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On the Science
Committee, Congressman Gordon has served as the Ranking member on
both the Technology Subcommittee (1995-96) and the Space
Subcommittee (1997-2002). In 2003, Mr. Gordon assumed the senior
Democratic post on the Full Committee.
He is best known for
his work on issues related to NASA, including leading the call for
an independent investigation of the Columbia disaster, pushing the
agency on its financial management and cost estimating practices,
and working to ensure that NASA addresses its workforce and
infrastructure needs in a credible fashion.
He has also been
involved in electronic authentication standards issues and has been
very active in efforts to fully fund both the intramural and
extramural programs at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology. Currently, he has a bill under consideration by the
Science Committee to establish methamphetamine health-based clean-up
guidelines through the work of NIST and the EPA.
In addition to his
position as Ranking Member on the Science Committee, Congressman
Gordon also serves on the powerful House Energy and Commerce
Committee. He serves on two subcommittees in Energy and Commerce –
Health, and Telecommunications and the Internet.
Just last year
Congressman Gordon was able to pass into law a teen suicide
prevention measure dubbed the Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act. It
established a grant program designed to help states and local
organizations bolster their intervention and prevention programs.
Also last year the
congressman’s Sports Agent Responsibility and Trust Act was passed
into law. It prohibits sports agents from bribing or misleading
student-athletes into signing away their eligibility to play college
sports.
In 1990, Congressman
Gordon initiated a wide-ranging investigation into the federal
student aid system. He authored and helped pass a number of
far-reaching reforms that saved taxpayers more than $6 billion and
made financial aid more accessible to low- and middle-income
students.
Furthermore, the
Congress passed Gordon’s proposal to ban awarding Pell Grants to
prison inmates, which cost taxpayers between $70 million to $200
million a year and took money away from traditional students.
One of Congressman
Gordon’s highest priorities is making sure parents have the tools
they need to control the information their children can access
through TV, by telephone and on the Internet. Congressman
Gordon authored
legislation protecting citizens from fraudulent 1-900 and 1-800
telephone numbers.
Gordon was the first
member of the Tennessee congressional delegation to oppose a
temporary waste dump for the nation’s nuclear waste to be located in
Tennessee. He has stood up to three presidents who wanted to place a
nuclear waste storage site in Tennessee and continues to fight
proposals to put nuclear waste in Tennessee.
Educated in
Rutherford County public schools, Gordon graduated with honors from
Middle Tennessee State University in 1971. He served in the Army
Reserves from 1971-1972 and received an honorable discharge in 1972.
Gordon went on to receive his law degree from the University of
Tennessee in Knoxville. The Murfreesboro lawmaker is married to
Leslie Peyton Gordon, and the two have a daughter, Peyton Margaret
Gordon.
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