Frank G. Jackson

Frank G. Jackson

Infobox Mayor
name = Frank G. Jackson
width =



order = 57th
office = Mayor of Cleveland
birth_date = birth date and age|1946|10|4
birth_place = Cleveland, Ohio
residence = Cleveland, Ohio
term_start = January 2, 2006
term_end =
predecessor = Jane L. Campbell
successor = Incumbent
party = Democratic
profession = attorney
religion =
spouse = Edwina
website =
alma_mater = Cleveland State University

Frank George Jackson (born October 4, 1946) is an American politician of the Democratic Party. He was elected the 57th mayor of Cleveland, Ohio on November 8, 2005, unseating unpopular incumbent Jane Campbell. He is the first sitting member of Cleveland City Council to become mayor since Stephen Buhrer in 1867.

Biography

Jackson's father, George, was an African American factory worker while his mother, Rose was an homemaker of Italian heritage. Jackson grew up in the neighborhoods of Kinsman and Central, sections of Cleveland that have become more known for crime and proverty than positive achievements. Young Jackson struggled in school and, when his father became sick, his mother took a job as a cleaner at St. Vincent Charity Hospital to support the family. After graduating from Max S. Hayes High School, Jackson served in the United States Army during the Vietnam War. After his discharge, Jackson attended Cuyahoga Community College and Cleveland State University, earning a Bachelor's Degree in Urban Studies and History, and a Master's Degree in Urban Affairs.

In 1975, he married his wife, Edwina. When the couple met, she already had a daughter, Janeise. Jackson has a granddaughter Janesha, a grandson Frank, two great-grandsons Donald and Javon, and a niece Diamond Frazier.

Early career

Jackson entered politics with the influence of former Cleveland councilman, Lonnie L. Burten. Burten represented what was Ward 12 (encompassing the Central neighborhood) from 1975 until his murder in 1984, an event that has affected Jackson emotionally to this day.

Jackson first worked as a night clerk for the Cleveland Municipal Court while putting himself through law school at the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. He passed the Ohio bar exam and started his legal career as an assistant city prosecutor. In 1989, Jackson won a seat on the Cleveland City Council for Ward 5. As Councilman, he spearheaded efforts to bring in approximately a half billion dollars of community investments, working hard to clean up and stabilize his ward. He fought for the redevelopment of Arbor Park Place, the construction of the only Home Ownership Zone in the city, and worked with the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority as CMHA began to rebuild its estates. Jackson became an active critic of (then mayor) Michael R. White, who had vowed in his campaign to clean-up neighborhoods but had instead dedicated the bulk of his tenure to downtown development. Jackson's progress in Ward 5 helped his election to Council President in 2001, succeeding Michael D. Polensek.

2005 Cleveland mayoral election

As Council President, Jackson became increasingly frustrated with the leadership of Mayor Jane L. Campbell. As the 2005 mayoral election approached, Jackson announced his candidacy on April 7. During his campaign, Jackson said that if he "didn't restore hope to the ailing city within 200 days of taking office, [he] would consider himself a failure." He received endorsement from several notable Cleveland and Cuyahoga County politicians, including Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones, County Auditor Frank Russo, County Treasurer Jim Rokakis, and most of his colleagues on City Council. In the October 4 mayoral primary, Jackson was the top vote-getter, ahead of the incumbent Campbell. Other candidates in the primary included former Cleveland Public Safety Director, James A. Draper; former Euclid Mayor and businessman David Lynch; former Cleveland Councilman Bill Patmon, and Municipal Court Judge Robert Triozzi, whom Jackson eventually asked to become his law director.

In the days leading up to the election, Campbell began what many considered to be a mudslinging attack against Jackson, accusing him of failing to do his job as a member and president of council, and of opposing Campbell-backed projects just to score political points. These attacks seemed to backfire. When Campbell began criticizing Jackson during their final debate, he said, "Your former allies, the people of the City of Cleveland and I cannot trust you. Now despite what you say, or who you blame, or the lies that you tell, we are worse off today than we were four years ago." In the November 8, 2005 general election, he was elected mayor with 55% of the vote, while Campbell received 45%. At 11:25 p.m. (EST), she conceded to Jackson.

On January 2, 2006, Jackson was sworn in as Cleveland's 57th Mayor, at East Technical High School, on the city's East Side. Among those in attendance were Congresswoman Tubbs Jones, Bishop Anthony Pilla of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, and Queensland parliament member Bruce Flegg. In his inaugural address, Jackson vowed to make Cleveland a city "where we are one people, that we are one community, living and working together, joined that there will be respect and equality and justice." He also promised improvements in the city's school system and better relations with Cleveland's neighboring suburbs.

The Mayor

In an interview aired during the night of the general mayoral election, former Cleveland Mayor and current U.S. Senator George V. Voinovich, vowed that he would personally "mentor" the winner of the election. Voinovich aid will most likely go to Jackson.

