BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY
STORY Sylvester Turner
BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY |
Sylvester Turner | |
---|---|
Mayor of Houston, Texas | |
Assumed office January 2, 2016 | |
Preceded by | Annise Parker |
Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 139 | |
Assumed office 1989 | |
Preceded by | Clint Hackney |
Succeeded by | TBD |
Personal details | |
Born | September 27, 1954 Houston, Texas |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Cheryl Turner (1983–1991; divorced) |
Children | Paige Turner |
Residence | Houston, Texas |
Alma mater | University of Houston Harvard Law School |
Occupation | Lawyer |
Religion | Baptist |
Website |
Sylvester Turner (born September 27, 1954) is a Democratic member of the Texas House of Representatives, serving since 1989 and Mayor Elect of Houston. He will be Houston's second African American mayor. Turner attended the University of Houston andHarvard Law School.[1] Turner ran for Mayor of Houston in 1991, losing in the runoff election to Bob Lanier. He lost again in 2003, falling in third place and thus missing out on the runoff.[2][3]
On February 20, 2015, Turner announced his candidacy for Houston Mayor in the 2015 election.[4] On October 11, the Houston Chronicle endorsed Sylvester Turner in the mayor's race.[5] On December 12, 2015 he won the runoff election against Bill King to become the Mayor of Houston.
Contents
Early years
Turner was born on September 9, 1954 in Houston, Texas as the sixth of nine children and was raised in the Acres Home community in northwest Houston by his father, a commercial painter and his mother, a maid at the Rice Hotel.[6] Turner was elected senior class president by his peers and awarded valedictorian of his graduating class from Klein High School.[7] At the University of Houston he was Speaker of the Student Senate and graduated Magna Cum Laude with a B.A. degree in Political Science. In addition, Turner achieved a finalist position in the Ames Moot Court Competition while obtaining a J.D. degree from Harvard Law School.
Law practice field
Upon graduating from law school, Turner joined the law firm of Fulbright & Jaworski. In 1983, Turner founded his own law firm, Barnes & Turner, where he continues to represent both plaintiffs and defendants in breach of contract actions. He has served as an adjunct professor at the Thurgood Marshall School of Law, and as a seminar lecturer at theSouth Texas College of Law and the University of Houston Law School's Continuing Legal Education Programs.[8] Turner was admitted to practice in the State of Texas, federal District Court for the Southern District Court of Texas and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. He is a member of the State Bar of Texas, American Bar Association, National Bar Association, Houston Lawyers Association, and the Houston Bar Association.
Political career
In 1984, Turner ran for Harris County Commissioner, Precinct 1 in the Democratic primary, but lost to El Franco Lee. Four years later, he was elected to the Texas House of Representatives in House District 139 in Harris County. He remained in office up through 2014. During that time, he ran for mayor of Houston twice- losing on both occasions.[2][3]
During his 1991 campaign for Houston mayor, Wayne Dolcefino of Channel 13 made allegations that Turner was involved in an insurance scam, which ultimately cost him the election. Dolcefino and KTRK were sued and the court deemed the allegations "false and defamatory” and "a calculated falsehood." The $5.5 million libel settlement awarded to Turner was reduced to $3.25 million by the presiding judge. KTRK appealed the ruling, which was overturned, along with the case being thrown out, due to the judge's determination that evidence in the trial failed to show legal malice.[9]
Turner has served more than 25 years and is a member of the Legislative Budget Board, Vice-Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Chairman of the Subcommittee of Articles 1, 4 & 5 (General Government, Judiciary, Public Safety & Criminal Justice) and a member of the House State Affairs Committee. He also chaired the Texas Legislative Black Caucus and the Greater Houston Area Legislative Delegation.[10] Turner has supported policies to attract doctors to underserved areas,[11] proposed a measure increasing state funding for mental health services in Harris County from $32 million to $200 million,[12] and worked to increase funds for legal aid for poor Texans.[13]
LGBT rights
In 2015, Turner was named one of the top 10 best members of the Texas House on LGBT issues by Equality Texas with an "A+" rating,[14] after Turner said he had "evolved" on LGBT issues.[15]
Sylvester Turner, who is running against Bill King in the 2015 Houston mayoral runoff election, stated he is "100 percent" committed to reenacting Houston Equal Rights Ordinance (HERO) and attacked Bill King for saying he won't revisit the issue of HERO, along with his support from the Campaign for Houston.[16]
Consumer protections
