Bill Fink Explained

William Fink
State Senate:Iowa
District:45th
Term Start:January 11, 1993
Term End:January 12, 2003
Predecessor:James Riordan
Successor:David Miller
Birth Date:5 May 1955
Birth Place:Ringsted, Iowa
Residence:Carlisle, Iowa
Party:Democratic
Spouse:Donna
Alma Mater:Iowa State University

William Fink (born May 5, 1955) is a former Iowa state senator. He also taught social studies for 36 years at Carlisle High School before retiring in 2015.[1]

Fink grew up in Ringsted, Iowa, and graduated from high school there in 1973. He then spent four years in Ames, Iowa, attending Iowa State University, graduating in 1977 with a B.S. in political science while also earning a teaching certificate. Following college, he became an intern within the Iowa Senate and began teaching social studies.[1] He later earned an M.S.E. in education from Drake University in 1984.

In 1982, he ran for the Iowa House as a Democrat, but was unsuccessful. He tried again in 1988, but did not succeed then either. In 1992, he attempted to enter the Iowa Senate instead of the House. This time, he won both the primary and the general election, and proceeded to spend the next 10 years as a state senator with the Democratic Party.[2] Among his accomplishments within the senate was the establishment of wind generators as a major source of electrical power within the state.[1] In 2001, he criticized an attempt by the Iowa legislature to make Iowa the first state in the country to base its salaries for public school teachers on their performances in the classroom, calling it "...tragic and misdirected" and saying he felt teachers themselves had been allowed too little input.[3]

Following his career as senator, Fink returned to teaching at the high school level, where he remained for the next three decades.[1]

Fink is a Lutheran.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fink retires after 36 years in classroom. Paige Godden. 28 May 2015. Des Moines Register.
  2. Web site: State Senator. Iowa Legislative Services Agency. 16 October 2015.
  3. Web site: Senate OKs teacher pay revamping . Todd Dorman. 3 May 2001. Globe Gazette.
  4. Web site: Candidates focus on schools, economy. Tom Suk. Des Moines Register. 23. subscription.