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Phil Mendelson

Philip Heath Mendelson (born November 8, 1952[1]) is an American politician from Washington, D.C. He is currently Chairman of the Council of the District of Columbia, elected by the Council on June 13, 2012, following the resignation of Kwame R. Brown. He was elected to serve the remainder of Brown's term in a citywide special election on November 6, 2012,[2] and re-elected to a full term in 2014 and 2018.[3]

Phil Mendelson
9th Chairman of the Council of the District of Columbia
Assumed office
June 13, 2012
Preceded byKwame Brown
Member of the Council of the District of Columbia
at-large
In office
January 2, 1999 – November 29, 2012
Preceded byHilda Mason
Succeeded byAnita Bonds
Member of the Advisory Neighborhood Commission
from District 3C06
In office
January 2, 1985 – January 2, 1997
Preceded byKaj Strand
Succeeded byJim Evans
Member of the Advisory Neighborhood Commission
from District 3C05
In office
January 2, 1981 – January 2, 1983
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byDouglass Sloan
Personal details
Born
Philip Heath Mendelson

(1952-11-08) November 8, 1952 (age 71)
Political partyDemocratic
EducationAmerican University (BA)

Early years edit

Mendelson came to Washington from Cleveland Heights, Ohio,[4] in 1970 to attend American University.[5] He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree.[6]

Political career edit

Advisory Neighborhood Commission edit

1986–1989 edit

In 1986, Mendelson ran unopposed to represent McLean Gardens in Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C.[7] He won the election.[8] In 1987, he was elected treasurer of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C.[9][10]

Mendelson fought against a developer who wanted to build an office building on Wisconsin Avenue near Upton Street NW.[11] Mendelson was opposed to the developer building an access road over a forested area.[11] After his community group filed a lawsuit to block the road, a court determined that the developer had the right to build the access road.[12] Mendelson tried to block the work using his own body, for which he was arrested.[13] The wooded area was razed, and the access road was built.[13]

Mendelson was critical of a policy of not assessing property taxes on a building until the roof is sealed.[14] One particular developer saved $500,000 of property taxes from delaying the sealing of the roof until later in the construction timeline.[14] Mendelson said the District of Columbia was losing significant amounts of tax revenue from what he called a loophole.[14]

In 1988, Mendelson was elected to the D.C. Democratic State Committee, representing Ward 3, in 1988.[15] He ran unopposed for reelection as an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner,[16] and he won the election.[17] He was elected chair of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C soon thereafter.[18]

1990–1995 edit

In 1990, Mendelson resigned from the D.C. Democratic State Committee to work for the reelection campaign of Jim Nathanson, member of the Council of the District of Columbia representing Ward 3.[19]

Also in 1990, Mendelson voiced his opposition to iron fences on the Duke Ellington Bridge in Rock Creek Park that were intended to prevent people from jumping off the bridge.[20] He said the fences did not prevent suicide because there were more suicide attempts from the bridge after the fences were erected.[20] An increase in suicide attempts from the nearby Taft Bridge demonstrated that the fences merely diverted, rather than deterred, suicide attempts in his opinion.[20] Mendelson argued against putting fences up again after the Duke Ellington Bridge's scheduled reconstruction and instead post phone numbers for suicide prevention hotlines on the bridge.[20] He was also opposed to building fences on the Taft Bridge.[21] A group of local mental health physicians was in favor of the fences, saying the fences were worthwhile even if they did not deter every suicide attempt.[21]

Mendelson ran unopposed for reelection as an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner in 1990;[22] he won the election.[23]

When the owner of a residential building proposed constructing townhouses in front of the apartments, Mendelson opposed the idea, saying, "It makes no sense to put eight townhouses on the lawn of an apartment building."[24]

In 1992, Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly's task force on the homeless made a recommendation that shelter beds should be located equally throughout the District.[25] Other than a few churches, there were no homeless shelters located in Ward 3 at the time.[25] The ward's council member Jim Nathanson opposed establishing homeless shelters in Ward 3.[25] Mendelson was also opposed, saying, "There's no right for the homeless to get shelter in any neighborhood they want."[25]

In 1992, Mendelson ran unopposed for reelection as an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner[26] and won the election.[27] He was subsequently elected vice-chair of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C, which represents residents of Cleveland Park, Cathedral Heights, Massachusetts Heights, and Woodley Park.[28]

1996–1998 edit

In 1996, Mendelson ran for an at-large seat on the Council.[29] Mendelson's campaign focused on holding government employees accountable, hiring qualified individuals for government positions, and cutting wasteful and ineffective programs.[6] Mendelson criticized incumbent Harold Brazil for conspicuously leaving a Council meeting just before a vote on whether to reduce pension benefits for newly hired police officers, firefighters, and teachers.[29] Mendelson said Brazil's absence was in line with many other important votes that Brazil for which was absent.[29] He said all Council members should accept a cut in salary due to recent poor performance of the Council.[30]

Brazil won the Democratic primary election.[31] Mendelson came in fourth place[31] with seven percent of the vote.[32] While Mendelson did not appear on the ballot for Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner, he was only individual to notify the Board of Elections that he was willing to represent Single Member District 3C06, and therefore the Board certified him the Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner for that district.[33]

When Congress began moving more and more responsibilities from the District Government to the District of Columbia Financial Control Board, Mendelson argued against doing so, saying that only removes accountability from Mayor Marion Barry.[34] Mendelson said that Mayor Barry should have enough control over the District in order for voters to be able to judge his actions.[34] "These end runs, so to speak, in a way empower Barry, because they get him off the hook and play into the voters' reliance on other people to solve our problems."[34]

