James (Jim) M. LeMunyon (R-SH067)
Email - Web Site

Capitol: 804.698.1067
FAX: 804.698.6767
District: 703.264.1432
Representative
Room 419 General Assembly Building 910 Capitol Square
Richmond, VA 23218

District Office:
PO Box 220962
Chantilly, VA 20153-0962
Elected: 2009    Next Election: 2013
Spouse: Robin Lynn Shepard   DOB: 3/12/1959
Committee Assignments
ChairmanSubcommittee on Teachers and Administrative Action
MemberSubcommittee on Standards of Quality
MemberSubcommittee #1
MemberSubcommittee #1
MemberSubcommittee on FOIA - Procurement
MemberHouse Committee on General Laws
MemberHouse Committee on Education
MemberHouse Committee on Counties, Cities and Towns
Counties Representing
Fairfax / Loudoun

Bio

Jim LeMunyon is a 30-year resident of Northern Virginia. He and his wife, Robin, have three children who are college graduates and alumni of Oakton High School. The LeMunyons have been active in the community for many years through organizations including church, scouts, PTAs, and sports and music boosters.

Jim is a Republican and was first elected to the Virginia House of Delegates in November 2009. During his first campaign, Jim walked 533 miles and knocked on 10,821 doors to listen to voters and share his ideas. Jim continues his door knocking tradition each year on behalf of other candidates and himself.

He serves on three committees- General Laws, Education, and Counties, Cities, and Towns. Delegate LeMunyon was appointed Chairman of the Teachers and Administrative Action Subcommittee within the Education Committee for the 2012 session. On the House floor, Jim is a Deputy Majority Whip. He also serves on three state-sponsored commissions that address specific issues- Transportation Accountability, Public-Private Partnerships, and the Code Commission. Since he was first elected in 2009, 17 of Jim’s bills have become law in addition to his resolution requiring Members’ voting records be easily retrievable online. Click the years for a list of bills Jim introduced or co-patroned during the 2010, 2011, and 2012 sessions.

As a technology company entrepreneur for more than 20 years, Jim has started and continues to help build technology businesses. He understands how jobs are created and what it takes to make our economy grow. This includes his role as the co-founding President of Sterling Semiconductor, now a unit of Dow Corning, which produces an advanced electronic material needed for electric cars and energy efficient lighting. Prior to running for the House of Delegates, Jim headed HexaTech, a company that is developing novel sources of ultra-violet light for water purification, and new components for wireless communication systems. Presently, Jim is an adviser to the Computer and Communications Industry Association.

In government, Jim served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce from 1989-1993. He managed the Export Administration, and within four years reduced the size of the agency’s budget while making the agency more effective, returning millions of tax dollars to the U.S. Treasury. His responsibilities included representing the United States on international trade and security negotiating teams that created the first trade restrictions on chemical, biological, and missile technologies to keep such items out of the hands of terrorists and other adversaries. Jim testified frequently before Congress on these issues.

Early in his career, Jim served as chief-of-staff to Republican Congressman Ed Zschau from California’s Silicon Valley. In that capacity, Jim coordinated the efforts of a Republican task force in the House of Representatives that was successful in passing several laws to foster innovation and the creation and growth of new companies.

In addition to business and government, Jim was an adjunct faculty member of the George Mason University international transactions graduate program during the 1990s. He previously served as congregation president and Sunday school teacher at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Falls Church.

Jim graduated from Valparaiso University with a B.S. in physics and mathematics. He earned a M.S. in meteorology at the University of Wisconsin on a NASA scholarship.