Moeller (D)
  44. Fred Crespo (D)
  45. Jenn Ladisch Douglass (D)
  46. Diane Blair-Sherlock (D)
  47. Amy Grant (R)
  48. Jennifer Sanalitro (R)
  49. Maura Hirschauer (D)
  50. Barbara Hernandez (D)
  51. Nabeela Syed (D)
  52. Martin McLaughlin (R)
  53. Nicolle Grasse (D)
  54. Mary Beth Canty (D)
  55. Marty Moylan (D)
  56. Michelle Mussman (D)
  57. Tracy Katz Muhl (D)
  58. Bob Morgan (D)
  59. Daniel Didech (D)
  60. Rita Mayfield (D)
  61. Joyce Mason (D)
  62. Laura Faver Dias (D)
  63. Steve Reick (R)
  64. Tom Weber (R)
  65. Dan Ugaste (R)
  66. Suzanne Ness (D)
  67. Maurice West (D)
  68. Dave Vella (D)
  69. Joe Sosnowski (R)
  70. Jeff Keicher (R)
  71. Daniel Swanson (R)
  72. Gregg Johnson (D)
  73. Ryan Spain (R)
  74. Bradley Fritts (R)
  75. Jed Davis (R)
  76. Lance Yednock (D)
  77. Norma Hernandez (D)
  78. Camille Lilly (D)
  79. Jackie Haas (R)
  80. Anthony DeLuca (D)
  81. Anne Stava-Murray (D)
  82. Nicole La Ha Zwiercan (R)
  83. Matt Hanson (D)
  84. Stephanie Kifowit (D)
  85. Dagmara Avelar (D)
  86. Lawrence M. Walsh Jr. (D)
  87. Bill Hauter (R)
  88. Dan Caulkins (R)
  89. Tony McCombie (R)
  90. John Cabello (R)
  91. Sharon Chung (D)
  92. Jehan Gordon-Booth (D)
  93. Travis Weaver (R)
  94. Norine Hammond (R)
  95. Michael Coffey (R)
  96. Sue Scherer (D)
  97. Harry Benton (D)
  98. Natalie Manley (D)
  99. Randy Frese (R)
  100. C. D. Davidsmeyer (R)
  101. Chris Miller (R)
  102. Adam Niemerg (R)
  103. Carol Ammons (D)
  104. Brandun Schweizer (R)
  105. Dennis Tipsword (R)
  106. Jason Bunting (R)
  107. Brad Halbrook (R)
  108. Wayne Rosenthal (R)
  109. Charles Meier (R)
  110. Blaine Wilhour (R)
  111. Amy Elik (R)
  112. Katie Stuart (D)
  113. Jay Hoffman (D)
  114. Kevin Schmidt (R)
  115. David Friess (R)
  116. Dave Severin (R)
  117. Patrick Windhorst (R)
  118. Paul Jacobs (R)