Kemper Freeman

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Kemper Freeman
Kemper Freeman at 2017 ULI Spring Meeting, Seattle.jpg
Member of the WashingtonHouseofRepresentatives
from the 48th district
In office
January 8, 1973 December 31, 1976

Kemper Freeman Jr. is a third-generation resident of Bellevue, Washington. His grandfather, Miller Freeman, was active in state politics and public affairs, including promoting the development of a bridge connecting Seattle, Mercer Island, and Bellevue, [3] and acting as a driving force in anti-Japanese discrimination, agitating for what he called a "white man's Pacific coast". [6] [7] Beginning in 1907, [7] Miller Freeman was a prominent voice calling for the segregation or deportation of Japanese immigrants, whom he saw as a threat to white prosperity. [8] He founded the Anti-Japanese League of Washington in 1916 and was a vocal proponent for the state's 1921 alien land laws, the 1924 Immigration Act, and the 1942 incarceration of American citizens of Japanese ancestry in concentration camps during World War II. [6]

Freeman Jr.'s father, Frederick Kemper Freeman Sr., led the development of what is now Bellevue Square, which opened in 1946. [9] He also was involved in building Bellevue's first hospital, Overlake Hospital Medical Center. [3] Kemper Freeman Jr. was born on October 23, 1941. [1] He married Betty Austin in 1965 and has two daughters, Amy Schreck and Suzanne McQuaid. [10]

Career

In 1973, Freeman Jr. was appointed to a vacant seat in the Washington State House of Representatives as a Republican representing the 48th district. After serving for three years, he resigned from the seat to focus on his business in building and development. [11] He then began working full-time on the expansion and enclosure of Bellevue Square with his father, which re-opened in 1981. In early-1980, Freeman Jr. founded the Kemper Development Company, [1] which has overseen the continued expansion of Bellevue Square as well as development of:

In total, the three properties (Bellevue Square, Bellevue Place, Lincoln Square) makeup the Bellevue Collection, covering approximately 50 acres of land in downtown Bellevue. [3] In 2016, Bloomberg reported all of Freeman's holdings had a worth of "about $2 billion" of which Freeman and his two daughters owned a majority stake. [13]

Political involvement

Freeman Jr. often speaks out against mass transit. In 1995 and 1996, Freeman Jr. led a campaign opposing the creation of a regional transit authority which later became Sound Transit, arguing "the automobile has won". [14] [15] In 2004 and 2008, Freeman backed state initiatives to convert HOV lanes and bus lanes to general traffic. [16] [17] [18] [19]

Freeman has been a consistent opponent of Sound Transit's light rail plans. In 2002, the Freeman-backed group Sane Transit sued Sound Transit after the 1 Line was reduced in scope, alleging that a reduction in project scope required the agency to put the issue to another public vote. [20] [21] [22] In 2008, Freeman campaigned against the plan to bring light rail to downtown Bellevue, [23] and backed city council candidates in an effort to route the new light rail line alongside the I-405 freeway, away from population centers. [24] Freeman sued Sound Transit in 2009, arguing that the use of the I-90 HOV lanes for light rail was illegal. The suit was ultimately rejected after being appealed to the Washington State Supreme Court. [25] [26] In 2011, Freeman supported Tim Eyman's Initiative 1125, a proposed tolling measure containing a subtle clause prohibiting any "non-highway purpose" for I-90. [27] [28] In 2016, Freeman spent $210,000 in opposition to Sound Transit 3, making up two-thirds of the nearly $316,000 donated to the "No on ST3" campaign. [29] Freeman called the plan a "major calamity", criticizing the plan's timeline, cost, and scope. [30]

Freeman's motivations stem from a belief that cars provide significantly more personal freedom than transit. He believes that socialist nations have failed in part due to their reliance on public transportation. [31] Critics have accused him of being motivated by classism, arguing that a 2005 comment about the Southcenter mall indicates his disdain for those who can't afford to shop at Bellevue Square: "When you walk through the [Southcenter] mall, the way the customer dresses just to shop there — the light blue and pink hair curlers, the shoes that flop, flop, flop along — it’s a completely different customer," said Freeman. "Yet we are 12 miles apart." [32] [33]

Community involvement

Freeman Jr. holds leadership appointments in several community and economic development organizations in the Bellevue area, including:

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References

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