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Reporter Tools - Biographies and photos
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Here are brief bios of people who fill high-profile positions in the Oregon Department of Human Services. If you wish further information, please call (503) 947-5050.

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Director
Bruce Goldberg M.D., is a family medicine physician who has devoted his professional career to improving the organization, delivery and financing of public health services. He has been Director of the Oregon Department of Human Services since November 2005, a position he says he was drawn to because of the opportunity it provides for making a positive difference in the lives of so many people.
During his time with DHS he has led efforts to improve children's access to health care and reduce hunger and food insecurity among Oregonians, has been instrumental in developing plans for revamping the state's mental health system and constructing two new state psychiatric hospitals, and has promoted education and prevention as the most effective means of protecting and improving the health of Oregonians.
Dr. Goldberg's experience also includes serving as head of the Office for Oregon Health Policy and Research, Medical Director for CareOregon, Health Officer for Columbia County in Oregon, and Director of Community Health Services in Zuni, New Mexico. He also was a faculty member at Oregon Health and Science University for more than 15 years.
Dr. Goldberg has published widely and has served on numerous regional and national advisory boards and committees. He currently is chairman of the American Public Human Services Association's National Policy Council.
He received a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2002 from the Oregon Public Health Association, the OHSU School of Medicine's 2000 Faculty Humanism Award, and in 1994 was named a U.S. Public Health Service Primary Care Policy Fellow.
Dr. Goldberg is a graduate of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City and completed his family medicine training at Duke University.
He and his wife, also a physician, are the proud parents of two daughters, one in college and one in high school. In his spare time he plays the harmonica in a rhythm and blues band and roots for the New York Yankees.
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Deputy Director for Operations
Clyde Saiki (rhymes with Nike) of Salem has been DHS deputy director for Operations since 2005. Prior to that he served for two years as the department's chief administrative officer. Saiki, who began his career at DHS in 1986 as volunteer services supervisor, also has managed agency contracts, facilities and personnel offices. Saiki is a 1980 health-education graduate of Oregon State University.
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Deputy Director for Finance
Jim Scherzinger of Portland was appointed DHS deputy director for Finance in 2007. Prior to joining DHS Scherzinger served for three years as superintendent of Portland Public Schools and before that as chief financial officer for PPS. From 1984 until 1998 he directed the Oregon Legislative Revenue Office, and for the six years preceding that he served as the economist for the Oregon Legislature. He was a Ph.D. candidate (ABD) in economics at the University of Oregon, and holds a B.S. in mathematics from the University of Santa Clara.
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Deputy Director for Human Services
Margaret Carter was appointed DHS Deputy Director for Human Services in September 2009. She was the first African-American woman elected to the Oregon House of Representatives and spent 25 years in the Legislature, serving as President Pro Tempore of the Senate, vice chair for Ways and Means and as a member of the Health and Human Services Committee. Some of her key legislation increased affordable housing for Oregonians living with mental illness, improved Head Start, and established a Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday in Oregon. In the 2009 session one of her priorities was a bill to reduce the over-representation of minority children in Oregon's foster care system. Between 1999 and 2002 she served as President and CEO of the Urban League of Portland, and for 27 years was a counselor and faculty member at Portland Community College (PCC). She has a master's in education from Oregon State University.
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Assistant Director for Transformation
Suzanne Hoffman was assigned as the assistant director for the DHS Transformation Initiative in December 2008. She started at DHS in 1998 as a human resources manager, and subsequently was promoted to the positions of assistant district manager for self-sufficiency programs in the Marion, Polk and Yamhill service area; health services deputy; human resources director; deputy chief administrative officer; and chief administrative officer in March 2008. During the final four months of 2007 she served as interim director of the Oregon State Board of Nursing. Before joining DHS she held several positions within the child support program at the Oregon Department of Justice. She graduated from Portland State University with a B.S. in social sciences.