After the November election, Ward 20 Councilman Martin J. Sweeney was elected to succeed Jackson as Council President. On December 1, 2005, he announced that he would appoint the city's first point person for regional issues.

On December 15, Jackson announced the appointment of his former opponent Triozzi as law director (under the city charter, the law director becomes mayor if the elected mayor is out of the city, resigns or becomes incapable of serving). From the former Campbell administration, Darnell Brown retained his position as the city’s chief operating officer. Valarie McCall, who had previously served as Clerk of City Council, was appointed chief of government affairs.

Shortly after his inauguration, Jackson began working with the Cleveland Police Department. He introduced a new force policy that clearly states what previous versions only implied: "Excessive force shall not be tolerated." Jackson also personally joined police from January 12 at 8:00 p.m. to January 13 at 1:00 a.m. on an undercover prostitution sting. By 10:00 p.m., police arrested three women for solicitation for prostitution, one man for solicitation, three men on felony drug charges and four men on misdemeanor drug charges. Jackson stated that he "hoped by inviting the media to the sting that people looking for prostitutes in the future would stay out of Cleveland."

Mayor Jackson has restored the Cleveland Police Aviation Unit (helicopters) and the Cleveland Police Mounted Unit (horses). In addition, the police now have a new class of cadets in the Cleveland Police Academy.

He is a member of the Mayors Against Illegal Guns Coalition, [cite web|url=http://www.mayorsagainstillegalguns.org/html/about/members.shtml|title=Mayors Against Illegal Guns: Coalition Members] a bi-partisan group with a stated goal of "making the public safer by getting illegal guns off the streets." The Coalition is co-chaired by Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Mayor Jackson, along with help from Downtown Cleveland's business community, brokered an alliance called the Downtown Cleveland Alliance, making Downtown Cleveland a Business Improvement District (BID). The owners of buildings and businesses pay fees, which aid in funding projects such as the restoration of the Cleveland Police Mounted Units, and the Downtown Cleveland Ambassadors, who clean the sidewalks and assist visitors when needed.

An advocate for regionalism for Cleveland-Cuyahoga County, Mayor Jackson, in his Election Day 2005 speech, said: Cquote|We are one Cleveland, we no longer have the luxury of city and suburbs separate.Before his inauguration, Jackson met with the mayors and city managers of Cleveland's suburbs in a retreat. He has been instrumental in a joint-tax sharing venture between the City of Cleveland and its suburbs. An example of how this agreement works:in July 2006, The Cleveland Cavaliers announced that they would move their practice facility from the Quicken Loans Arena to suburban Independence. In the past, Cleveland would have lost money, but now Cleveland shares revenue with Independence. The Mayors of both cities agreed to this arrangement. Mayor Jackson supports a no-poaching or stealing of businesses from one community to another. A similar agreement was reached with suburban Shaker Heights regarding a significant administrative office move by University Hospitals of Cleveland.

Residency

On January 18, the Ohio House passed a bill that will eliminate residency rules passed by local voters. This included the amendment to the Cleveland municipal charter that restricted city workers from living outside the city, approved by voters in 1982. Ohio Governor Bob Taft signed the bill by the House on January 31. In response, Mayor Jackson and law director Triozzi threaten to take the issue to court. Jackson contended that if the city's residency restrictions are overturned, Cleveland would suffer the ill effects of city workers fleeing the city, and its related effects on the economy and city safety. "This is about the issue of home rule," Jackson said at a City Hall news conference. "They are attempting to usurp our constitutional rights, and we are defending our rights." He then threatened to fire any city worker that attempted to move out of their district of employment. The Cleveland Fire Fighters Association Local 93 and four individual union members filed a complaint on January 30 with the 8th Ohio District Court of Appeals to block any actions that Jackson, Triozzi, or the city might take on the matter. The police and fire unions are against the residency requirement, considering it a matter of personal choice.

References

*"The Plain Dealer", October 23, 2005. "Though Private About Family, Jackson Says He Lives City's Ills" by Olivera Perkins.
*"The Plain Dealer", October 25, 2005. "Jackson's Lifelong Code Drives Run For City Hall" by Olivera Perkins and Mark Naymik.
*"The Plain Dealer", November 9, 2005. "Jackson Wins" by Olivera Perkins.
*"The Plain Dealer", January 6, 2006. "Jackson Tightens Police Use-Of-Force Policy" by Gabriel Baird.
*"The Plain Dealer", January 13, 2006. "Jackson Takes Part In Prostitution Sting" by Joe Guillen.
*"The Plain Dealer", January 19, 2006. "City Residency Rules In Peril" by Reginald Fields.

Center of political figures (Multiple secretary rooms, red carpet no purpose assembly)

External links

* [http://www.city.cleveland.oh.us/mayor/about.html City of Cleveland - Frank G. Jackson] profile


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