Ron Lewis has represented Kentucky's Second
District since first being sworn in to Congress on May
26th, 1994. The Second District is home to Fort Knox,
Mammoth Cave National Park, the birthplace of Abraham
Lincoln, and over 50,000 people who depend on agriculture
for a living.
The son of a tobacco farmer, Ron Lewis was born Sept.
14, 1946, in the eastern Kentucky county of Greenup.
Raised in South Shore, KY, Lewis graduated from McKell
High School in 1964. Lewis now resides in Cecilia, a
small community west of Elizabethtown.
Lewis entered Morehead State University before
transferring to the University of Kentucky, where he
received his Bachelor of Arts degree in History and
Political Science in 1969. He returned to Morehead State
and earned a Master of Arts degree in Higher Education in
1981. Lewis also attended the Southern Baptist Seminary
prior to being ordained a minister.
Lewis' varied job experience reflects the people of
the Second District. He worked his way through college at
Morehead State as a laborer with the Armco Steel
Corporation. He also worked with the Kentucky Highway
Department, at Eastern State Hospital, and began training
in the U.S. Navy's Officer Candidate School before a
kidney ailment forced his honorable medical discharge in
1972. Lewis worked in sales for several companies,
including Ashland Oil, before a five-year teaching stint
at Watterson College beginning in 1980. He also became a
Baptist minister that year, serving as pastor for the
historic White Mills Baptist Church. In 1985, he opened
and operated his own small business in Elizabethtown
before being elected to the U.S. House.
Lewis is a member of the prestigious Ways and Means
Committee and its Social Security and Trade
Subcommittees. In this capacity, he recently hosted a
nationally recognized symposium in Campbellsville to
highlight that communities' remarkable economic
revitalization and has traveled abroad to explore trade
agreements beneficial to the Commonwealth. In the 109th
Congress, Lewis will play a key role in social security
reform legislation. In previous terms, Lewis served on
the Agriculture, Government Reform and Veterans and Armed
Services committees. He traveled to Iraq in February 2004
as a member of the Government Reform National Security
Subcommittee to access the progress being made by
coalition troops.
Lewis advocates a quality national defense and has
worked in Congress to enhance Fort Knox's position as a
premier training site for armored troops. During the
108th Congress, he spearheaded funding for numerous
facility improvement projects including construction of a
new state of the art barracks and upgrades to computer
training infrastructure. He has also been a consistent
advocate for our nation's veterans, working hard to
increase funding for veteran programs, protect benefits
and support concurrent receipt.
He has been a consistent leader in preserving a way of
life for family tobacco farmers in Kentucky through
efforts to stop new taxation, regulation and litigation.
In 2004, Lewis coordinated a bipartisan congressional
delegation, representing nine tobacco producing states,
to combine elements of the Fair and Equitable Tobacco
Reform Act with the American Jobs Creation Act, restoring
hope to thousands of farmers nationwide who have faced
increasing financial challenges due to the outmoded New
Deal quota system that regulates tobacco production and
pricing
His diligent work steered the tobacco buyout through
the legislative process winning approval by members of
the House and Senate and signed into law by President
Bush in November. The approved buyout eliminates the
federal quota, enabling tobacco growers to better compete
with foreign producers. The bill additionally allocates
$10.14 billion dollars over 10 years to compensate
farmers for their losses.
Mindful of potential security threats at home, Lewis
introduced The Agricultural Business Security Tax Credit
Act of 2004, proposing a tax incentive to agricultural
retailers, manufacturers, formulators or distributors of
fertilizers and pesticides. While important to farmers
and agricultural businesses, these agents can also be
used to manufacture illegal drugs such as methamphetamine
and develop explosive devises, making these sites a
potential target for foreign and domestic terrorists.
Qualified businesses would be able to receive a tax
credit of up to $100,000 per site for security measures
to protect locations where agricultural chemicals and
fertilizers are manufactured and stored.
Family-friendly tax issues are also important to
Lewis. In the last session of Congress, the House has
approved his legislation that adds simplicity and
fairness to tax treatment for foster care families. He
was a strong supporter of legislation developed in 2001
in the Ways and Means Committee that reduces individual
tax rates, ends the marriage penalty tax and eliminates
the death tax and the 2003 Jobs and Economic Growth Tax
Relief Act recently signed into law by President Bush.
Lewis is a member of the House's Conservative
Opportunity Society. In the 106th Congress, Lewis chaired
this group of House members that meet weekly to discuss
national issues from a conservative viewpoint. He also
serves on the House Republican Policy Committee and the
House Pro-Life Caucus. In the 105th Congress, he was
chairman of the House Family Caucus.
Lewis has always been active in community affairs,
serving as a member of the Elizabethtown Chamber of
Commerce and as past-president of the Hardin and LaRue
County Jail Ministry. He is also a member of the Severns
Valley Ministerial Association.
Since taking office, Lewis has been honored for his
voting record by a wide variety of organizations,
including the following: Farm Bureau, the Christian
Coalition, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, League of Private
Property Rights, Council for Citizens Against Government
Waste, The Coalition to Save Medicare, The 60-Plus
Association, National Association of Manufacturers and
the National Federation of Independent Business.
Lewis is the author of the "Precision Agriculture,
Research, Education and Information Dissemination Act of
1997," which allows farmers to take advantage of
high-tech equipment to increase yields and remain
profitable in the global market. Lewis has also
co-authored legislation in the fiscal year 1996 and 1997
Labor, Health, and Human Services appropriations bills to
help keep college loans available for students borrowing
from small banks and credit unions. In 1998, Lewis
authored the Family Impact Act, which will require
federal regulatory agencies to discuss how their proposed
regulations will impact American families.
In 2000, Lewis worked with the Ways and Means
Committee to add a section to Medicare legislation to
help notify senior citizens when they qualify for extra
assistance with Medicare premiums and co-payments, saving
seniors money on their health care. In 2002, Lewis'
legislation to add simplicity and fairness to tax
treatment for foster care families was approved and
signed into law, along with legislation that adds
Edmonson and Hart counties to the Appalachian Regional
Commission. Lewis' Medical Adult Day Care Demonstration
Act was included in the House's Medicare Modernization
and Prescription Drug Act of 2004, as well as a provision
to support rural hospitals.
Lewis married the former Kayi Gambill in 1966. They
have two children, Ronald Brent and Allison Faye.
Web Site:
http://house.gov/ronlewis
Email Address:
ron.lewis@mail.house.gov