In 1997, the District Department of Recreation tore down a playground in McLean Gardens because it was rotting, splintered, and dangerous.[35] Mendelson criticized the Department of Recreation for not informing residents ahead of time and for not replacing the equipment immediately.[35] A spokesperson for the Department said that the new playground equipment would be installed within two weeks.[35]

The Washington Post wrote an article detailing how the District of Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs does not consistently enforce District laws, does not consistently collect the fees it is due, and has insufficient authority to do either.[36] Mendelson noted that residents build decks without permits and receive no penalty, and neighbors have no recourse.[36] Mendelson said that the Department could only advise residents of the law, and he advocated for giving the Department more authority to enforce the laws that it has purview over.[36] Mendelson later advocated against the Council's confirmation of W. David Watts as the agency's director, saying that the Council was not confirming the best individual for the position.[37] Mendelson continued to advocate for simplifying regulatory requirements and increasing enforcement.[38] When the Council unanimously passed a bill to reform the regulatory process, Mendelson said it was hastily written and had not been opened to enough public opinion.[39] Mendelson asked the Financial Control Board to overturn the Council's bill.[39] While Council member David Catania admitted the bill was not perfect, he also took issue with Mendelson's approach, saying it undermined District home rule.[39]

In 1998, the Financial Control Board considered repealing a law that required environmental impact statements for private projects costing more than $1 million.[40] The Financial Control Board said repealing the law would make it easier to do business in the District.[40] Mendelson opposed the repeal, saying that environmental impact statements can reveal potential public health hazards before they occur and that preparation of the statements is not sufficiently onerous to offset the potential benefits.[40] The Financial Control Board ended up increasing the threshold from $1 million to $5 million.[41]

Council of the District of Columbia edit

On June 14, 1998, Mendelson announced he would run again for an at-large seat on the Council of the District of Columbia.[42] Mendelson said the public needed to be better informed about the incumbent Council's meetings and votes.[43] He said residents only hear from Council members when they are up for reelection.[43]

Mendelson said the District should be proactive about recruiting developers and businesses, and he thought he could play a role in doing so as a member of the Council.[44] He also said the Council should do more during debates on education.[44]

Mendelson's candidacy was endorsed by the editorial board of The Washington Post[45] the Metropolitan Washington AFL–CIO,[44] the Sierra Club, and the tenant advocacy council TENAC.[46]

Mendelson came in first place in the Democratic primary election with 17 percent of the vote, advancing to the general election.[47]

Mayor Marion Barry endorsed Mendelson's candidacy in the general election.[48] The editorial board of The Washington Post endorsed independent candidate Beverly Wilbourn and Republican incumbent David Catania in the general election.[49]

Mendelson won the general election with 37 percent of the vote.[50][51] He was sworn in on January 2, 1999.[52] Because Mendelson had no seniority on the Council, Council Chair Linda W. Cropp did not assign him to chair any committees, but he was appointed as a representative to the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.[53]

In 1999, Mendelson and Catania sponsored a bill to amend a law that required most contractors to hire a majority of District residents to complete contracts with the District government.[54] The new bill would reduce monetary penalties for noncompliance, and ban non-compliant companies from doing business with the District for three years.[54]

Mendelson criticized the Council for passing acts as emergency legislation, which bypasses Congressional review and lasts for a short amount of time, even though the acts were not intended to fill temporary or urgent needs.[55] Mendelson was opposed to Mayor Anthony Williams' proposal to have a children's theme park on islands in the Anacostia River.[56]

From 2005 to 2012[57] Mendelson served as the chair of the DC Council's Committee on the Judiciary. In 2011 he supported the effort to establish an elected attorney general[58][59] and pushed for an independent Forensic Science Crime Lab.[60]

Mendelson was re-elected in 2002,[61] 2006,[62] and 2010.[63]

In 2012, Kwame Brown resigned from the position of Chair of the Council.[64] In a vote of 11 to 1, the Council voted to appoint Mendelson to the position of interim Chair of the Council.[65] In a special election held in November 2012, Mendelson was elected by District voters to the position of Chair of the Council.[66] He was elected to a full term as chair in 2014.[3]

From a regional standpoint, Mendelson worked with his counterparts in Montgomery and Prince George's Counties to increase the minimum wage.[67][68]

Mendelson has received national attention for his work to bring Budget Autonomy for the District,[69][70] the city's laws on gun control[71] and same-sex marriage legalization.[72][73]

2016

In 2016 Mendelson overhauled Mayor Bowser's plan to close DC General homeless shelter and build multiple smaller shelters in its place. He shepherded Universal Paid Leave through the Council.[74][75]

2018 edit

Mendelson ran for a third term, facing progressive challenger Ed Lazere, and won renomination with 63% of the vote.[76] He won the general election over Libertarian candidate Ethan Bishop-Henchman.[77]

In 2019, Mendelson proposed changes that would significantly limit the ability for the public to access government records through the Freedom of Information Act. Mendelson claimed that the changes were necessary to limit frivolous requests while activists insisted that the changes would prevent the public from uncovering fraud, waste, and abuses. Mendelson was also criticized for introducing the changes as a technical amendment, not separate legislation, which would require a public hearing.[78]

Mendelson was an active proponent for a no-bid, sole-source contract to launch the District's sports betting program. Mendelson insisted that a competitive bid for the $215 million contract would result in unacceptable delays of two to three years. He downplayed the inexperience of local partners and claimed that any award would risk conflicts of interest.[79] After the Council narrowly approved the bid, it was discovered that the main local partner had no employees and was led by a Maryland resident. [80]

2021 edit

After 3 years of budget battles, Mendelson was finally able to fully fund the Tipped Worker Fairness Act of 2018[81] a long-sought compromise bill stemming from the battle over Initiative 77. Among the many additional regulations surrounding hospitality venue operations, this bill formed the Tipped Workers Coordinating Council within the DC government to oversee the implementation of the law and act as a formal body to make policy recommendations to the appropriate District agency.[82] Importantly this council is made up of directors of several District agencies along with 4 seats reserved for workers, 2 appointed by the Mayor and 2 by the DC Council Chairman.[83] Mendelson appointed known hospitality advocate Zachary Hoffman in May of 2021[84] with the other seat vacant for some time.

