Tom (Tom) A. Casperson (R-SS38)
Email - Web Site

Capitol: 517.373.7840
FAX: 517.373.3932
District: 906.486.4041
Senator
Michigan State Senate
Room 705 Farnum Building 125 West Allegan Street
Lansing, MI 48909-7536

District Office:
PO Box 545
Escanaba, MI 49829
Elected: 2010    Next Election: 2014
Spouse: Diane   DOB: 7/20/1959
Committee Assignments
ChairmanSenate Committee on Natural Resources, Environment and Great Lakes
ChairmanSenate Committee on Transportation
MemberSenate Committee on Reforms, Restructuring and Reinventing
MemberSenate Committee on Outdoor Recreation and Tourism
Counties Representing
Alger / Baraga / Delta / Dickinson / Gogebic / Houghton / Iron / Keweenaw / Marquette / Menominee / Ontonagon / Schoolcraft

Bio

Tom Casperson served in the Michigan House of Representatives for six years, from 2002 to 2008. In 2010, he was elected to the Michigan Senate. The 38th District includes 13 of the Upper Peninsula's 15 counties, making it bigger geographically than 9 states.

Prior to being elected to the Legislature, Casperson worked for 27 years in his family's log trucking business, including 12 years as its owner and operator. That business, Casperson & Son Trucking, was started by his grandfather.

While in the House, Casperson served as an Assistant Majority Whip and as Chair of the House Conservation, Forestry and Outdoor Recreation Committee and Vice-Chair of the Transportation Committee. In the Senate, Casperson has the distinction of being one of only two state senators to chair two Senate policy committees. He serves as chair of the Transportation Committee and the Natural Resources, Environment and Great Lakes Committee. In addition, he is a member of the Senate's Outdoor Recreation and Tourism Committee and the Reforms, Restructuring and Reinventing Committee. Additionally, Casperson serves as the Chair of the Legislative Natural Resources Caucus and as a member of the Legislative Waterways Caucus and the Legislative Sportsmens Caucus.

HONORS & AWARDS-

Casperson has been the recipient of numerous awards, including Advocate of the Year from the Michigan Manufacturers Association, The Tuebor Award presented by Michigan Forest Products Council, Legislative Leadership awards from Great Lakes Timber Professionals and the County Road Association, the Special Volunteer Award presented by the Michigan Association of Timbermen, and the National Logging Safety & Innovations Award from the American Logging Council. Since his election to the State Senate, he has been named Legislator of the Year by the Michigan Townships Association, the Michigan Association of Counties, and the Michigan Propane Gas Association, and was also named the Michigan's Most Effective Public Servant by Transportation Riders United.

LEGISLATIVE ACCOMPLISHMENTS-

While serving as a State Representative, Casperson authored twenty Public Acts, including- the "Crib Truck Bill" (Public Act 142 of 2003), which addressed the cause of a fatal log spill accident, a tragedy that led to Casperson's first run for elected office; the "Healthy Forest Package" (Public Act 125 of 2004), a group of bills requiring the Department of Natural Resources to certify Michigan's forests as sustainable forests; Public Act 449 of 2004, legislation that permitted metallic mining in Michigan; "The Castle Doctrine" (Public Act 313 of 2006), an Act that gives Michigan citizens the right to use force to defend themselves and provides law-abiding citizens with civil immunity; and Public Act 332 of 2005, legislation that prevented the State from seizing control of the Mackinac Bridge.

Since taking office as a state senator, Casperson has introduced a wide variety of bills, with 25 of those bills signed into law during his first term in the Senate, including- the transformative Land Cap, which provides restrictions on land that the Michigan Department of Natural Resources can purchase (Public Act 240 of 2012); a law to ensure the state fulfills its obligation to pay local units of government payments in lieu of taxes on the basis of the state's land ownership (Public Act 603 of 2012); a law that removes restrictions to permit property owners with frontage on the Great Lakes, to groom their beaches (Public Act 247 of 2012); a law to grant the Michigan Natural Resource Commission the authority to establish a wolf hunt season (Public Act 520 of 2012); and historic legislation to establish a Regional Transit Authority (Public Act 387 of 2012).

Casperson and his wife Diane, whom he married in 1982, continue to reside in Escanaba with two of their four children- Hillary and Dane. Their son Tom is a recent graduate of the engineering program at Western Michigan University, while their daughter Ashley lives in San Diego with her husband, Chan, who serves in the U.S. Navy, and their daughter, Oaklyn.