Mayor of Palm Springs | |
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Style | Mr. Mayor |
Term length | Four years |
Inaugural holder | Philip L. Boyd |
Formation | 1938 |
Website | "Office of the Mayor". |
The mayor of Palm Springs, California is a largely ceremonial title, elected at-large, with no executive functions. The mayor is the chairman of the city council meetings. The legislative body is the five-member city council, which is voted into office by public elections. The Council appoints a professional manager to oversee the administrative operations, implement its policies, and advise it. The city of Palm Springs is a council-manager type government. [1]
The office of mayor was created in 1938 when Palm Springs was officially established as a city. Palm Springs residents voted on the issue of incorporation and for the first members of the city council on April 12, 1938. There were 910 registered voters in the city. Voters cast their ballots 442 in favor and 211 opposed. [2] Upon certification of the election results the city's incorporation was finalized on April 20, 1938.
The mayor was not directly elected until 1982 and stopped being directly elected in 2019. The mayor's role is now largely ceremonial and rotates annually among council members elected from five different districts. There are no term limits for the members of the city council.
This is a list of mayors of Palm Springs, California.
# | Mayor | Picture | Term(s) | Notes | Significant civic events during term(s) of office |
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1 | Philip L. Boyd | April 1938 – April 1942 | First mayor under the original city charter. The city was 16 square miles and represented by seven wards. [2] | ||
2 | Frank V. Shannon | April 1942 – April 1944 |
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3 | Eugene E. Therieau | April 1944 – April 1946 |
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4 | Clarence E. Hyde | April 1946 – April 1948 |
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5 | Charles Farrell | April 1948 – July 1953 |
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6 | Florian Boyd | July 1953 – November 1957 |
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7 | Gerald K. Sanborn | November 1957 – April 1958 | Acting mayor | ||
8 | Frank Bogert | April 1958 – January 1966 |
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9 | George Beebe, Jr. | January 1966 – April 1966 | Acting mayor | ||
10 | Edgar L. McCoubrey | April 1966 – April 1967 |
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11 | Howard Wiefels | April 1967 – March 1974 |
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12 | William Foster | April 1974 – March 1977 |
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13 | Russ Beirich | March 1977 – April 1980 |
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14 | John Doyle | April 1980 – April 1982 | |||
15 | Frank Bogert | April 1982 – April 1988 | First directly elected mayor | ||
16 | Sonny Bono | April 1988 – April 1992 |
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17 | Lloyd Maryanov | April 1992 – December 1995 | Date for elections moved from April to November to coincide with state and nation election cycles. |
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18 | William G. Kleindienst | December 1995 – December 1999 December 1999 – December 2003 | First two-term directly elected mayor [17] |
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19 | Ron Oden | December 2003 – December 2007 [35] | First African-American and openly gay mayor [36] |
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20 | Steve Pougnet | December 2007 [42] – December 2015 [43] | Second openly gay mayor of Palm Springs |
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21 | Robert Moon [50] | December 2015 [51] – December 2019 [52] | Last directly elected mayor of the City of Palm Springs |
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22 | Geoff Kors [54] | December 2019 [55] - December 2020 [56] | Fourth openly gay mayor of Palm Springs | ||
23 | Christy Holstege [57] | December 2020 [58] – December 2021 [59] | First Female, Millennial & Bisexual mayor of Palm Springs | ||
24 | Lisa Middleton [60] | December 2021 [61] – December 2022 [62] | First transgender mayor of Palm Springs | ||
25 | Grace Elena Garner [63] | December 2022 [64] – December 2023 [65] | First Latina mayor of Palm Springs [66] [67] [68] | ||
26 | Jeffrey Bernstein [69] | December 2023 [70] – December 2024 [71] | Fifth openly gay mayor of Palm Springs | ||
27 | Ron deHarte [72] | December 2024 [73] – Present | Sixth openly gay mayor of Palm Springs |
Salvatore Phillip "Sonny" Bono was an American singer, songwriter, actor, and politician. In partnership with his second wife, Cher, he formed the singing duo Sonny & Cher. A member of the Republican Party, Bono served as the 16th mayor of Palm Springs, California, from 1988 to 1992, and served as the U.S. representative for California's 44th district from 1995 until his death in 1998.
Palm Desert is a city in the Coachella Valley region of eastern Riverside County, California. The city is located in the Colorado Desert arm of the Sonoran Desert, about 14 miles (23 km) east of Palm Springs, 121 miles (195 km) northeast of San Diego and 122 miles (196 km) east of Los Angeles. The population was 51,163 at the 2020 census, and the city has been one of the state's fastest-growing since 1980, when its population was 11,801.
