Ex-Rep. Marda Dillree remembered fondly

Published: Sunday, Oct. 25 2009 12:00 a.m. MDT

Rep. Marda Dillree is inducted into Bald Eagle Forum in 1998. She died Thursday after a long battle with cancer.

Deseret News archives

As Rep. Marda Dillree stood with her colleagues on Utah's Capitol Hill, she reached up, grasped the wig she wore to cover her head — rendered bald by chemotherapy — and held the wig aloft.

A Deseret News photographer captured the moment on Feb. 5, 1998, as the Republican from Farmington was inducted into the Bald Eagle Forum, a group that celebrates follically challenged legislators.

"She was such a fighter, just so sparkling," Lt. Gov. Greg Bell told the Deseret News on Saturday. "She took the attitude that it was just another thing and she was going to get through it. Very courageous."

On Thursday, Dillree lost her battle against a rare form of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. She was 64.

Bell learned of Dillree's death Saturday afternoon.

"I was so sad; I adored her so much," he said. "I owe her so much. She was a strong figure in my life."

Bell first worked with Dillree in 1990 when he was elected to the Farmington City Council. At the time she was already a veteran of public service, starting as a Boy Scout leader, a PTA president, a city councilwoman and a school board member. Dillree began her service in the Utah House in 1992, representing Davis County residents in District 17.

"When she took on a cause, it was a good one or she wouldn't have taken it on," said Dillree's husband of 46 years, Steve.

One of Dillree's causes was transportation, and she became a strong proponent of the West Davis Highway, later renamed the Legacy Parkway by former Gov. Mike Leavitt.

"She was indeed a visionary on transportation," Bell said. "She understood that we were going to shut down on I-15, and she knew that we needed another major route (through Davis County)."

Rep. Julie Fisher, R-Fruit Heights, was elected to succeed Dillree when she chose not to run for re-election in 2004. Fisher called her predecessor "a champion of transportation issues, not just for Davis County but for the state as a whole."

"When she first got elected she told someone she wanted to be on Transportation Committee," Fisher said, recalling a conversation she'd had with Dillree. "They said that'd be a boring job, but she was very instrumental in transportation issues throughout Utah."

Dillree also championed education issues, helping to create charter schools in Utah.

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