Background
Clark, Fred was born on May 14, 1959 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States.
Clark, Fred was born on May 14, 1959 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States.
Born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Clark graduated from Huron High School in Ann Arbor in 1977. He attended Michigan Technological University before earning a Bachelor of Surgery from Michigan State University in 1985, and an Master of Surgery in Forest Science from the University of Wisconsin–Madison 1992.
He served as a Senior Forester with the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and an ecologist with The Nature Conservancy. Clark is now a consulting forester, owner of Clark Forestry in Baraboo. Clark Forestry provides forestry management and consulting services to family forest owners, farmers, environmental groups, and government agencies throughout Wisconsin.
Clark was appointed by Republican Governor Tommy Thompson to the Lower Wisconsin Riverway Board in 1998, where he served as a representative for Columbia County.
In 2004, Clark was appointed by Democratic Governor Jim Doyle to the Wisconsin Council on Forestry, where he leads the Council"s invasive species committee. Clark was first elected to the Assembly in 2008, defeating incumbent Republican Judge-Advocate "Doc" Hines by a substantial margin (15,936 to 11,304).
He was assigned to the standing committees on forestry, (of which he became chair in December 2009), on natural resources, and on rural economic development, and the Wisconsin Council on Tourism. He was reelected in 2010 by a narrow margin (10,208 votes to 9921 for Republican Jack Cummings).
He become the Minority Caucus Vice Chairperson for the 2011-2012 session.
In March 2011 Clark moved his desk outside of the capital building to meet with constituents, because of difficulties the public was having entering the building, as a result of an "essential" lock-down of the building to dissuade protests of Governor Walker and his efforts to strip collective bargaining rights away from teachers in Wisconsin. On April 21, 2011, Clark announced his candidacy for the 14th district seat in the Wisconsin Senate, in the recall election against Luther Olsen, as part of the 2011 Wisconsin protests. In the recall election, Clark was endorsed by the Capital Times, which described him as the "more able, independent and responsible candidate." He lost the race, with Olsen polling fifty-two percent to Clark"s forty-eight percent.
Member of Forest Guild, Wisconsin League Conservation Voters, Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association, Society of America Foresters, National Wild Turkey Federation.
1 child.