Jock Mills
Jock Mills served as the Director of the University Legislative Scholars Program at its inception in 2019. Now retired from the university, he continues to assist with the program on a “courtesy appointment” with the School of Public Policy. Jock began his career at OSU in 2000 as the University’s Director of Government Relations where, for over 20 years, he was responsible for OSU’s interactions with the state legislature, the Governor's Office, state agencies, local governments, and Oregon’s educational infrastructure.
Jock began his career in Oregon in 1983 as an analyst and committee administrator with the Oregon Legislature. His experience in Oregon includes 14 years with the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) in Portland as a fish and wildlife and energy policy analyst, environmental policy manager, and liaison with the State of Oregon.
As a volunteer, he served 10 years on the Board of Directors of the Oregon Environmental Council, chairing the board for two years. Jock also volunteered on John Kitzhaber’s first campaign for Governor. During Kitzhaber’s second term, he took a nine-month sabbatical from BPA to serve as the Governor’s liaison to the Willamette Restoration Initiative, a public/private partnership created by the Governor to develop a comprehensive watershed restoration plan for the Willamette River.
Before moving to Oregon, Jock worked with the Education Policy Research Institute, a branch of the Educational Testing Service in Washington, D.C. He also served for three years as a legislative assistant to a New York Member of Congress. In college, he misspent a summer as a “roustabout” on a Colorado dude ranch. Born and raised in Los Alamos, New Mexico, he is happiest when conducting high altitude vertical snowpack research. He is also an amateur silk-screen printer, a connoisseur of French cars, and a former recreational runner with a marathon PR of 2:57.
Jock holds a master’s degree in public policy from the University of California, Berkeley. He completed his undergraduate education at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he was awarded a bachelor of arts degree, (magna cum laude) in political science with a public service emphasis.