Welcome to my online constituent office. We hope you will find this website to be a useful one-stop portal for any needs you might have from the Virginia state government. We have included information to help you better understand how our government works.

You can also keep up with the policy-making process in the General Assembly during the weeks that I am working in Richmond by reading my blogs and Twitter updates.

As your State Delegate, I’m here to serve you so please contact me with any questions or services you need. I am particularly interested in hearing about ways to make our laws work better for all of us so please do not hesitate to send me policy ideas that I may be able to propose in Richmond. I am honored to represent you and I look forward to meeting you in person.

Thank you,

About Mark

Delegate Mark L. Keam represents the 35th District in the Virginia House of Delegates, which is considered the oldest continuous legislative body in the modern world with roots dating back to Jamestown in 1619.

The 35th House District is entirely within Fairfax County, and includes over 77,000 residents living in the Town of Vienna and in portions of Dunn Loring, Fairfax, Fair Oaks, Oakton, and Tysons.

In his first campaign for public office, in June 2009, Mark won a competitive four-way primary election for the Democratic Party’s nomination.  He went on to win the general election in November 2009 to succeed retiring Delegate Steve Shannon.  In January 2010, Mark became the first Korean American and the first Asian-born immigrant to be sworn into the Virginia General Assembly.

In the legislature, Mark serves on the House Finance and the House Militia, Police and Public Safety Committees.  He was appointed by the Speaker of the House to serve as a member of the Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission, which the General Assembly created to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Civil War which began in 1861.  Mark also serves on the Leadership and Policy Team of the Virginia Prisoner and Juvenile Re-Entry Council, which was established by Governor Bob McDonnell to improve the correctional system in Virginia.

As a part-time citizen-legislator, Mark and his staff maintain a year-round office in Vienna in addition to his Richmond office.  When the General Assembly is not in session, Mark serves as senior advisor for strategic affairs at Verizon where he helps the company develop ideas that promote the use of technology to solve societal problems.

Mark joined Verizon in early 2007 after twelve years of public service, in both executive and legislative branches of government.  For six years, he served as Chief Counsel to the Assistant Senate Majority Leader Dick Durbin on the Senate Judiciary Committee.  Before working on Capitol Hill, Mark was appointed Assistant Chief Counsel in the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business Administration, and had also served as an attorney with the Federal Communications Commission’s Wireless Bureau.

Mark’s long history of community service extends to a wide variety of local, state and national organizations.  He is currently involved with the Rotary Club of Vienna, Boy Scouts Pack 1139, Vienna-Tysons Regional Chamber of Commerce, Vienna Arts Society, Historic Vienna, Leadership Greater Washington, Homestretch and Vienna Presbyterian Church.  He is a former president of the Courthouse Oaks Homeowners Association and of the Asian Pacific American Bar Association of the Greater Washington Area.

Mark was born in Seoul, Republic of Korea, the youngest child of a Presbyterian minister.  At age four, Mark and his family moved to South Vietnam where his father established a church.  In 1975, when Vietnam fell to communism, the family fled the war-torn country.  They then moved to Australia, where his father established another church before eventually moving to America.

Mark received a political science degree from the University of California at Irvine, and had a chance to live in Falls Church, Virginia, while working as a college intern.  After receiving a law degree from Hastings College of the Law, Mark returned to Virginia where he met and married Alex Seong Keam.  They have two children, Tyler who attends Mosby Woods Elementary School, and Brenna who attends Marshall Road Elementary School.