Gordly was appointed to the Oregon House of Representatives in 1991, replacing Representative Ron Cease. She was later elected to the seat, ultimately serving three terms, representing parts of
north and
northeast Portland. In 1996, she was elected to the Oregon State Senate, becoming the first African-American woman to serve in that chamber, from 1997 to 2009. Originally a Democrat, Gordly changed her party affiliation to non-affiliated in 2006 and did not seek re-election in 2008. During her legislative career, Gordly championed social justice, civil rights, education reform, and mental health reform. During her legislative career Gordly led trade missions to South Africa and Zambia and participated in another to South Korea. As senator, she served as co-chair of Oregon Governor
John Kitzhaber's Task Force on Racial and Ethnic Health. In 2001, Gordly sponsored Senate Joint Resolution 31, which officially recognized
Juneteenth in Oregon. In 2002, Gordly was the chief petitioner for Oregon Ballot Measure 14, a legislatively referred constitutional amendment that removed
racially discriminatory language from the Oregon Constitution, and for Measure 25, which raised Oregon's
minimum wage and created a requirement for annual increases based on the
Consumer Price Index. In 2005, Gordly sponsored Senate Bill 300, also known as the Expanded Options Bill, which provides Oregon high school students with opportunities to further their educational experience by taking college-level courses at local postsecondary institutions. In 2007, Gordly sponsored SB 420, which established Oregon's
Environmental Justice Task Force (renamed the Environmental Justice Council in 2022), a diverse, statewide, 13-member council which advises the Governor on environmental justice issues. In 2008, while Gordly was serving as senator,
Oregon Health & Science University opened the Avel Gordly Center for Healing, which provides
culturally sensitive mental health and psychiatric services to underserved populations, particularly members of the Black community. At the time of her death in 2026, her childhood home on
North Williams Avenue housed the Gordly Burch Center for Black Leadership and Civic Engagement, an organization preserving the history of Oregon's Black leaders and promoting new Black leaders and policy makers in the area. In 2010, Gordly was the public face of the second attempt to recall then-Portland Mayor
Sam Adams. == Later work ==