Other activities edit

Mendelson has served as a trustee of the Committee of 100 on the Federal City,[38] a member of the board of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, and as the president of the Association of Metropolitan Planning Organizations.

Personal life edit

Mendelson is divorced from Constance G. (Connie) Ridgway.[85][86][87]

Mendelson and Ridgway have a daughter, Adelaide Marie Ridgway-Mendelson, born July 29, 2000.[88]

Mendelson lives in Capitol Hill.[89]

Electoral history edit

1996 edit

1996 Council of the District of Columbia, Democratic primary, at-large[32]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Harold Brazil 17,465 42
Democratic Joseph P. Yeldell 9,230 22
Democratic John Capozzi 6,092 15
Democratic Phil Mendelson 3,117 7
Democratic Kathryn A. Pearson-West 2,015 5
Democratic Paul Savage 1,941 5
Democratic Ronnie Edwards 791 2
Democratic Ernest E. Johnson 664 2
Democratic Write-in 258 1

1998 edit

1998 Council of the District of Columbia, Democratic primary, at-large[90]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 14,089 17
Democratic Linda Moody 11,532 14
Democratic William H. "Rev" Bennett II 11,336 14
Democratic Bill Rice 11,087 14
Democratic Phyllis J. Outlaw 10,769 13
Democratic Sabrina Sojourner 9,725 12
Democratic Don Reeves 4,130 5
Democratic Charles Gaither 3,721 5
Democratic Greg Rhett 2,646 3
Democratic Kathryn A. Pearson-West 2,485 3
Democratic Write-in 718 1
1998 Council of the District of Columbia general election, at-large[91]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 71,799 37
Republican David A. Catania 40,200 21
DC Statehood Hilda Mason 28,615 15
Independent Beverly J. Wilbourn 22,946 12
Independent Malik Z. Shabazz 15,644 8
Umoja Mark Thompson 9,733 5
Independent Sandra "SS" Seegars 2,764 1
Write-in 648 0

2002 edit

2002 Council of the District of Columbia, Democratic primary, at-large[92]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 38,681 43
Democratic Beverly Wilbourn 26,379 29
Democratic Dwight E. Singleton 16,749 19
Democratic M. Muhammad Shabazz 4,098 5
Democratic Al-Malik Farrakhan 3,655 4
Democratic Write-in 933 1
2002 Council of the District of Columbia general election, at-large[61]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 90,316 47
Republican David A. Catania 51,698 27
Independent Eugene Dewitt Kinlow 17,522 9
DC Statehood Green Michele Tingling-Clemmons 13,828 7
Independent Chris Ray 5,879 3
Independent A.D. "Tony" Dominguez 4,395 2
Independent Ahmad Braxton-Jones 3,708 2
Independent Kweku Toure 3,304 2
Write-in 1,115 1

2006 edit

2006 Council of the District of Columbia, Democratic primary, at-large[93]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 62,776 64
Democratic A. Scott Bolden 35,486 36
Democratic Write-in 468 0
2006 Council of the District of Columbia general election, at-large[62]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 90,599 51
Independent David A. Catania 58,293 33
DC Statehood Green Ann C. Wilcox 12,390 7
Independent Antonio "Tony" Dominguez 8,759 5
Republican Marcus Skelton 8,199 5
Write-in 912 1

2010 edit

Council of the District of Columbia, Democratic primary, at-large[94]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 77,127 63
Democratic Michael D. Brown 34,829 28
Democratic Dorothy Douglas 6,922 6
Democratic Write-in 812 1
2010 Council of the District of Columbia, general election, at-large[63]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 105,296 56
Independent David A. Catania 57,163 31
DC Statehood Green David Schwartzman 12,697 7
Independent Richard Urban 9,668 5
Write-in 1,839 1

2012 edit

2012 Council of the District of Columbia, Chair, Special Election[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 174,742 71
Democratic Calvin H. Gurley 69,342 28
Democratic Write-in 3,017 1

2014 edit

2014 Council of the District of Columbia, Democratic primary, chair[95]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 69,138 81
Democratic Calvin H. Gurley 15,178 18
Democratic Write-in 825 1
2014 Council of the District of Columbia general election, chair[3]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 138,066 78
Republican Kris Hammond 12,114 7
Independent John C. Cheeks 6,949 4
DC Statehood Green G. Lee Aikin 5,930 3
Libertarian Kyle Walker 3,674 2
Write-in 849 0

2018 edit

2018 Council of the District of Columbia, Democratic primary, chair[96]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 48,848 63.02
Democratic Ed Lazere 28,280 36.48
Democratic Write-in 384 0.5
2018 Council of the District of Columbia general election, chair[97]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Phil Mendelson 198,639 89.13
Libertarian Ethan Bishop-Henchman 18,708 8.39
Write-in 5,516 2.48

References edit

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  89. ^ Janezich, Larry (September 12, 2016). "City Council Chair Mendelson Purchases Hill East Home Across From Watkins School". Capitol Hill Corner. Retrieved February 17, 2017.
  90. ^ . District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. September 25, 1998. Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  91. ^ . District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. November 13, 1998. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  92. ^ . District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. September 20, 2002. Archived from the original on September 5, 2015. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  93. ^ (PDF). District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. September 26, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  94. ^ "Certified Results, Primary Election, 2010". District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. September 29, 2010.
  95. ^ . District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. April 23, 2014. Archived from the original on April 12, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  96. ^ "Certified Results, Primary Election, 2018". District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. June 19, 2018. Retrieved April 12, 2022.
  97. ^ "Certified Results, General Election, 2018". District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. November 15, 2018. Retrieved April 12, 2022.

