Cylvia Hayes

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Cylvia Hayes
File:Cylvia Hayes in 2012.jpg
Cylvia Hayes in 2012
First Lady of Oregon
In office
January 10, 2011 – February 18, 2015
Governor John Kitzhaber
Preceded by Mary Oberst
Succeeded by Dan Little (as First Gentleman)
Personal details
Born Cylvia Lynne Johnson
(1967-08-10) August 10, 1967 (age 56)
Seattle, Washington[1]
Spouse(s) Todd Hayes (1984–1986)
Doug McCarthy (?–1996)[2]
Abraham B. Abraham (1997–2002)[3]
Domestic partner John Kitzhaber (2003–present)
Residence Bend, Oregon;
Portland, Oregon
Alma mater The Evergreen State College (B.S., M.E.S.)
Occupation CEO of 3EStrategies;
Consultant

Cylvia Lynne Hayes (née Johnson, born August 10, 1967),[1] an American consultant with a focus in sustainable economic development,[4] was First Lady of the state of Oregon and is the fiancée of former Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber. She is the founder and chief executive officer of 3EStrategies, a clean economy consulting firm.[5] During her time as First Lady, Hayes helped launch the Prosperity Initiative to reduce poverty in Oregon.[6] She was also an unsuccessful candidate for the Oregon House of Representatives in 2002, running against state representative Ben Westlund.[7] She is a member of the Democratic Party.[1]

In 2005, Hayes was honored as a Top 50 Leader in Oregon by Oregon Business Magazine, and in 2006, she was recognized as one of Cascade Business News' "40 under 40." She was also co-chair of the Oregon Renewable Energy Working Group, which developed clean energy standards for the state.[8]

In October 2014, Hayes began receiving increased public attention from ongoing media coverage prompted by articles from Willamette Week reporter Nigel Jaquiss[9][10][11] and The Oregonian.[12] The Oregonian followed up on those claims in December 2014 when the publication requested emails from Hayes’ personal email accounts relating to state business.[13] On her personal blog in October 2015, Hayes stated she turned over "every email" requested by federal investigators[14] and accused The Oregonian of using her emails to make false allegations and print misinformation.[15] Shortly before announcing his resignation in February 2015,[16] Kitzhaber made the announcement that Hayes would no longer be connected to the governorship in any way and would have no political or policy role during his fourth term.[17]

Early life and education

Cylvia Johnson was born in August 1967 in Seattle.[1][18] Her father, Orville Johnson, was the brother of her mother's first husband. The family lived near Carnation in King County, Washington and Hayes has described the home as a dilapidated shack with no running water or electricity.[19] At sixteen, Hayes moved out, stating, "alcoholism and mental illness took a real toll on my parents."[1] As a teenager and young adult, Hayes worked a variety of jobs including apple picking, catching fryer chickens, training horses, heavy equipment operation, dental assistant, plastic surgery assistant, and working for the King County public works department.[1][20]

She graduated from The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, with a bachelor's degree in 1994,[20][21][22] and with a master's degree in 1997.[23][24]

Hayes' late teens and early twenties are described as a difficult period in her life.[3] In 1997, Hayes entered into a “green card marriage” with an Ethiopian immigrant that ended in 2002.[3] In a statement in October 2014, Hayes admitted the “serious mistake” of this previously undisclosed arrangement.[3] Hayes admitted she had needed financial support and married for $5000, which she used to pay for a laptop and school expenses.[25]

While in a relationship from 1997 to 1998, Hayes and her then boyfriend placed a down payment on a property in Okanogan, Washington. In a statement in 2014 covered by Portland television station KOIN 6 News, Hayes admitted the couple planned to use the property for a marijuana grow operation that never materialized. Hayes left the relationship in April 1998 and moved to central Oregon in July of that year.[25]

Professional career

Hayes moved to Bend, Oregon, from Washington in summer 1998 and began a career in clean energy and sustainable economic development.[11][26] That year Hayes founded 3EStrategies, a Bend-based clean-economy consulting firm that grew out of the nonprofit organization she launched two years before, called Earth Connections.[27][28] As CEO of 3EStrategies, Hayes helped launched the Building Green Council, which is now a component of the Central Oregon Builders Association. The council was started to make it easier for people to build energy- and resource-efficient homes and commercial buildings, and bring together developers interested in promoting and learning more about green construction.[26][29] Hayes published and edited the Green + Solar Building Oregon magazine from 2004 to 2009, created with contributions from writers and photographers throughout the state.[26][30] She served as a member and co-chair of the Oregon Renewable Energy Working Group (REWG), which developed the state Renewable Energy Standard, Renewable Fuels Standard, and other clean energy policies.[20][28][31] Since 2012 Hayes has also worked as a professional writer, contributing to online news sources including The Huffington Post [32] and Grist.[33] In 2015 Hayes launched an independent blog which included a public statement about her appearances in the media that year, and in 2016 she joined Bend-based Issue Magazine as a staff journalist.[14][34]

Political career

Four years after she moved to Bend, Oregon, Hayes ran for the Oregon House of Representatives in District 53 against Ben Westlund, the Republican incumbent, as a Democrat.[11] She launched her campaign to win the Democratic nomination as a write-in candidate after what she described as a "filing deadline error" kept her from being listed on the ballot.[35] She changed her party registration from independent to Democratic in February 2002, shortly before announcing her candidacy, and she originally considered seeking a nomination from a minor party, such as the Pacific Green Party.[36] Hayes lost to Westlund in the November election, with 30.5% of the vote.[7] Hayes met then-outgoing Governor John Kitzhaber during the campaign.

