The Assembly of the City and Borough of Juneau, Alaska is the governing body and legislative branch of the City and Borough of Juneau, the local government of Juneau, Alaska, United States. As Juneau is a unified municipality, its corporate limits encompass the historic town of Juneau (or present-day downtown), suburbs both urban and rural, as well as thousands of square miles of wilderness.
The Assembly is headed by the mayor of Juneau. The assembly consists of nine members, which includes the mayor, elected in rotating tranches to three-year terms. Elections are held on the first Tuesday of every October.
The City and Borough of Juneau operates under a council–manager form of government. The mayor is the titular head of the city, is the presiding officer (or chair) of the Assembly, and is one of three members of that body elected areawide (or at-large). The remaining six members are elected by district: two districts have been defined by the Assembly, as of its last redistricting in 2003: [1]
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The 2nd Assembly District is nearly identical to the state's 31st Election District, represented in the Alaska House of Representatives by Cathy Muñoz, except that the 31st District includes the Juneau Airport precinct. The 1st Assembly District is mostly identical to the 32nd Election District represented by Sam Kito III, except for the aforementioned inclusion of Juneau Airport, in addition to the inclusion of communities outside of the CBJ: Gustavus, Kupreanof, Petersburg, Skagway and Tenakee Springs. Excepting these communities, the areawide "district" (or CBJ boundaries as a whole) are identical to Senate District P represented by Dennis Egan.[ needs update ]
Election year | Mayor | Areawide members | District 1 members | District 2 members |
---|---|---|---|---|
1970 | Joseph McLean | Hunt Gruening Robert Loescher | Greg Machyowski George Rogers Robert Savikko | Virginia Kline Bill Matheny Mike Miller |
1971 | Fred Baxter [a] George Rogers Robert Savikko [b] | Virginia Kline Bill Matheny Robert Thomas [c] | ||
1972 | C. E. Jacobsen Robert Loescher | Phil Chitwood George Rogers [d] Bill Walley | James Duncan Virginia Kline Bill Matheny | |
1973 | William A. Macomber [e] | C. E. Jacobsen W. D. Overstreet | Phil Chitwood Jeffrey Morrison Bill Walley | James Duncan Virginia Kline Donald Madsen |
1974 | Phil Chitwood Jeffrey Morrison Mike Thomas [f] | Harry Aase Virginia Kline Donald Madsen | ||
1975 | Virginia Kline | David Freer W. D. Overstreet | Harry Aase Donald Madsen Lenard Sevdy [g] | |
1976 | W. D. Overstreet | Roger Allington David Freer | Dave Fremming John Jensen Jeffrey Morrison | Harry Aase Burt Finley James Wakefield |
1977 | John Jensen Jeffrey Morrison Ray Paddock, Jr. | |||
1978 | Roger Allington Ernest Polley | Harry Aase James Wakefield Charles Wells | ||
1979 | Fred Baxter Ernest Polley [h] | Dianne Bergstrom Alexander Hoke John Jensen | ||
1980 | ||||
1981 | Hugh Grant Alexander Hoke Rich Poor | Harry Aase Jamie Parsons James Wakefield | ||
1982 | Fred Baxter Ray Paddock, Jr. | Hugh Grant Bill Knight Rich Poor | Harry Aase Kay Diebels Jamie Parsons | |
1983 | Fran Ulmer | Fred Baxter Hugh Grant | Bruce Botelho Peter Freer Rich Poor | Kay Diebels Ed Kalwara Jamie Parsons |
1984 | Fred Baxter Rosalee Walker | George Davidson Kay Diebels Jamie Parsons | ||
1985 | Ernest Polley | Errol Champion George Davidson Jamie Parsons | ||