External links edit

Council of the District of Columbia
Preceded by Member of the Council of the District of Columbia
At-Large

1999–2012
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Chairman of the Council of the District of Columbia
2012–present
Incumbent

phil, mendelson, philip, heath, mendelson, born, november, 1952, american, politician, from, washington, currently, chairman, council, district, columbia, elected, council, june, 2012, following, resignation, kwame, brown, elected, serve, remainder, brown, ter. Philip Heath Mendelson born November 8 1952 1 is an American politician from Washington D C He is currently Chairman of the Council of the District of Columbia elected by the Council on June 13 2012 following the resignation of Kwame R Brown He was elected to serve the remainder of Brown s term in a citywide special election on November 6 2012 2 and re elected to a full term in 2014 and 2018 3 Phil Mendelson9th Chairman of the Council of the District of ColumbiaIncumbentAssumed office June 13 2012Preceded byKwame BrownMember of the Council of the District of Columbiaat largeIn office January 2 1999 November 29 2012Preceded byHilda MasonSucceeded byAnita BondsMember of the Advisory Neighborhood Commissionfrom District 3C06In office January 2 1985 January 2 1997Preceded byKaj StrandSucceeded byJim EvansMember of the Advisory Neighborhood Commissionfrom District 3C05In office January 2 1981 January 2 1983Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byDouglass SloanPersonal detailsBornPhilip Heath Mendelson 1952 11 08 November 8 1952 age 71 Political partyDemocraticEducationAmerican University BA Contents 1 Early years 2 Political career 2 1 Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2 1 1 1986 1989 2 1 2 1990 1995 2 1 3 1996 1998 2 2 Council of the District of Columbia 2 2 1 2018 2 2 2 2021 3 Other activities 4 Personal life 5 Electoral history 5 1 1996 5 2 1998 5 3 2002 5 4 2006 5 5 2010 5 6 2012 5 7 2014 5 8 2018 6 References 7 External linksEarly years editMendelson came to Washington from Cleveland Heights Ohio 4 in 1970 to attend American University 5 He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree 6 Political career editAdvisory Neighborhood Commission edit 1986 1989 edit In 1986 Mendelson ran unopposed to represent McLean Gardens in Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C 7 He won the election 8 In 1987 he was elected treasurer of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C 9 10 Mendelson fought against a developer who wanted to build an office building on Wisconsin Avenue near Upton Street NW 11 Mendelson was opposed to the developer building an access road over a forested area 11 After his community group filed a lawsuit to block the road a court determined that the developer had the right to build the access road 12 Mendelson tried to block the work using his own body for which he was arrested 13 The wooded area was razed and the access road was built 13 Mendelson was critical of a policy of not assessing property taxes on a building until the roof is sealed 14 One particular developer saved 500 000 of property taxes from delaying the sealing of the roof until later in the construction timeline 14 Mendelson said the District of Columbia was losing significant amounts of tax revenue from what he called a loophole 14 In 1988 Mendelson was elected to the D C Democratic State Committee representing Ward 3 in 1988 15 He ran unopposed for reelection as an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner 16 and he won the election 17 He was elected chair of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C soon thereafter 18 1990 1995 edit In 1990 Mendelson resigned from the D C Democratic State Committee to work for the reelection campaign of Jim Nathanson member of the Council of the District of Columbia representing Ward 3 19 Also in 1990 Mendelson voiced his opposition to iron fences on the Duke Ellington Bridge in Rock Creek Park that were intended to prevent people from jumping off the bridge 20 He said the fences did not prevent suicide because there were more suicide attempts from the bridge after the fences were erected 20 An increase in suicide attempts from the nearby Taft Bridge demonstrated that the fences merely diverted rather than deterred suicide attempts in his opinion 20 Mendelson argued against putting fences up again after the Duke Ellington Bridge s scheduled reconstruction and instead post phone numbers for suicide prevention hotlines on the bridge 20 He was also opposed to building fences on the Taft Bridge 21 A group of local mental health physicians was in favor of the fences saying the fences were worthwhile even if they did not deter every suicide attempt 21 Mendelson ran unopposed for reelection as an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner in 1990 22 he won the election 23 When the owner of a residential building proposed constructing townhouses in front of the apartments Mendelson opposed the idea saying It makes no sense to put eight townhouses on the lawn of an apartment building 24 In 1992 Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly s task force on the homeless made a recommendation that shelter beds should be located equally throughout the District 25 Other than a few churches there were no homeless shelters located in Ward 3 at the time 25 The ward s council member Jim Nathanson opposed establishing homeless shelters in Ward 3 25 Mendelson was also opposed saying There s no right for the homeless to get shelter in any neighborhood they want 25 In 1992 Mendelson ran unopposed for reelection as an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner 26 and won the election 27 He was subsequently elected vice chair of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3C which represents residents of Cleveland Park Cathedral Heights Massachusetts Heights and Woodley Park 28 1996 1998 edit In 1996 Mendelson ran for an at large seat on the Council 29 Mendelson s campaign focused on holding government employees accountable hiring qualified individuals for government positions and cutting wasteful and ineffective programs 6 Mendelson criticized incumbent Harold Brazil for conspicuously leaving a Council meeting just before a vote on whether to reduce pension benefits for newly