The Columbus Dispatch

27 individual­s apply to fill vacant seat on Columbus City Council

- Sheridan Hendrix

Over the next two weeks, council members will review

Columbus City Council has released the names of 27 individual­s who have applied to fill the vacant seat created by Council President Pro Tempore Elizabeth Brown’s resignatio­n, including a former City Council member and the head of the city’s largest LGBTQ+ organizati­on.

Brown announced in November that she will soon step down from her elected position to lead YWCA Columbus as the nonprofit organizati­on’s next president and CEO. She will officially begin her new role on Jan. 2.

City Council President Shannon G. Hardin laid out in a November memo that council will choose Brown’s successor by early January.

As of council’s noon Friday deadline for applicatio­ns, 27 people had submitted resumes to the Columbus City Clerk for considerat­ion.

“We appreciate the interest of residents and will follow the City Charter and Code to ensure a continuati­on of governance by Columbus City Council,” Hardin said. “Since 2023 is also an election year for Council members as we prepare to go into a new district system, I believe we should appoint an experience­d caretaker to the seat who will not be a candidate in 2023.”

the resumes of applicants and set up interviews with them.

Who applied to fill Brown’s vacancy on Columbus City Council?

One of the most notable candidates is Mitchell J. Brown, former Columbus City Council member and former head of the city and Ohio department­s of public safety. Brown last year chose not to seek reelection and announced he was retiring from his council seat on Dec. 31, 2021.

“It’s time for me to pass stewardshi­p on to my colleagues,” Brown told The Dispatch.

Brown was appointed to city council in January 2016 to fill the remaining two years of the term of former council member Eileen Y. Paley after she was elected to be a Franklin County Municipal Court judge. He was then elected in 2017.

Densil Porteous, executive director/ CEO at Stonewall Columbus, central Ohio’s largest LGBTQ+ community support organizati­on, has also applied to the seat.

One of the candidates who might be best known from seeing his works around the Columbus area is Rick Shuster, LEGO builder and destinatio­n specialist & certified tourism ambassador with Experience Columbus, the nonprofit city tourism and visitor informatio­n center.

The other two dozen applicants include:

● Christina Pelletier, music operations and program coordinato­r at Otterbein University.

● Olubunmi Adekanbi, public relations officer at NIDOA Ohio, a nonprofit Nigeria support organizati­on.

● Patricia Duckworth, program director at Brightside Academy Ohio.

● Eli Bohnert, a commission­er on the West Scioto Area Commission.

● Kelly Lombardo-matthews, an Italian language instructor at Italian Dream Academy.

● Josh Leach.

● Larry Druggan, founder of DTV Real Estate LLC, home and commercial renovation, design and constructi­on management.

● William Dodson.

● Kurt Looper.

● Martin Alvarado.

● Tom Price.

● Chelssy Alvarez, case manager and care coordinato­r at Huckleberr­y House. ● Hugh Butler, III.

● Charity Martin-king, director of social change at Ohio State University’s Office of Student Life.

● Forrest Neuswanger, a Realtor in Upper Arlington.

● Aaron Neumann.

● Lucy Gettman, principal at G&S Consulting.

● Charles Nabrit, associate consultant at PN&A, Inc.

● Kristen Hosni, a member of the Hilliard Environmen­tal Sustainabi­lity Commission.

● Ilhan Dahir, gobal governance and civilian protection expert at Stimson Center.

● Eric Duffy, director of access technology at the National Federation of the Blind Ohio.

● Angela Meddock.

● Sean Ruffin, CEO of Divinely Restored Citizens.

● Stephanie Matthews.

What is city council’s process for replacing Brown?

In his memo, Hardin outlined the process and timeline city council will use to appoint a new council member.

Over the next two weeks, council members will review the resumes of applicants and set up interviews with them. Each council member will submit a list of up to three finalists to the City Clerk by Dec. 21.

Council will meet on Jan. 3 to host a public hearing and hear testimony from the public about the finalists being considered. Members of the public who wish to provide testimony, either inperson or written, must be submitted by noon on Jan. 3. Council will go into an executive session after the hearing to discuss the candidates and public testimony.

At their Jan. 9 meeting, council members will officially nominate applicants for the vacancy and vote to appoint a new member. If a majority of council members vote to appoint a nominee, they will then be eligible to be sworn in under oath and take office. shendrix@dispatch.com @sheridan12­0

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States