1986 | Caren Robinson Rosalee Walker | Peter Freer Rich Poor Clarke Young | ||
1987 | McKie Campbell Rich Poor Clarke Young | |||
1988 | Bruce Botelho | McKie Campbell Rosie Peterson Clarke Young | ||
1989 | McKie Campbell Dennis Egan Rosie Peterson | Errol Champion George Davidson John MacKinnon | ||
1990 | Dennis Egan Kim Elton Rosie Peterson | |||
1991 | Jamie Parsons | Dennis Egan Kim Elton Rod Swope | ||
1992 | Al Clough Rosalee Walker | |||
1993 | Al Clough Tom Garrett | Errol Champion Ralph Kibby John MacKinnon | ||
1994 | Byron Mallott [i] | Dennis Egan [j] Rosemary Hagevig Rod Swope | Ralph Kibby John MacKinnon Dwight Perkins | |
1995 | Dennis Egan | Tom Garrett Jim Powell | Rosemary Hagevig Cathy Muñoz Rod Swope | |
1996 | ||||
1997 | Rosemary Hagevig Ken Koelsch Cathy Muñoz | |||
1998 | ||||
1999 | Ken Koelsch Cathy Muñoz Frankie Pillifant | Don Etheridge John MacKinnon Dwight Perkins | ||
2000 | Sally Smith | Jim Powell Marc Wheeler | Dale Anderson Don Etheridge John MacKinnon | |
2001 | Jeannie Johnson Ken Koelsch Frankie Pillifant | Dale Anderson Don Etheridge Randy Wanamaker | ||
2002 | Jeannie Johnson Ken Koelsch Merrill Sanford | Dale Anderson Stan Ridgeway Randy Wanamaker | ||
2003 | Bruce Botelho | Jeannie Johnson Merrill Sanford David G. Stone | Daniel Peterson Stan Ridgeway Randy Wanamaker | |
2004 | Johan Dybdahl Marc Wheeler | Jeff Bush Merrill Sanford David G. Stone | ||
2005 | Bob Doll [m] Johan Dybdahl | Jonathan Anderson Daniel Peterson Randy Wanamaker | ||
2006 | Jonathan Anderson Sara Chambers Randy Wanamaker | |||
2007 | ||||
2008 | ||||
2009 | Jonathan Anderson Ruth Danner Randy Wanamaker | |||
2010 | Mary Becker Merrill Sanford David G. Stone | Jonathan Anderson [k] [l] Karen Crane Ruth Danner | ||
2011 | Johan Dybdahl Carlton Smith | Mary Becker Jesse Kiehl David G. Stone | Karen Crane Ruth Danner Randy Wanamaker | |
2012 | Merrill Sanford | Mary Becker Loren Jones Jesse Kiehl [p] | Karen Crane Jerry Nankervis Randy Wanamaker | |
2013 | ||||
2014 | Maria Gladziszewski Kate Troll | Karen Crane [q] Jerry Nankervis Debbie White | ||
2015 | Greg Fisk [n] / Mary Becker | |||
2016 | Ken Koelsch | Jaime Bursell Jerry Nankervis Debbie White | ||
2017 | Maria Gladziszewski Norton Gregory [o] | Beth Weldon Jerry Nankervis Debbie White | ||
2018 | Beth Weldon [r] Jerry Nankervis Rob Edwardson | |||
2019 | Beth Weldon | Maria Gladziszewski Carole Triem | Mary Becker Loren Jones Alicia Hughes-Skandijs | Wade Bryson Michelle Bonnet Hale Rob Edwardson |
2020 | Greg Smith Loren Jones Alicia Hughes-Skandijs | |||
2021 | Wade Bryson Michelle Bonnet Hale Christine Woll | |||
2022 | Greg Smith Waahlaal Giidaak Barbara Blake Alicia Hughes-Skandijs |
The City and Borough of Juneau, more commonly known simply as Juneau, is the capital city of the U.S. state of Alaska. Located in the Gastineau Channel and the Alaskan panhandle, it is a consolidated city-borough and the second-largest city in the United States by area. Juneau was named the capital of Alaska in 1906, when the government of what was then the District of Alaska was moved from Sitka as dictated by the U.S. Congress in 1900. The municipality unified on July 1, 1970, when the city of Juneau merged with the city of Douglas and the surrounding Greater Juneau Borough to form the current municipality, which is larger by area than both Rhode Island and Delaware.