hired police officers firefighters and teachers 29 Mendelson said Brazil s absence was in line with many other important votes that Brazil for which was absent 29 He said all Council members should accept a cut in salary due to recent poor performance of the Council 30 Brazil won the Democratic primary election 31 Mendelson came in fourth place 31 with seven percent of the vote 32 While Mendelson did not appear on the ballot for Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner he was only individual to notify the Board of Elections that he was willing to represent Single Member District 3C06 and therefore the Board certified him the Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner for that district 33 When Congress began moving more and more responsibilities from the District Government to the District of Columbia Financial Control Board Mendelson argued against doing so saying that only removes accountability from Mayor Marion Barry 34 Mendelson said that Mayor Barry should have enough control over the District in order for voters to be able to judge his actions 34 These end runs so to speak in a way empower Barry because they get him off the hook and play into the voters reliance on other people to solve our problems 34 In 1997 the District Department of Recreation tore down a playground in McLean Gardens because it was rotting splintered and dangerous 35 Mendelson criticized the Department of Recreation for not informing residents ahead of time and for not replacing the equipment immediately 35 A spokesperson for the Department said that the new playground equipment would be installed within two weeks 35 The Washington Post wrote an article detailing how the District of Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs does not consistently enforce District laws does not consistently collect the fees it is due and has insufficient authority to do either 36 Mendelson noted that residents build decks without permits and receive no penalty and neighbors have no recourse 36 Mendelson said that the Department could only advise residents of the law and he advocated for giving the Department more authority to enforce the laws that it has purview over 36 Mendelson later advocated against the Council s confirmation of W David Watts as the agency s director saying that the Council was not confirming the best individual for the position 37 Mendelson continued to advocate for simplifying regulatory requirements and increasing enforcement 38 When the Council unanimously passed a bill to reform the regulatory process Mendelson said it was hastily written and had not been opened to enough public opinion 39 Mendelson asked the Financial Control Board to overturn the Council s bill 39 While Council member David Catania admitted the bill was not perfect he also took issue with Mendelson s approach saying it undermined District home rule 39 In 1998 the Financial Control Board considered repealing a law that required environmental impact statements for private projects costing more than 1 million 40 The Financial Control Board said repealing the law would make it easier to do business in the District 40 Mendelson opposed the repeal saying that environmental impact statements can reveal potential public health hazards before they occur and that preparation of the statements is not sufficiently onerous to offset the potential benefits 40 The Financial Control Board ended up increasing the threshold from 1 million to 5 million 41 Council of the District of Columbia edit On June 14 1998 Mendelson announced he would run again for an at large seat on the Council of the District of Columbia 42 Mendelson said the public needed to be better informed about the incumbent Council s meetings and votes 43 He said residents only hear from Council members when they are up for reelection 43 Mendelson said the District should be proactive about recruiting developers and businesses and he thought he could play a role in doing so as a member of the Council 44 He also said the Council should do more during debates on education 44 Mendelson s candidacy was endorsed by the editorial board of The Washington Post 45 the Metropolitan Washington AFL CIO 44 the Sierra Club and the tenant advocacy council TENAC 46 Mendelson came in first place in the Democratic primary election with 17 percent of the vote advancing to the general election 47 Mayor Marion Barry endorsed Mendelson s candidacy in the general election 48 The editorial board of The Washington Post endorsed independent candidate Beverly Wilbourn and Republican incumbent David Catania in the general election 49 Mendelson won the general election with 37 percent of the vote 50 51 He was sworn in on January 2 1999 52 Because Mendelson had no seniority on the Council Council Chair Linda W Cropp did not assign him to chair any committees but he was appointed as a representative to the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments 53 In 1999 Mendelson and Catania sponsored a bill to amend a law that required most contractors to hire a majority of District residents to complete contracts with the District government 54 The new bill would reduce monetary penalties for noncompliance and ban non compliant companies from doing business with the District for three years 54 Mendelson criticized the Council for passing acts as emergency legislation which bypasses Congressional review and lasts for a short amount of time even though the acts were not intended to fill temporary or urgent needs 55 Mendelson was opposed to Mayor Anthony Williams proposal to have a children s theme park on islands in the Anacostia River 56 From 2005 to 2012 57 Mendelson served as the chair of the DC Council s Committee on the Judiciary In 2011 he supported the effort to establish an elected attorney general 58 59 and pushed for an independent Forensic Science Crime Lab 60 Mendelson was re elected in 2002 61 2006 62 and 2010 63 In 2012 Kwame Brown resigned from the position of Chair of the Council 64 In a vote of 11 to 1 the Council voted to appoint Mendelson to the position of interim Chair of the Council 65 In a special election held in November 2012 Mendelson was elected by District voters to the position of Chair of the Council 66 He was elected to a full term as chair in 2014 3 From a regional standpoint