Background
Mundy, Phyllis was born on January 31, 1948 in Evansville, Indiana, United States. Daughter of C. Brian.
Mundy, Phyllis was born on January 31, 1948 in Evansville, Indiana, United States. Daughter of C. Brian.
Bachelor of Science, Bloomsburg State College, 1970.
She is a graduate of Kingston High School and Bloomsburg University. Prior to her time in the State House, she was a French teacher, the manager of a multimillion dollar manufacturing facility during the 1980s, was heavily involved with the Junior League, was President of the Wilkes-Barre chapter of the League of Women Voters, and served on the Luzerne County Property tax reform commission in the late 80s. A current and longtime resident of Kingston, Pennsylvania, Mundy represented the 120th legislative district of her state from 1991 to 2014.
She earned high ratings from the Sierra Club, an environmental advocacy group that gave Mundy a 100% rating recently, and American Federation of Labor-Congress-Chief Information Officer, which consistently gave Mundy high marks for her support of working families.
Indeed, in two cases, she had no Republican opponent in reelection campaigns, including in 2004 and 2008. Her exceptional constituent service, constant visits in her district to attend local events and festivals, and her close ties to thousands of voters all contributed to her huge personal popularity.
In addition to such attributes, Mundy"s policy positions and votes were generally smiled upon by voters in her district. Most notably, her successful effort in 2005 to stop health care cost hikes at Blue Cross Blue Shield for residents of her district and her 2010 proposal for a one-year ban on new Marcellus Shale drilling permits both earned her widespread approval.
Nonetheless, it is evident that one political reality aided Mundy in particular: her district became increasingly Democratic in voter registration in her last decade in office, reaching 56 percent by 2012.
Her hometown of Kingston, once heavily Republican, became mostly Democratic during the late 2000s. Mundy"s popularity translated into large election victories when she had a Republican opponent. On December 2, 2013, Mundy announced she would not run for reelection to a 13th term in the 2014 elections and that she would retire at the end of her term on November 30, 2014.
Given that the district, at the time, was 60 percent Republican, Mundy"s landslide victory was considered a political upset, as was her enormous reelection victory in 1992. At home in the Kingston area, Mundy enjoyed broad popular support among voters of both parties in her district.
Board directors Children's Trust Fund, Emergency Medical Services Northeastern Pennsylvania. Member advisory board Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Northeast Pennsylvania. Member of Chamber of Commerce (board member), Volunteer Literacy, Domestic Violence Service Center (advisory committee member), Junior League, League Women Voters, Sierra Club.
1 child Brian.