In 1999, Turner voted to restructure the electric utility industry in Texas to allow customers of investor-owned utilities to choose their own provider in an attempt to promote retail competition and consumer choice.[17] During his time in the legislature, he has also worked to continue to protect Texans, voting for bills preventing gas companies from cutting off service during freezing temperatures,[18] limiting the amount utility companies could raise rates in order to fund certain projects, such as building electric poles and wires, without first getting approval from state regulators,[19] and authoring legislation that required the Public Utility Commission to conduct cost-benefit analyses of any proposals from utility companies that would add more than $100 million to annual consumer electricity costs.[20] During the 84th session, Turner authored legislation that would prohibit electricity companies from charging customers "minimum usage fees" when they used too little electricity.[21] Turner also voted to allow the Public Utility Commission to issue emergency cease-and-desist orders, without first going to a court, to companies whose actions threaten the state's electricity supply.[22] During the 83rd session, he joined a campaign to encourage low-income Texans to enroll in "LITE-UP Texas", a program "authorized by the Texas Legislature through which participants could reduce the monthly cost of electric service by 82%."[23] In the 84th session, he authored a bill to extend this discount program for another two years, until the end of 2017.[24] He also co-authored a bill to help ensure persons living in multi-family residences are alerted when their electricity bill has not been paid.[25]
Public education[edit]
Education has been a key policy area of interest for Turner. In 2004, he voted against a measure that would have scaled "back benefits for future public school employees and discourag[ed] early retirement."[26] He was also critical of investment managers for the Teachers Retirement Fund for taking over $8.2 million in bonuses while the state was slashing funding for education and the system's investments continued to struggle.[27] In 2011, Turner voted against a measure that would have implemented a 6 percent cut to education funding for all schools in Texas, a move that equated to a $4 billion education funding cut.[28] As a member of the legislature, Turner also stood up for public school teachers, voting against a measure that would allow school districts to lower their salaries, implement furlough days,[29] and increase student-teacher classroom ratios.[30] He also opposed a corporate tax break that many believed would have hurt public school funding.[31]
Health care[edit]
A supporter of the federal Affordable Care Act (ACA), Turner voted against joining the Interstate Health Care Compact, an alternative to traditional ACA participation,[32] and introduced legislation that would expand Medicaid in Texas pursuant to the ACA.[33] Turner warned fellow legislators about the potential backlash from constituents if the state chose not to expand Medicaid, which promised a significant return on the state's investment.[34] One of his major accomplishments in the House was legislation that expanded access to the children's health insurance program, which was passed in 2007.[8] Turner also passed legislation in 2015 that will free up funding for medical trauma care centers, which have not received the full amount of funds designated to be spent specifically on trauma centers. The legislation will bring $25 million to the Greater Houston area over the next two years, including $11 million to Ben Taub and $10 million to the Memorial Hermann.[35] During the 84th Legislature, Turner introduced legislation that would provide care under Medicaid for people with severe and persistent mental illness and who are transitioning from an institution to the community, and who are at risk of institutionalization or re-institutionalization.
Sylvester Turner has long been an advocate for a woman's right to choose. He voted against a measure requiring doctors to perform a sonogram on women seeking an abortion at least 24 hours before the procedures.[36] He has also fought to protect funding for family planning programs and Planned Parenthood.[37] Turner also voted against a Senate version of a measure that banned abortions after 20 weeks and tightened standards on abortion clinics,[38] and also authored an amendment to the bill that would have required the state to pay the costs abortion clinics would incur on the measure to retrofit facilities so they could be certified as surgical centers.[39] In 2013, the El Paso Times described Turner as a "lion of pro-abortion rights."[40]
Criminal justice
On gun control, Turner opposed measures to limit lawsuits against gun or ammunition manufacturers,[41] allowing concealed handguns on higher education campuses, and rescinding the authority of local governments to ban concealed weapons on public property.[42] He also opposed measures that would reduce the number of training hours required to receive a concealed handgun license.[43] Turner supported a bill that prohibited the use of state funds for the enforcement of federal firearms regulations.[44] He also advocated abandoning the "pick-a-pal system", where judges appoint commissioners who then can pick whoever they want to serve on grand juries.[45]
Recognition
After the 83rd legislative session, Turner was named the "Most Valuable Player" in the Texas House by Capitol Inside.[46] He received the "2011 Legislative Leadership Award" from AARP and the "Hero Award" from the NAACP of Texas. In June 2015, Sylvester Turner was named one of the best legislators of the 84th session by Texas Monthly magazine.[47]
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