Mendelson worked with his counterparts in Montgomery and Prince George s Counties to increase the minimum wage 67 68 Mendelson has received national attention for his work to bring Budget Autonomy for the District 69 70 the city s laws on gun control 71 and same sex marriage legalization 72 73 2016In 2016 Mendelson overhauled Mayor Bowser s plan to close DC General homeless shelter and build multiple smaller shelters in its place He shepherded Universal Paid Leave through the Council 74 75 2018 edit Mendelson ran for a third term facing progressive challenger Ed Lazere and won renomination with 63 of the vote 76 He won the general election over Libertarian candidate Ethan Bishop Henchman 77 In 2019 Mendelson proposed changes that would significantly limit the ability for the public to access government records through the Freedom of Information Act Mendelson claimed that the changes were necessary to limit frivolous requests while activists insisted that the changes would prevent the public from uncovering fraud waste and abuses Mendelson was also criticized for introducing the changes as a technical amendment not separate legislation which would require a public hearing 78 Mendelson was an active proponent for a no bid sole source contract to launch the District s sports betting program Mendelson insisted that a competitive bid for the 215 million contract would result in unacceptable delays of two to three years He downplayed the inexperience of local partners and claimed that any award would risk conflicts of interest 79 After the Council narrowly approved the bid it was discovered that the main local partner had no employees and was led by a Maryland resident 80 2021 edit After 3 years of budget battles Mendelson was finally able to fully fund the Tipped Worker Fairness Act of 2018 81 a long sought compromise bill stemming from the battle over Initiative 77 Among the many additional regulations surrounding hospitality venue operations this bill formed the Tipped Workers Coordinating Council within the DC government to oversee the implementation of the law and act as a formal body to make policy recommendations to the appropriate District agency 82 Importantly this council is made up of directors of several District agencies along with 4 seats reserved for workers 2 appointed by the Mayor and 2 by the DC Council Chairman 83 Mendelson appointed known hospitality advocate Zachary Hoffman in May of 2021 84 with the other seat vacant for some time Other activities editMendelson has served as a trustee of the Committee of 100 on the Federal City 38 a member of the board of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments and as the president of the Association of Metropolitan Planning Organizations Personal life editMendelson is divorced from Constance G Connie Ridgway 85 86 87 Mendelson and Ridgway have a daughter Adelaide Marie Ridgway Mendelson born July 29 2000 88 Mendelson lives in Capitol Hill 89 Electoral history edit1996 edit 1996 Council of the District of Columbia Democratic primary at large 32 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Harold Brazil 17 465 42Democratic Joseph P Yeldell 9 230 22Democratic John Capozzi 6 092 15Democratic Phil Mendelson 3 117 7Democratic Kathryn A Pearson West 2 015 5Democratic Paul Savage 1 941 5Democratic Ronnie Edwards 791 2Democratic Ernest E Johnson 664 2Democratic Write in 258 11998 edit 1998 Council of the District of Columbia Democratic primary at large 90 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 14 089 17Democratic Linda Moody 11 532 14Democratic William H Rev Bennett II 11 336 14Democratic Bill Rice 11 087 14Democratic Phyllis J Outlaw 10 769 13Democratic Sabrina Sojourner 9 725 12Democratic Don Reeves 4 130 5Democratic Charles Gaither 3 721 5Democratic Greg Rhett 2 646 3Democratic Kathryn A Pearson West 2 485 3Democratic Write in 718 11998 Council of the District of Columbia general election at large 91 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 71 799 37Republican David A Catania 40 200 21DC Statehood Hilda Mason 28 615 15Independent Beverly J Wilbourn 22 946 12Independent Malik Z Shabazz 15 644 8Umoja Mark Thompson 9 733 5Independent Sandra SS Seegars 2 764 1Write in 648 02002 edit 2002 Council of the District of Columbia Democratic primary at large 92 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 38 681 43Democratic Beverly Wilbourn 26 379 29Democratic Dwight E Singleton 16 749 19Democratic M Muhammad Shabazz 4 098 5Democratic Al Malik Farrakhan 3 655 4Democratic Write in 933 12002 Council of the District of Columbia general election at large 61 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 90 316 47Republican David A Catania 51 698 27Independent Eugene Dewitt Kinlow 17 522 9DC Statehood Green Michele Tingling Clemmons 13 828 7Independent Chris Ray 5 879 3Independent A D Tony Dominguez 4 395 2Independent Ahmad Braxton Jones 3 708 2Independent Kweku Toure 3 304 2Write in 1 115 12006 edit 2006 Council of the District of Columbia Democratic primary at large 93 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 62 776 64Democratic A Scott Bolden 35 486 36Democratic Write in 468 02006 Council of the District of Columbia general election at large 62 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 90 599 51Independent David A Catania 58 293 33DC Statehood Green Ann C Wilcox 12 390 7Independent Antonio Tony Dominguez 8 759 5Republican Marcus Skelton 8 199 5Write in 912 12010 edit Council of the District of Columbia Democratic primary at large 94 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 77 127 63Democratic Michael D Brown 34 829 28Democratic Dorothy Douglas 6 922 6Democratic Write in 812 12010 Council of the District of Columbia general election at large 63 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 105 296 56Independent David A Catania 57 163 31DC Statehood Green David Schwartzman 12 697 7Independent Richard Urban 9 668 5Write in 1 839 12012 edit 2012 Council of the District of Columbia Chair Special Election 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 174 742 71Democratic Calvin H Gurley 69 342 28Democratic Write in 3 017 12014 edit 2014 Council of the District of Columbia Democratic primary chair 95 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 69 138 81Democratic