Douglas Island is a tidal island in the U.S. state of Alaska. It is part of the city and borough of Juneau, just west of downtown Juneau and east of Admiralty Island. It is separated from mainland Juneau by the Gastineau Channel, and contains the communities of Douglas and West Juneau.
Bruce M. Botelho is an American attorney and politician in the U.S. state of Alaska. He served as the mayor of Juneau from 1988 to 1991 and from 2003 to 2012. Born and raised in Juneau, where his father was a top official of the Alaska Highway Patrol, Botelho has pursued concurrent careers in law and politics, largely with success. He also previously served a term as mayor from 1988 to 1991, defeating former Alaska Secretary of State Robert W. Ward in the election. He spent most of his professional career as an employee of the Alaska Department of Law. He rose to the top position in the department in 1994, when Governor Walter Hickel appointed him to be the Alaska Attorney General. Retained by Hickel's successor, Tony Knowles, Botelho served as Attorney General for nearly nine years before retiring from state service.
Robert Walter Ward was an American electrician, businessman, and government executive, and Republican politician from the U.S. state of Alaska. He was the third Secretary of State of Alaska from 1969 to 1970, and was the last person to serve under that title, as the title was changed to lieutenant governor by a constitutional amendment passed by voters on August 25, 1970, making him the first lieutenant governor of Alaska.
Kim Steven Elton is a journalist, commercial fisherman, government official and Democratic politician in the U.S. state of Alaska. Elton represented Juneau in the Alaska House of Representatives for two terms, from 1995 to 1999. In 1998, he was elected to the Alaska Senate, serving until his resignation in early 2009 to accept appointment as director of Alaska Affairs at the U.S. Department of the Interior by President Barack Obama. Prior to holding elected office, Elton was executive director of the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute and a salmon troller engaged in commercial fishing.
Dennis William Egan was an American politician who was a member of the Alaska Senate representing Juneau from April 19, 2009, until January 15, 2019. A member of the Democratic Party, he previously served as the Mayor of Juneau from February 13, 1995, to October 3, 2000, and was a member of the local assembly prior to that. Outside of politics, he was known for his work as a radio broadcaster, most notably for KINY, and was inducted to the Alaskan Broadcaster Association's Hall of Fame in 2001.
Byron Ivar Mallott was an American politician, elder, tribal activist, and business executive from the state of Alaska. Mallott was an Alaska Native leader of Tlingit heritage and the leader of the Kwaash Ké Kwaan clan. He was the 12th lieutenant governor of Alaska from December 2014 until his resignation on October 16, 2018. He also previously served as the mayor of Yakutat, the mayor of Juneau, the president of the Alaska Federation of Natives and the executive director of the Alaska Permanent Fund.
Catherine Norah "Cathy" Muñoz is an American politician who was a Republican member of the Alaska House of Representatives, who from 2009 to 2017 represented the 34th District. She served as Co-Chair of the Community and Regional Affairs Committee, Vice-Chair of the Education Committee, and served two terms on the House Finance Committee. She served as Co-Chair of the Community & Regional Affairs Committee and Vice-Chair of the Education Committee. Muñoz has been a small business owner since 1988. She was appointed by Governor Michael J. Dunleavy in 2018 to serve as the Deputy Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Muñoz was a third-generation member of the Alaska Legislature. Her father served in the Alaska House and Senate, her grandfather as the mayor of Douglas, Alaska and in the Territorial and State Senates, and her grandmother served in the Territorial House.
The Douglas Bridge is located in Juneau, Alaska, United States. Spanning the Gastineau Channel, it connects Juneau's eastern, mainland side with the city's communities on Douglas Island to the west. The current span is the second bridge of the same name; the original, built in 1935, was demolished in 1981 following the completion of its replacement in 1980.
