Norine Hammond

American politician
Norine Hammond
Member of the
Illinois House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
December 14, 2010 (2010-December-14)
Preceded byRichard P. Myers
Constituency94th district (2023-present)
93rd district (2013-2023)
94th district (2010-2013)
Personal details
Political partyRepublican
SpouseLeonard Hammond
Children1
Residence(s)Macomb, Illinois, U.S.[1]
Alma materWestern Illinois University
ProfessionPolitician

Norine K. Hammond is a Republican member of the Illinois House of Representatives. She has served since her appointment in December 2010 to replace the late Rich Myers. Hammond represents the 94th district, located in western Illinois, which contains all or parts of Fulton, Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, and Warren counties.[2]

Early life and career

In 1999, she became a legislative aide to Richard P. Myers and would serve in that capacity until his death. She was a trustee for Emmet Township from 2004 to 2006 and was township supervisor from 2006 until her appointment to the Illinois House. She also served for a time on the Macomb Planning Commission.[3]

Illinois House of Representatives

On December 1, 2010, Republican incumbent Rich Myers died from prostate cancer creating a vacancy in the Illinois House.[4] The Republican Representative Committee of the 94th Representative District appointed Hammond to the subsequent vacancy for the remainder of the 96th General Assembly. Hammond was sworn into office on December 14, 2010.[1] In her first term, she was assigned to the following House committees: Aging; Agriculture & Conservation; Appropriations—Higher Education; Consumer Protection; Higher Education; and Human Services.[3]

In the 2011 decennial reapportionment, Hammond was drawn into the 93rd district which included all or parts of Galesburg, Macomb, Mount Sterling, Rushville, Havana and Abingdon.[5] In the 2022 Illinois House of Representatives election, Hammond was elected in the 94th district. Due to redistricting, the 93rd district was won by Travis Weaver.[6]

Committee assignments

As of July 3, 2022, Representative Hammond is a member of the following Illinois House committees:[7]

  • Appropriations - Higher Education Committee (HAPI)
  • Consumer Protection Committee (HCON)
  • Financial Protection Subcommittee (HCON-FINA)
  • Higher Education Committee (HHED)
  • Human Services Committee (HHSV)
  • Product Safety Subcommittee (HCON-PROD)
  • Public Benefits Subcommittee (HHSV-PUBX)
  • Public Utilities Committee (HPUB)
  • Telecom/Video Subcommittee (HPUB-TVID)

References

  1. ^ a b Mahoney, Mark (Chief Clerk of the House) (December 6, 2010). "Certificate of Appointment" (PDF). Journal of the Illinois House of Representatives. 96 (155). Springfield, Illinois: Illinois House of Representatives: 3–5. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  2. ^ "Maps of Districts of the Illinois House of Representatives (2023-2033)". Illinois State Board of Elections. July 16, 2022. p. 94. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  3. ^ a b Miller, David R. (ed.). "Biographies of New House Members" (PDF). First Reading. 26 (2). Springfield, Illinois: Illinois General Assembly Research Unit: 4. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  4. ^ Wilson, Doug. "State Rep. Rich Myers dies at age 62 after battle with prostate cancer". Quincy Herald-Whig. Archived from the original on April 8, 2024. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  5. ^ Veeneman, Drew. "93rd House District" (PDF). precinctmaps.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 8, 2012. Retrieved 2013-07-29.
  6. ^ Dalton, Alex. "Travis Weaver tops incumbent Mark Luft to win GOP primary for 93rd Illinois House District". Peoria Journal Star. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  7. ^ "Illinois General Assembly - Representative Committees". ilga.gov. Retrieved 2022-07-03.

External links

  • Representative Norine Hammond (R) 93rd District at the Illinois General Assembly
    • By session: 98th, 97th, 96th
  • State Representative Norine Hammond constituency site
  • Profile at Vote Smart
  • v
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  • e
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. Vacant
  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)