Gibson C. Armstrong
Gibson C. Armstrong | |
---|---|
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from the 100th district | |
In office July 20, 2002[1] – November 30, 2006[2] | |
Preceded by | John Barley |
Succeeded by | Bryan Cutler |
Personal details | |
Born | North Carolina |
Political party | Republican |
Gibson C. Armstrong served as a Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for the 100 District.[3] His first campaign was against 18-year incumbent John E. Barley who resigned rather than face Armstrong in a primary election.[4] As a result, he was elected in a special election on July 16, 2002 to fill Barley's unexpired term.
While in office he held statewide policy hearings on higher education reform, spoke at national policy conferences and on regional talk radio, hosted statewide TV programming, and, after the tragic slaying of Amish students in his district, went on Glenn Beck to tell the encroaching national media to "back off!"
Armstrong founded and ran the Renewable Energy Caucus, the legislature’s largest policy caucus, to educate colleagues on clean energy policy issues. Additionally, he spoke at state political and energy conferences.
As a member of the powerful Appropriations Committee, each year he exercised oversight of hundreds of programs and thousands of line items in PA's $25 billion budgets.
As the Aviation Subcommittee Chairman on the Transportation Committee, he was handpicked by chairman to stop $20 million Aviation Trust Fund from losing $1 million annually.
While serving on the Aging and Older Adult Services Committee, he discovered a funding formula error that netted local seniors and senior services hundreds of thousands of dollars in added annual benefits.
He worked closely with the Secretary of Environmental Protection to found the PA Energy Development Authority, and was then appointed Chairman of Technology Committee and subsequently Board Secretary. The committee reviewed and approved $300+ million for advanced energy projects. He remains active on the authority.
He left office in 2006 and was succeeded by Bryan Cutler.[5]
Committees and Policy Caucuses
- Aging and Older Adult Services
- Appropriations
- Environmental Resources and Energy
- Renewable Energy Caucus (Chairman)
- Transportation (Aviation Subcommittee Chairman)
- Veterans and Emergency Preparedness (Secretary)
Education
Armstrong attended Millersville University and was admitted on his third application to the US Naval Academy's Class of 1991. At "Navy," he majored in political science and minored in Chinese and engineering. He earned his "jump wings" at the US Army Airborne School in Ft. Benning, GA following plebe (freshman) year. He rowed crew for three years, stroking the second boat and rowing in some of the shells built by George Pocock, made famous to the rest of the world by The Boys in the Boat by Daniel Brown. Additionally he served as the vice president of Officer's Christian Fellowship and was awarded a Cox Language Scholarship to study Chinese for a summer in Taiwan. Following graduation he married Sharon Barnett.
Military Service
Armstrong was commissioned a second lieutenant at graduation and served as a Marine officer. He was awarded the warrant for major before leaving active duty in 2000. His tours of duty included:
Security Officer, Mogadishu, Somalia (3rd Battalion, 11th Marines). While in Somalia he led teams on day and night combat patrols, managed translation and civil affairs teams.
Fire Direction Officer, Twenty-Nine Palms, CA (3rd Battalion, 11th Marines). He led as many as 50 Marines while in charge of his battery's motor pool and controlled the fire of up to 6 howitzers during numerous extended field operations in the California desert.
Executive Officer, Patuxent River Naval Air Station, MD. He was responsible for daily operations of an 80-Marine unit responsible to protect national security communication assets.
CSSD-39 Rapid Deployment Unit Commander, Okinawa, Japan. Armstrong was tasked with forming up a brand-new rapid deployment unit, Combat Service Support Detachement 39. By the time he turned over the unit to its next commander, it was capable of deploying globally with over 150 combat-ready Marines and with over half a dozen cargo aircraft carrying support equipment.
Deputy Comptroller, 3rd FFSG, Okinawa, Japan. In charge of daily operations for 3rd Force Service Support Group's $60 million (inflation-adjusted) logistics budget, he supported the logistical needs nearly two dozen units in Hawaii, Korea, Japan and Australia.
Military Awards, Clearances
- Top Secret Clearance
- Combat Action Ribbon
- National Defence Service Medal
- Sea Service Deployment Ribbon (2)
- Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal
- Armed Forced Expeditionary Medal
- Expert Shooter, Rifle
- Expert Shooter, Pistol
Schools and Professional Training
- The Basic School (Quantico, VA)
- US Army Artillery School (Ft. Still, OK)
- US Naval Gunfire School (San Diego, CA)
- US Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Center (Bridgeport, CA)
- US Naval War College National Securities Diploma (non-resident program, New Port, RI)
- US Marine Corps Security and Counter-Terrorism School (Chesapeake, VA)
- US Marine Corps Financial Management School (Camp Lejeune, NC)
- US Air Force Air University Professional Military Comptroller School (Maxwell Air Force Base)
Post-Political Career
After leaving office, he worked in the energy sector. Most notably, he spent several years at start-up BlueStar Energy Solutions where he held key leadership positions at the senior level. He was instrumental in helping grow the company until it was acquired by Fortune 200 utility, American Electric Power.
He is currently a principal at STR Resource and Associates (www.str-resource.com). STR focuses on helping company leaders improve their bottom line by solving operational problems and improving efficiencies.
References
- ↑ "SESSION OF 2002 - 186TH OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY - No. 58" (PDF). Legislative Journal. Pennsylvania House of Representatives. 2002-07-30.
- ↑ Per Article II, Section 2 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, the legislative session ended on November 30, 2006
- ↑ http://www.house.state.pa.us/BMC/Bios/PDF/973.PDF
- ↑ "2002 Special Election for the 100th Legislative District". Commonwealth of PA - Elections Information. Pennsylvania Department of State. 2004. Retrieved 2008-11-20.
- ↑ "2006 General Primary - Representative in the General Assembly". Commonwealth of PA - Elections Information. Pennsylvania Department of State. 2004. Retrieved 2008-11-20.
External links
- Pennsylvania House of Representatives - Gibson C. Armstrong official PA House website (archived)
- Pennsylvania House Republican Caucus - Representative Gibson C. Armstrong official Party website
- Follow the Money - Gibson C. Armstrong