Sarah J. Smith is an American politician. She was a member of the Alaska Legislature in the 1970s and 1980s, and the mayor of Juneau, Alaska, from 2000 to 2003. She later worked as a field representative for United States Senator Mark Begich.
Merrill Sanford is an American politician who served as Mayor of Juneau, Alaska from 2012 until 2015.
Elton Egedeous Engstrom Jr. was an American lawyer, businessman, writer, and politician. Engstrom served one term apiece in the Alaska House of Representatives and the Alaska Senate as a Republican during the 1960s, leaving in 1971. He was also a part of one of Alaska's longest-enduring political families; his father served in Alaska's territorial and state senates, his mother served in the territorial house, and his daughter, Cathy Muñoz was a member of the Alaska House from 2011 through January 16, 2017.
Walter Bruce "Walt" Parker was an American civil servant, policy adviser, transportation adviser, academic and local politician. Parker's career focused on the development of natural resources, transportation and infrastructure in Alaska from the 1940s to the 2000s. In 1989, Alaska Governor Steve Cowper appointed Parker as the chairman of the Alaska Oil Spill Commission, which investigated the Exxon Valdez oil spill. He is credited with making important contributions to the fields of transportation, telecommunications, education, land use and urban planning within the state of Alaska. Parker was inducted into the Alaska Conservation Hall of Fame by the Alaska Conservation Foundation in 2002 for his contributions to state conservation.
James McClary Parsons was an American civil servant, politician and businessman who served as the Mayor of Juneau, Alaska, from 1991 until 1994. Parsons originally moved to Juneau in 1972 to become the city's first Director of Parks and Recreation. He served on the Assembly of the City and Borough of Juneau, Alaska, during the 1980s before being elected mayor in 1991. Parsons declined to seek re-election for a second term, Instead, Parsons devoted his attention to the defeat of a 1994 statewide ballot initiative, which would have moved the Alaskan state capital from Juneau to Wasilla. He has been widely credited with the rejection of the proposal by voters.
Thelma Catherine Engstrom was a teacher, columnist and legislator in Alaska.
Elton Egedeous Engstrom Sr. was an American businessman and politician.
Justin V. Parish is an American politician who served for one term in the Alaska House of Representatives. His family includes Tlingit people. In 2017, "Representative Justin Parish, a first-time legislator, introduced himself in Tlingit and acknowledged his own Native heritage. His paternal grandmother is a member of the Dog Salmon clan."
Mayor Bill Overstreet Park, also known locally as Overstreet Park, is a beach and public park, located in the City of Juneau, the state capital of Alaska. The large, waterfront park stretches over half a mile, past two state office buildings. Its most notable feature is a breaching whale sculpture called Takhu, designed by Alaskan artist Skip Wallen and built in Anaheim, California. The sculpture was placed in a fountain, next to the Juneau-Douglas Bridge, overlooking Gastineau Channel. The park is within walking distance of Downtown Juneau, the cruise ship docks and Douglas Island. It was completed in 2018. A system of boardwalks and trails connect Downtown Juneau to the park.
Jesse Kiehl is a Democratic member of the Alaska Legislature representing the State Senate's B district and a former member of the Assembly of the City and Borough of Juneau, Alaska.
Laura Mae Bergt was an Iñupiaq athlete, model, politician, and activist for the Iñupiat and other Indigenous Alaskans. Born in the Northwest Arctic Borough of Alaska to bi-racial parents, she grew up in Nome and Kotzebue before attending high school in Sitka. Involved in the Native Olympic movement, she was both a nine-times winner of the Arctic Circle blanket toss event and served as chair of the World Eskimo Indian Olympics in 1966. She worked as a promoter for the new state of Alaska attending trade shows and making marketing appearances as a spokeswoman and guest on radio and television programs. From the 1960s, she worked in various policy positions at the tribal, local, state, and national level to address issues like disability, education, employment opportunities, housing, and poverty, and promoting the rights of Indigenous people.