Twentynine Palms is a city in San Bernardino County, California. It serves as one of the entry points to Joshua Tree National Park.
Mary BonoOswald is an American politician, businesswoman, and lobbyist who served Palm Springs and most of central and eastern Riverside County, California, in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1998 to 2013.
The Coachella Valley is an arid rift valley in the Colorado Desert of Southern California in Riverside County. The valley has been referred to as Greater Palm Springs and occasionally the Palm Springs Area due to the historic prominence of the city of Palm Springs. The valley extends approximately 45 mi (72 km) southeast from the San Gorgonio Pass to the northern shore of the Salton Sea and the neighboring Imperial Valley, and is approximately 15 mi (24 km) wide along most of its length. It is bounded on the northeast by the San Bernardino and Little San Bernardino Mountains, and on the southwest by the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa Mountains.
Palm Springs International Airport, formerly Palm Springs Municipal Airport, is an airport two miles east of downtown Palm Springs, California, United States. The airport covers 940 acres and has two runways. The facility operates year-round, with most flights occurring in the fall, winter, and spring.
The Palm Springs Walk of Stars is a walk of fame in downtown Palm Springs, California, where "Golden Palm Stars", honoring various people who have lived in the greater Palm Springs area, are embedded in the sidewalk pavement. The walk includes portions of Palm Canyon Drive, Tahquitz Canyon Way, La Plaza Court and Museum Drive. Among those honored are presidents of the United States, showbusiness personalities, literary figures, pioneers and civic leaders, humanitarians and Medal of Honor recipients.
Ron Oden is an American politician. In November 2003, he was elected the first gay African-American mayor of Palm Springs, California, after serving eight years on the city council. He became the first Black openly gay man to be a mayor of a U.S. city. He was also "the first gay African-American elected to lead a California city." In December 2017, Palm Springs elected "America's first all-LGBTQ city council."
Palm Springs International Film Festival is a film festival held in Palm Springs, California. Originally promoted by Mayor Sonny Bono and then sponsored by Nortel, it started in 1989 and is held annually in January. It is run by the Palm Springs International Film Society, which also runs the Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films (ShortFest), a festival of short films and film market in June.
Palm Springs is a desert resort city in Riverside County, California, United States, within the Colorado Desert's Coachella Valley. The city covers approximately 94 square miles (240 km2), making it the largest city in Riverside County by land area. With multiple plots in checkerboard pattern, more than 10% of the city is part of the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians reservation land and is the administrative capital of the most populated reservation in California.
The Plaza Theatre is a historic theater located at 128 South Palm Canyon Drive in Palm Springs, California. It is an anchor of La Plaza, a streetside collection of shops, one of the first planned shopping centers in Southern California, opened in 1936. From 1990 through 2014 the theatre housed The Fabulous Palm Springs Follies which was featured on ABC's 20/20, The Today Show, the New York Times, NPR and other media since its founding. There is currently a fundraising campaign to raise money to restore the historic building to its former glory and make it a theater that meets theatrical needs for today and tomorrow.
Frank Mitchell Bogert was an American cowboy, professional rodeo announcer, author, and politician best known as the longtime mayor of Palm Springs, California.
Stephen P. "Steve" Pougnet is an American businessman and politician. A member of the Democratic Party, Pougnet served as the mayor of Palm Springs, California from 2007 to 2015.
Forever Marilyn is a giant statue of Marilyn Monroe designed by Seward Johnson. The statue is a representation of the image of Monroe taken from Billy Wilder's 1955 film The Seven Year Itch. Created in 2011, the statue has been displayed in a variety of locations in the United States, as well as in Australia.
The Racquet Club was a resort in Palm Springs, California, founded by actors Charles Farrell and Ralph Bellamy, which opened on December 15, 1934. Originally designed to include two tennis courts, it expanded to include additional courts, the "Bamboo Room" bar, bungalows, and a swimming pool.
Desert Fashion Plaza, formerly known as Desert Inn Fashion Plaza, was an enclosed shopping mall located in Palm Springs, California. The mall was originally developed by the Home Savings and Loan Association, which sold the shopping center to Desert Plaza Partnership.
Lisa Middleton is an American politician, who served as the Mayor of Palm Springs from 2021 to 2022. A member of the Democratic Party, Middleton has served on the Palm Springs City Council since 2017, and is the first openly transgender person elected in California for a non-judicial position.
Torney General Hospital was a US Army Hospital in Palm Springs, California, in Riverside County used during World War II. Parts of Torney General Hospital are now the Desert Regional Medical Center.