Roberts began her career as a caseworker with the
State Public Welfare Department in Portland and then as a counselor for the
Multnomah County juvenile court. Roberts was elected in 1972 to the
Oregon House of Representatives and served as a member of the Joint Ways and Means Committee. She was elected to the
Oregon State Senate in 1974. While serving in the
Oregon State Senate, Roberts was one of only three women.
Oregon Commissioner of Labor Roberts was elected
Oregon Commissioner of Labor in 1978 and re-elected in 1982, 1986 and 1990. She wrote the law in 1985 creating the first Wage Security Fund in the United States. It guaranteed workers up to $4,000 of owed wages left jobless by business closures. She sponsored the Oregon Family Medical Leave Act, which guaranteed up to 12 weeks job-protected leave to workers—to allow time off for illness, injury or death of a family member. In 1989, she fought for passage of
parental leave, enforced by the
Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. Roberts' final orders on parental leave cases were upheld by the
Oregon Supreme Court on appeal, firmly established case law. Roberts testified on the act in the
United States Congress—and the federal act was patterned in part on the state law. When
President George H. W. Bush twice vetoed the national bill, Roberts was often quoted in
The New York Times, which also published her
op-ed column on the subject. Other awards came from Hispanic, human resources and women's rights groups. Roberts was a member of international delegations: the United States Department of Labor delegation to the International Conference on Innovations in Apprenticeship in Paris, the United States delegation to China, 1980 and 2000, sponsored by the American Council of Young Political Leaders, at the behest of the United States State Department—and a school-to-work apprenticeship program in Germany, which she created, in partnership with the state of
Upper Saxony. She was a speaker at President
Jimmy Carter's re-election kickoff dinner and at the
1980 Democratic National Convention. Roberts was president of the National Association of Government Labor Officials and of the National Apprenticeship Program Board. She was profiled in the 1983 book
Images of Oregon Women, by Ellen Nichols. Roberts ran for
Oregon Secretary of State in 1992, losing to incumbent Democrat
Phil Keisling.
Later career After elective office, Roberts managed real estate investments, operated a health and personal development business with her husband, and worked as a consultant to law firms on wage/hour and civil rights law. Roberts helped found and served on the Board of Directors of Green Village Schools, a nonprofit that built and funded primary schools (for boys and girls) in
Helmand Province,
Afghanistan. She has given speeches to help raise money for breast cancer exams for low-income women. == Personal life ==