Calvin H Gurley 15 178 18Democratic Write in 825 12014 Council of the District of Columbia general election chair 3 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 138 066 78Republican Kris Hammond 12 114 7Independent John C Cheeks 6 949 4DC Statehood Green G Lee Aikin 5 930 3Libertarian Kyle Walker 3 674 2Write in 849 02018 edit 2018 Council of the District of Columbia Democratic primary chair 96 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 48 848 63 02Democratic Ed Lazere 28 280 36 48Democratic Write in 384 0 52018 Council of the District of Columbia general election chair 97 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Phil Mendelson 198 639 89 13Libertarian Ethan Bishop Henchman 18 708 8 39Write in 5 516 2 48References edit Voters Guide 2006 Supplement PDF The Washington Informer September 24 2006 Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 a b Certified Results Special Election 2012 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics April 14 2014 Archived from the original on January 6 2015 Retrieved September 19 2015 a b c Certified Results General Election 2014 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics December 3 2014 Archived from the original on December 20 2015 Retrieved September 18 2015 Klein Allison June 13 2012 Mendelson is a man of detail not drama The Washington Post p A1 About Phil Phil Mendelson DC Council Chairman Retrieved September 26 2015 a b D C Council Races At Large The Washington Post September 5 1996 p DC2 Advisory Neighborhood Commissions The Washington Post October 30 1986 p DC11 Winners The Washington Post November 13 1986 p DC7 ANC Actions The Washington Post February 5 1987 p J5 ANC Actions The Washington Post June 4 1987 p DC5 a b Wheeler Linda June 10 1987 Protesters Court Stall Building Of Road in NW The Washington Post p D3 Wheeler Linda June 17 1987 Go Ahead Granted on Disputed NW Road The Washington Post p D9 a b Pae Peter June 23 1987 Wooded Area Razed for Disputed NW Access Road The Washington Post p B3 a b c Crenshaw Albert B September 24 1988 Building s Unfinished Roof Gives Developer Big Shelter The Washington Post p E1 Sherwood Tom May 5 1988 Jackson s Landslide Falls Short of Hopes Lack of D C Organization Cited Dukakis D C Vote Less Than Mondale s in 1984 The Washington Post p D1 Advisory Neighborhood Commission The Washington Post November 3 1988 p J5 District Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Election Votes Tabulated The Washington Post November 11 1988 p C4 Barker Karlyn October 25 1989 Metro s Zoo Directions Don t Tell Whole Story Cleveland Park Feeling Short Changed The Washington Post p D5 Abramowits Michael March 15 1990 Making and Not Making Hard Budget Choices The Washington Post p DC3 a b c d Butler Josephine Mendelson Phil March 24 1990 Fences That Have Failed opinion The Washington Post p A20 a b Webb Margaret K May 24 1990 New Debate On Suicide Barriers Issue Dominates Taft Bridge Meetings The Washington Post p DC1 Advisory Neighborhood Commissions The Washington Post November 1 1990 p H8 Armstrong Jenice November 15 1990 Incumbents Sail Into ANC Posts 176 Commissioners Reelected With Little or No Opposition The Washington Post p J1 Greene Jon July 16 1992 Town House Plan Gets Hearing The Washington Post p DC2 a b c d Castaneda Ruben August 17 1992 Panel Would Divvy Up Beds for the Homeless Equal Share Envisioned in All D C Wards The Washington Post p C1 Sutner Shaun October 29 1992 New ANC Borders Spark Fierce Fights for Unpaid Posts The Washington Post p DC7 Sutner Shaun November 19 1992 267 ANC Seats Filled in Vote but 32 Remain Open The Washington Post p DC4 News Near You The Washington Post February 4 1993 p DC4 a b c Harris Hamil R Woodlee Yolanda July 25 1996 Challenger Says Brazil Gets Scarce for the Tough Votes The Washington Post p DC1 Harris Hamil R September 7 1996 Despite D C Budget Woes It Still Pays to Be on Council Salaries Are Among Highest in the Country The Washington Post p B1 a b District Primary Election Results The Washington Post September 11 1996 p A2 a b Certified Results Primary Election 1996 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics September 20 1996 Archived from the original on September 7 2015 Retrieved September 19 2015 Wheeler Linda Harris Hamil R November 21 1996 ANC Winners Declared 42 Positions Have No Takers The Washington Post p DC7 a b c Williams Vanessa March 2 1997 Barry Puts Positive Spin on His Reduced Role The Washington Post p B1 a b c Horwitz Sari June 11 1997 NW Children s Playground Is No More Teary Tots Irate Parents Find City Dismantled It Without Notice The Washington Post p B3 a b c Loeb Vernon Powell Michael August 27 1997 A Critical D C Agency Fails to Mind Its Affairs Regulations Unenforced Fees Uncollected The Washington Post p A1 Williams Vanessa September 15 1997 D C Council Confirms Its Critics Fears The Washington Post p C1 a b Mendelson Phil February 1 1998 Roadblock to Real Reform op ed The Washington Post p C10 a b c Williams Vanessa February 12 1998 Activist Asks Control Board To Overturn Bill Request Angers Council Home Rule Advocates The Washington Post p DC1 a b c Ferster Andrea Mendelson Phil April 26 1998 And One That Needs To Stay on the Books op ed The Washington Post p 48 Vise David A May 29 1998 D C Board Caps Term by Easing Business Rules The Washington Post p A1 Civic Activist Seeks At Large Seat The Washington Post June 14 1998 p B3 a b Williams Vanessa August 19 1998 At Large Candidates Criticize Council on Schools The Washington Post p B8 a b c Powell Michael September 6 1998 At Large Candidates Try To Stand Out in a Crowd Campaigners Stress Ideas to Bolster Business Community D C Council The Washington Post p B1 For D C Council editorial The Washington Post September 10 1998 p A22 Phil Mendelson The Washington Post September 12 1998 p DC6 Powell Michael Cottman Michael H September 16 1998 Williams Wins Mayoral Primary District s Ex Finance Chief Trounces Democratic Field The Washington Post p A1 Montgomery David October 8 1998 After 3 Weeks Barry Backs Entire Democratic Slate The Washington Post p B1 At Large Wilbourn amp Catania editorial The Washington Post October 23 1998 p A26 Montgomery David November 4 1998 Mendelson Catania Win Veteran Council Member Hilda Mason Is Ousted The Washington