Background
Koehler was born and raised in South Dakota.
Koehler was born and raised in South Dakota.
He graduated from Yankton College in South Dakota (Bachelor of Arts, 1971) and United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio (Master of Divinity).
The 46th district includes Canton, East Peoria, Fairview, Lewistown, Mapelton, Peoria, Pekin and West Peoria. He was a staff member at the National Farm Worker Ministry (NFWM) from 1972 to 1978 working in Arizona, Ohio, New York, and eventually at the United Farm Workers Louisiana Paz headquarters in Keene, California. He moved to Peoria, Illinois in 1978, and became a community organizer manager and for the Peoria Friendship House, a local charity.
He became executive director of the Peoria Area Labor Management Council (PALM) in 1985, and president of its Labor Management Cooperative Health Programs in 1992.
They live in Peoria, and started Peoria Bread Company, a bakery, in 2006. Koehler was on the Peoria County Board from 1982 to 1988, and Peoria City Council from 1989 to 1997.
While on the city council, he was mayor pro tem for two years. Koehler was elected to the Illinois Senate in November 2006.
His predecessor, George Shadid, retired in December 2006, allowing Koehler to take office in December prior to his elected term in January 2007.
He was re-elected uncontested in 2010. In early 2010, Koehler and other lawmakers called for the elimination of the position of Illinois Lieutenant Governor. During the 96th Illinois General Assembly, Koehler was the chair of the Local Government Committee and of the Subcommittee on Fertilizers and Chemicals (of the Agriculture and Conservation Committee).
He is also Vice-Chair of the Energy Committee.
In the 97th General Assembly, he was once again chair of the Local Government Committee and chair of vice-chair of the Energy Committee. Saying he had a good team and was pleased by the results, Senator.
Koehler defeated his Republican opponent for a second four-year term in the November 2012 general election, Peoria-area businessman and developer Pat Sullivan, by a margin of 39,149 to 31,684 — or a 55 percent to 45 percent margin, with Tazewell County unable to provide complete results late Tuesday.
His priorities are pension reform and tax code changes, civil unions, passing of concealed carry, and containing the budget and a backlog of unpaid bills.