First Lady

Hayes campaigned alongside Kitzhaber when he ran again for governor in 2010. After Kitzhaber was elected and sworn in, Hayes assumed many of the roles and responsibilities of First Lady.[37] Willamette Week described her in 2014 as playing a "central role" in the Kitzhaber administration, and she was described as a policy adviser to the governor on clean energy and economic development issues, fields where she had nonprofit and consulting experience prior to becoming first lady.[38]

During her time as first lady, Hayes worked on the Prosperity Initiative that aimed to reduce income inequality in Oregon.[6][39] In the 2011 legislative session, she supported the centerpiece of Kitzhaber’s economic agenda, Cool Schools energy retrofit program, and also lobbied the Legislature on poverty issues. In the same year, Hayes was named to a seven-member team charged with writing Kitzhaber’s 10-year energy plan, touted by the administration as a path toward Oregon’s energy independence. Hayes frequently delivered speeches on clean economy during her time as First Lady, such as the 2013 commencement address to Oregon State University.[28][40] According to Willamette Week she did not draw a state salary and like the partners of other elected officials continued her private consulting work during her time in the governor's office.[41]

Kitzhaber announced on January 30, 2015, that Hayes would not play a role in his administration during his fourth term. Hayes' "First Lady" website was taken down four days later.[42] On February 13, 2015, Kitzhaber announced his intention to resign as governor effective February 18, 2015.[43]

Controversies

In 2014, Hayes was the subject of a series of articles and media coverage that weakened Kitzhaber's reelection campaign and the governor's office. On October 8, a month before the gubernatorial election in 2014, the Willamette Week reported on Hayes’s previously undisclosed "green card marriage" from 1997 to 2002.[44] A few days later, Portland television station KOIN 6 News reported on Hayes’ role over a decade prior in purchasing property for a planned grow operation in Washington, also in 1997. In a statement to the news station on October 13, Hayes admitted to and apologized for her role in the planned operation. According to Hayes, she went along with the property purchase while in a relationship with an abusive boyfriend, whom she left soon after.[25]

Hayes and Kitzhaber also faced questions over her alleged use of her position as first lady and relationship to the governor to boost the profile of her consulting business. In October 2014, the Willamette Week raised questions about the potential conflict of interest regarding Hayes’ role as First Lady and her consulting work for 3EStrategies. In November the Oregon Government Ethics Commission rejected a request made by Kitzhaber to look into her records.[45] On January 27, 2015 the Portland Tribune reported Hayes was paid $118,000 for communications work with the Clean Economy Development Center at the same time she was listed as an adviser to Kitzhaber on renewable energy. The newspaper suggested the dual roles could be considered a conflict of interest.[46] The Oregonian raised similar questions in a report a few days later.[47]

In December 2014, The Oregonian requested emails from Hayes’ personal email accounts related to state business.[13] When Hayes responded that she held no formal government position and had no government authority, The Oregonian petitioned Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum on January 29, 2015, for the release of the emails.[13] In an article on February 4, 2015 Willamette Week (whose publisher and co-owner Richard Meeker is married to Rosenblum)[48][49] commented on the lack of investigation and Rosenblum’s self-proclaimed reluctance to comment on the case.[48] A week later on February 12, 2015, Rosenblum concluded that Hayes earned public official status[50] and ordered the release of emails to The Oregonian.[13]

On February 25, 2015, Hayes filed a lawsuit against The Oregonian,[51] claiming Fifth Amendment Rights against the release of the emails and citing from Rosenblum's order that Hayes had asked for a state email but was ineligible without employee status.[50] On April 3, 2015, under Federal subpoena Governor Kate Brown’s office publicly released 94,000 emails between Hayes and official email accounts for staff members in Kitzhaber’s office.[52][53] As of April 2015, investigations into Hayes’ involvement are ongoing.

Personal life

Hayes' current surname is from her two-year marriage to her first husband Todd Hayes.[1] Hayes has been married three times. Her first was to Todd Hayes from 1984–1986; her second was with Doug McCarthy, which ended in 1996; and her third was to Abraham B. Abraham using the name Cynthia Lynne Hayes on the marriage certificate,[54] which ended in 2002.[55]

Hayes is an active outdoorswoman committed to running, weight training, and racquetball,[20] and was a 2006 state champion racquetball player.[56] She loves animals and often travels with her dog, a Rhodesian ridgeback named Tessa,[57] and has adopted two cats from the Humane Society.[58]

Hayes is currently engaged to Oregon former governor John Kitzhaber, who is 20 years her senior and with whom she became romantically involved after her 2002 House campaign. When Kitzhaber was elected governor of Oregon in 2010, Hayes, as his live-in girlfriend, assumed the role of the state's first lady.[57] The couple announced their engagement in August 2014.[59] Hayes owns a home in Bend, Oregon, while also sharing Kitzhaber’s home in Portland.[1][60][61]

References

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