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Assistant Director for Addictions and Mental Health
Richard Harris was appointed DHS assistant director of the Addictions and Mental Health Division (AMH) in September 2009. He was named interim assistant director in September 2008, after spending 29 years with the Portland-based Central City Concern, a non-profit agency that houses and serves homeless adults and families. He has more than 30 years of experience in mental health and addictions management.
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Assistant Director for Administrative Services - Chief Administrative Officer
Jim Neely was appointed DHS chief administrative officer in September 2009. He has been with DHS (starting in what was then the Public Welfare Division) since 1974, holding numerous positions in what is now the Children, Adults and Families Division. These include eligibility unit supervisor, branch manager and assistant region manager in Eugene. He has been a senior administrator in CAF (then Adult & Family Services) since 1996, and in 2004 became its deputy director for field operations. Neely holds a B.A. in psychology from the University of Oregon.
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Assistant Director for Children, Adults and Families
Erinn Kelley-Siel was named assistant director for the DHS Children, Adults and Families Division in August 2009, after serving 13 months as the interim assistant director of the division. For the five and a half years prior to joining DHS, she served as Governor Kulongoski's human services advisor, during which time she provided guidance on such issues as reducing Oregon's hunger rate, strengthening protection for children in Oregon's child welfare system, transforming Oregon's public mental health system, making health care more affordable for all Oregonians, and ensuring a sustainable future for long-term care services for Oregon seniors and people with disabilities. Prior to joining the Governor's staff she served as an associate attorney in the Energy and Telecommunications practice group at the Portland-based law firm Stoel Rives LLP, and as a law clerk to then-Justice Kulongoski at the Oregon Supreme Court. She holds a law degree from the University of Texas at Austin and a degree in psychology from Texas A&M University.
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Assistant Director for Medical Assistance Programs - State Medicaid Director
Judy Mohr-Peterson was appointed assistant director for the DHS Division of Medical Assistance Programs (DMAP) in September 2009. She has been at DHS since 1997, including eight years in DMAP as a manager of the analysis and evaluation unit and in research. She also has administered the DHS caseload forecasting and actuarial services team. Before DHS, Judy was on a team that researched and reported on children's mental health in Texas. She received her doctoral degree in sociocultural anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin.
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Assistant Director for Public Health - State Public Health Officer
Mel Kohn, M.D., M.P.H., of Portland, was named acting DHS assistant director for the State Public Health Division and State Health Officer in September 2008. He previously served as state epidemiologist and administrator of the DHS Office of Disease Prevention and Epidemiology. He has worked in the public health sector since 1993, including two years as an Epidemic Intelligence Service officer for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Before joining DHS in 1999 Kohn was medical director for a section of the Louisiana Office of Public Health in New Orleans, and also served as an assistant professor of Pediatrics at Tulane University School of Medicine. Dr. Kohn received a B.A. in Russian and East European Studies from Yale in 1981, took pre-med courses at Columbia University, received his M.D. from Harvard in 1990, and received his Masters in Public Health from Tulane School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine in 1997. He is board-certified in pediatrics and preventive medicine.
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Assistant Director for Seniors and People with Disabilities
James Toews (rhymes with waves) of Portland is DHS assistant director for the Seniors and People with Disabilities Division. Toews joined DHS in 1985, where he administered programs for clients with developmental disabilities. He served as director of governmental affairs and executive director of the Association for Retarded Citizens of Oregon and protective-services director for the Logan Center for Retardation Services in South Bend, Indiana. Toews is a graduate of Goshen College in Goshen, Indiana.
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Note: these photos can be downloaded from this page for use on the Internet. If a higher resolution photo is needed for print purposes, contact the DHS Communications Resources office at (503) 373-7120, dhs-web@state.or.us
Tips on downloading photos: How you download a photo will depend on which web browser software you use. Here are some general guidelines that will help. Select the graphic using right-mouse+click (Windows) or control+click (Mac). Then choose an option from the dropdown box such as "Save Picture As...", "Save Target As...," "Save Link As...," "Save to Disk" or "Download to Disk" (the message wording will vary depending on whether you are using Netscape or Internet Explorer, and what version you are running).
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