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Oregon Governor's Chief Of Staff Resigns

File photo. Oregon Governor Kate Brown has released a plan on how she'd use money from a potential corporate tax increase.
Office of the Governor
/
Flickr
File photo. Oregon Governor Kate Brown has released a plan on how she'd use money from a potential corporate tax increase.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown is looking for a new chief of staff heading into the 2017 legislative session. The governor's office announced Tuesday that Kristen Leonard will resign at the end of January.

Leonard has served in the role for just over a year. She came to the governor's office from the Port of Portland, where she held a public affairs position.

Last fall, Portland's Willamette Week newspaper reported that Leonard had been slow to disclose a conflict of interest involving a public contract held by a software company owned by Leonard and her husband. But the governor's office said that Leonard had already planned to limit her work in the governor's office to a year and that her departure was unrelated to recent news coverage.

The resignation will take effect one day before the beginning of the 2017 legislative session.

In a statement, Brown said Leonard "executed this job with integrity and distinction, and I am grateful for her dedicated service."

Leonard is the second chief of staff to resign in Brown's first two years in the governor's office. The first, Brian Shipley, stepped down abruptly in November of 2015 after nine months on the job. His resignation was announced by the governor's office two hours after it took effect.

Copyright 2017 Northwest News Network

Chris Lehman graduated from Temple University with a journalism degree in 1997. He landed his first job less than a month later, producing arts stories for Red River Public Radio in Shreveport, Louisiana. Three years later he headed north to DeKalb, Illinois, where he worked as a reporter and announcer for NPR–affiliate WNIJ–FM. In 2006 he headed west to become the Salem Correspondent for the Northwest News Network.