Spencer Swalm

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Preceded byLauri Clapp
Succeeded byJack Tate
SpouseMarleen[1]
Spencer Swalm
Member of the Colorado House of Representatives
from the 37th district
In office
January 10, 2007  January 7, 2015
Preceded byLauri Clapp
Succeeded byJack Tate
Personal details
PartyRepublican
SpouseMarleen[1]
ProfessionInsurance broker
Websitehttp://www.spencerswalm.com/

Spencer Swalm is a former legislator in Colorado. First elected to the Colorado House of Representatives as a Republican in 2006, Swalm represented House District 37, which encompasses most of the city of Centennial, Colorado.[2] Term limited, he did not run for re-election in 2014, so his term ended in January 2015.[3]

Born in Colorado,[1] Swalm attended Colorado College before transferring to the University of Colorado Boulder, graduating with a bachelor's degree in history[4] in 1975.[5] He then earned a J.D. from the University of Denver in 1979.[5]

After practicing law for over a decade,[5] specializing in estate planning,[4] Swalm entered the employee benefits and health insurance business in 1990 as a partner in Redstone Benefit Systems. He has served as the chair of the legislative committee of the Colorado State Association of Health Underwriters.[5]

In the early 1980s, Swalm began writing op-ed pieces opposing government transportation subsidies and joined the Independence Institute, a Colorado free-market think tank, eventually becoming a senior fellow.[4] He opposed the 2004 tax measure funding the FasTracks light rail expansion.[6] He has also served on the board of the Colorado Council on Economic Education. Politically, Swalm has been a member of the Colorado Republican Business Coalition, the Centennial Republican Forum, the Arapahoe County Republican Men's Club, and was treasurer for the Sixth Congressional District Republican Committee.[4]

Swalm is married; he and his wife, Marleen, have three children:[1] Byron, Lauren, and Jocelyn.[7] Swalm has taught Sunday school and served on the missions committee of his church, Grace Chapel, and has taken several missionary trips to the Amazon Basin in Bolivia.[5]

Political career

References

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