A
MEMORIAL
EXPRESSING THE CONDOLENCE OF THE HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES UPON THE PASSING OF HAROLD JOSEPH "DOC" WEILER.
WHEREAS, Harold Joseph
"Doc" Weiler, one of the state's best-known and longest-working
lobbyists, died at the age of eighty-six; and
WHEREAS, Doc Weiler was born in
Burlington, Wisconsin, earned a bachelor's degree from St. Mary's college in
Minnesota and received a law degree from Marquette university in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin; and
WHEREAS, he served as a United
States navy pilot in World War II and returned to Burlington to practice law
for sixteen years; and
WHEREAS, he moved to New Mexico
in 1960 and became executive director of the association for commerce and
industry, where he remained for seventeen years; and
WHEREAS, Doc then began working
as a lobbyist and was registered as the lobbyist for Phelps Dodge and Ruidoso
Downs; and
WHEREAS, at the capitol, he was
described as possessing a voice that a Shakespearean actor or radio evangelist
would covet; and
WHEREAS, Doc helped get the
personal property tax on inventory held for retail repealed, crusaded for
worker's compensation reform, helped to defeat mandatory collective bargaining
for public employees, and helped to pass the In-Plant Training Act, the
Pollution Control Revenue Bond Act, the industrial revenue bond acts, seat belt
legislation and unemployment compensation reform; and
WHEREAS, of the role of the
lobbyist, Doc said, "I think we serve an extremely useful purpose as a
resource", and, regarding his personal approach, observed, "What I
attempt to do and always have done is to express good, concrete reasons why a
bill should be adopted or amended or killed based on information"; and
WHEREAS, Ernie Mills,
Albuquerque journalist, said, "He represented all the good things we look
at in a lobbyist: honesty, integrity and credibility"; and
WHEREAS, he was known as Santa
Fe's great legislative compromiser and saw bills as people instead of as legal
writing, believing legislation was alive because it affected lives;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED
BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that condolences be
expressed on the passing of Harold Joseph "Doc" Weiler, one of the
state's best-known lobbyists, and that Doc be recognized for his many years of
service to the state of New Mexico; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a
copy of this memorial be transmitted to Doc's wife, Lena Weiler.