Before he became the 18-year GOP congressman from Hennepin County's western suburbs, Jim Ramstad was a rookie state senator from Plymouth in a vomit-stained shirt locked in a South Dakota jail cell.
He didn't know what he'd done to get there and asked his jailer if he'd killed someone. He had been in a fight in a motel coffee shop after yet another long night of drinking.
That was July 31, 1981, the day he got sober and became a recovering alcoholic who would go on to champion landmark mental health and chemical addiction legislation through Congress. Ramstad died Thursday from Parkinson's disease, at 74. He was sober for 39 years.
As a state senator, Ramstad didn't have the option of an anonymity. "He decided at that point, 'I'm going to be totally honest in this space and be who I am and let the chips fall where they may,' " his longtime congressional chief of staff Dean Peterson said.
Peterson said Ramstad's entire life, including his relationships and work in Congress, were shaped by the recovery principles of honesty, transparency, doing the right thing and courage. "He chose to embrace the recovery lifestyle and never shied away from that," Peterson said.
As a congressman, he dedicated himself to legislation and working across partisan lines. His work in recovery brought him into contact with famous performers, former presidents and desperate parents. The outpouring of tributes on social media since his death reflected the breadth of his impact.
Peterson said he'd seen it for years in the calls Ramstad took from anyone who reached out for help breaking out of chemical addiction. A mother in Tennessee, a drug user in Los Angeles. Ramstad always took the calls — usually on his own time.
Ramstad will be most remembered for his work on access to treatment for mental health. He was chief sponsor of 2008 legislation that opened the door to treatment for millions of Americans suffering from mental illness or chemical addiction. At his behest, the legislation was named in honor of the late Sen. Paul Wellstone, a Minnesota Democrat who was also passionate about mental health equity.