Post p A35 Result Chart District of Columbia The Washington Post November 4 1998 p A37 Williams Vanessa January 3 1999 7 Members Sworn In Altering D C Council Lawmakers Promise to Bolster Oversight The Washington Post p B4 Williams Vanessa January 5 1999 Council Names Committee Chairmanships The Washington Post p B4 a b Pyatt Rudolph A Jr January 21 1999 Work Here Hire Here Or Pay Dearly The Washington Post p E3 Williams Vanessa February 8 1999 Study Urges D C Council to Reorganize The Washington Post p B4 Fast Decision Urged on Children s Island Park The Washington Post February 14 1999 p C3 Councilmember Phil Mendelson News dcclims1 dccouncil us Retrieved August 29 2019 Sherwood Tom Elected Attorney General Possible for DC WRC TV Retrieved August 29 2019 PR19 0145 Elected Attorney General Referendum Emergency Declaration Resolution of 2011 lims dccouncil us Retrieved August 29 2019 D C Crime Lab An Experiment in Forensic Science Second of Two Parts www govtech com November 27 2012 Retrieved August 29 2019 a b Certified Results General Election 2002 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics November 21 2002 Archived from the original on November 29 2014 Retrieved September 19 2015 a b Certified Results General Election 2006 PDF District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics November 21 2006 Archived from the original PDF on September 23 2015 Retrieved September 19 2015 a b Certified Results General Election 2010 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics November 19 2010 Archived from the original on November 23 2015 Retrieved September 19 2015 Wilber Del Quentin Craig Tim June 6 2012 D C Council Chairman Kwame Brown resigns after he is charged with bank fraud The Washington Post Craig Tim June 13 2012 Mendelson Brown chosen to lead D C Council amid acrimonious debate The Washington Post Phipps Evans Michelle November 15 2012 The Council Shuffle Begins Washington Informer Washington D C p 5 How D C and 2 Maryland Counties Coordinated a Minimum Wage Hike Governing the states and localities December 9 2013 Plan would raise minimum wage for half of D C region to 11 50 by 2016 The Washington Post October 9 2013 Dick Jason March 28 2016 What a Long Strange Case D C Budget Autonomy Chairman Mendelson s Statement on Budget Autonomy Decision Chairman Phil Mendelson Retrieved August 29 2019 DC Will Not Appeal Gun Law To Supreme Court The Washington Post October 5 2017 Religious Freedom and Civil Marriage Equality Amendment Act of 2009 DC Council October 6 2009 D C Council approves same sex marriage bill The Washington Post December 16 2009 D C Council Approves Smart Fair Comprehensive Paid Leave Program the District Needs and Deserves Women s Leader Says www nationalpartnership org Retrieved August 29 2019 D C Council votes for expansive paid family and medical leave for private sector workers The Washington Post December 20 2016 Jamison Peter January 24 2018 Head of influential think tank to challenge D C Council chairman The Washington Post Retrieved January 24 2018 Mellendorf Hallie November 6 2018 Head of influential think tank to challenge D C Council chairman The Washington Post Retrieved November 8 2018 Jamison Peter May 8 2019 FOIA restrictions would shield D C officials who use email for personal business The Washington Post Nirappil Fenit July 9 2019 D C Council approves no bid sports gambling contract The Washington Post Retrieved July 9 2019 Thompson Steve August 28 2019 The little firm that got a big chunk of D C s lottery and sports gambling contract has no employees The Washington Post Retrieved August 28 2019 DC Council officially overturns Initiative 77 killing minimum wage increase October 16 2018 Tipped Workers Coordinating Council does D C Law Library 32 1009 02 Tipped Workers Coordinating Council Tipped Workers Coordinating Council does DeBonis Mike August 1 2008 Political Potpourri Washington City Paper Timberg Craig Hsu Spencer November 21 2002 Status Quo Election Limits Council Members Upward Mobility The Washington Post p T2 Jamison Peter March 4 2017 Phil Mendelson beat the odds to run D C Will his luck hold in the Trump era The Washington Post Cottman Michael H Chan Sewell Leonnig Carol D August 10 2000 Adopting a Baby The Washington Post p J2 Janezich Larry September 12 2016 City Council Chair Mendelson Purchases Hill East Home Across From Watkins School Capitol Hill Corner Retrieved February 17 2017 Certified Results Primary Election 1998 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics September 25 1998 Archived from the original on November 29 2014 Retrieved September 19 2015 Certified Results General Election 1998 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics November 13 1998 Archived from the original on November 17 2015 Retrieved September 19 2015 Certified Results Primary Election 2002 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics September 20 2002 Archived from the original on September 5 2015 Retrieved September 19 2015 Certified Results Primary Election 2006 PDF District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics September 26 2006 Archived from the original PDF on March 3 2016 Retrieved September 19 2015 Certified Results Primary Election 2010 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics September 29 2010 Certified Results Primary Election 2014 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics April 23 2014 Archived from the original on April 12 2014 Retrieved September 19 2015 Certified Results Primary Election 2018 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics June 19 2018 Retrieved April 12 2022 Certified Results General Election 2018 District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics November 15 2018 Retrieved April 12 2022 External links editWebsite of Councilmember Phil Mendelson Appearances on C SPANCouncil of the District of ColumbiaPreceded byHilda Mason Member of the Council of the District of ColumbiaAt Large1999 2012 Succeeded byAnita BondsPolitical officesPreceded byKwame Brown Chairman of the Council of the District of Columbia2012 present Incumbent Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phil Mendelson amp oldid 1181665469, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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