Zones I, V have new representation
Members in the northwestern and southwestern portions of the state have new representation on the OSEA Board of Directors.
Delegates to the OSEA Conference 2017 from Zone I elected Dianna Hess (Beaverton Chapter 48) while Zone V members elected Marina McCambridge (Phoenix-Talent Chapter 96) to the Board. Former Zone I Director Kathy Forbes and Zone V Director Aaron Powell did not seek reelection.
While their backgrounds are unique, both got involved in our union because a fellow OSEA member encouraged them to get involved. Their dedication speaks volumes to the value of “the ask.”

Although relatively new to OSEA, Marina McCambridge’s labor background stretches back decades, from her home in Medford all the way north to Portland.
After working in retail, McCambridge got a job maintaining records at the Portland Police Bureau (PPB). It was there she became a member of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 189.
“Somebody said to me, ‘People seem to listen to you. Why don’t you do this?’” McCambridge recalled. “There were a lot of issues in the records department, and they only had one steward for 68 people.”
McCambridge became an AFSCME steward and mostly volunteered behind the scenes — setting up trainings, networking with different PPB offices, and coordinating with unions representing other city employees. Eventually she went to work for AFSCME as a receptionist. She moved to Medford when husband Rodney, an AFSCME field representative, was transferred to southern Oregon.
McCambridge secured a job at the Phoenix-Talent School District, substituting as an aide or secretary as the need arose. She was hired as permanent part-time, and eventually full-time as attendance clerk at Talent Middle School.
And just when she thought she was out…
“Chapter President Mary Nitcher said she’d heard I was pretty involved in union activity previously, so she approached me,” McCambridge recalled, adding she was hesitant at first: “I’d just spent 20 years doing union stuff.”
It didn’t take McCambridge long to jump in and help out, however. She sat in with the bargaining team in 2015 – her first time representing members at the table.
“That was kind of intense because I realized these people are relying on me and put their whole trust in me, so I have this big sense of responsibility to be there for them,” McCambridge said. After that she quickly rose from vice president to chapter president, stepping into the secretarial role when she was elected to the Board of Directors.
A top priority is ensuring Southern Oregon knows OSEA is there for them.
“I want to make sure they know they have a voice, and that they can call on me,” McCambridge said.
An admitted “political junkie,” in her spare time McCambridge also enjoys crocheting and volunteering in community activities.