Difference between revisions of "Joe Herzenberg"
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'''Joe Herzenberg ''' | '''Joe Herzenberg ''' | ||
− | Born June 25, 1941 | + | Born June 25, 1941 |
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+ | Died October 28, 2007 | ||
Town Council Member, Mayor Pro Tempore | Town Council Member, Mayor Pro Tempore | ||
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− | == | + | == Essay by Joe Herzenberg for ''Out and Elected in the USA'' == |
Revision as of 10:27, 3 June 2008
Joe Herzenberg Born June 25, 1941 Died October 28, 2007 Town Council Member, Mayor Pro Tempore Chapel Hill, North Carolina 45,000 constituents
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Career Overview Appointed 1979 Came out gradually 1981-85 Elected in November 1987 Reelected 1989, 1991 Elected Mayor Pro Tempore by the Council in December 1992 |
After his appointment in 1979, Joe Herzenberg ran for the seat in 1981 and lost, then he ran in 1985 and lost again. By the time of his final re-election in 1991, Herzenberg received the highest number of votes ever as a candidate for local office in Chapel Hill.
Essay by Joe Herzenberg for Out and Elected in the USA
It was a simple matter. I had always been interested in politics. Both my father and his father had served on the Borough Council and the Board of Education in my hometown of Franklin, New Jersey, where I was born.
After five years at Yale, where I studied history, and another five years at Tougaloo College in Mississippi, where I taught and helped make history and witnessed great social change, I arrived in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, a southern university town with a tradition of liberalism and tolerance. That was in 1969, when the voters had just elected the first Black mayor in a White-majority southern town.
While still in the closet, I ran for the Chapel Hill Town Council for the first time in 1979. I lost, but then served two years on the Council after being appointed to fill a vacancy. It wasn’t until 1987, after I came out, that I was elected to a full term on the Council. I served for six years, and one of those years, 1992, I was also Mayor Pro Tempore.
Chapel Hill has about 45,000 residents, half of them University of North Carolina students. And our local elections are non-partisan. (There are not enough Republicans to make much difference.) Gay students and activists, and sometimes the North Carolina press tried to make a big deal about my election as the first openly gay official on “the Southern Mainland” – there was already one of us in Key West. But most of my constituents didn’t seem to mind one way or the other, so long as I was doing a good job tending to the public business.
I enjoyed my service on the Town Council, where I helped accomplish a good deal including a shelter for the homeless, a new public library, a downtown parking garage and plaza, important additions to our greenway system, an AIDS house, and new legislation in several areas including tree protections and noise abatement. And I always was, and still am, a gay person in public life in our town.
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