CARL CLINTON
OCCUPATION: Land Surveyor Manger (Deputy County Surveyor) – Clackamas County (11/93 to present)
OCCUPATIONAL BACKGROUND: Registered Professional Land Surveyor in Oregon and Washington; Chief of Surveys at Kampe Assoc., Inc. (5/87 to 11/93); Survey Dept. Manager at DeHaas and Assoc., Inc. (11/80 to 5/87); Project Land Surveyor at Compass Corp. (6/76 to 11/80)
EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND: School Board training and development averages about 50 contact hours per year; Oregon Institute of Technology – 1968 Associate Degree Highway Engineering; Centennial High School – Graduated 1965
PRIOR GOVERNMENTAL EXPERIENCE: David Douglas School Board (1999-Present) – Vice Chairman (2002-2003); David Douglas Board Committees: Citizen Advisory (1999-Present); Budget Committee (1996-Present); District Site Council (1999-2002); Bond Construction (1999-Present); Classified Negotiating (2001-2002); Clackamas County Committees: Year 2000 (Y2K); Technology Strategy; Imaging; Development Process Review; Gresham Annexation; New Building at Sunnybrook; Complete Communities
Incumbent David Douglas School Board Member.
• Did you know that School Board members are not paid?
• Did you know that the cost for each Voters Pamphlet submission is $100?
• Did you know that David Douglas will not cut any days this year?
Being a School Board Member is about participation, intense involvement, and making a serious commitment of personal time.
I ask for your vote, to continue to be a part of the solution for our children in the David Douglas District.
• Our children are the future of our community.
• Your School Board is the lead in protecting and improving the future of our children.
• I have the experience and personal commitment needed to continue to make the sound, considered, tough decisions that we must make.
Since elected, I have learned that to do the job right means spending time attending:
• Board meetings 50 hours (all hours are estimated per year)
• Agenda setting meetings 33 hours
• Committee meetings 52 hours
• School visitations 20 hours
• Training: 50 hours
(conferences and seminars by state and national associations)
(This information furnished by Carl Clinton)