This article reads like a press release or a news article and may be largely based on routine coverage .(August 2024) |
Rosalynn Bliss | |
---|---|
Mayor of Grand Rapids | |
Assumed office January 1, 2016 | |
Preceded by | George Heartwell |
Personal details | |
Born | Sault Ste. Marie,Michigan,U.S. | August 3,1975
Political party | Democratic [1] |
Alma mater | University of South Alabama (BA) Michigan State University (MSW) |
Rosalynn Bliss (born August 3,1975) is an American politician,social worker,and mayor of Grand Rapids,Michigan. The first woman to be elected mayor of Michigan's second-largest city,Bliss took office on January 1,2016. She has served on the Grand Rapids City Commission since 2006. Bliss is a member of the Democratic Party.
Bliss comes from a large family of six brothers and three sisters. Her father was a brickmason,while her mother worked at a local grocery store.[ citation needed ]
Bliss grew up in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan in Sault Ste. Marie and graduated from Sault Area High School in 1993. [2] [ citation needed ] Shortly after,she moved to Mobile,Alabama,where she attended the University of South Alabama earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology and criminal justice in 1997. Upon graduation,she moved to Grand Rapids and began her career working at Hope Network while attending graduate school at Michigan State University. She earned her master's in social work and professionally started working in the field of domestic violence and child welfare. [3] [4] Originally,Bliss wanted to be a meteorologist up until she took calculus class in college. [5]
Today,Bliss takes pride in being a part of the Grand Rapids community and is currently fighting for stronger neighborhoods as well as affordable housing. [6] Bliss is also extremely active outside of her mayoral duties as she currently serves as the Frederik Meijer Endowed Chair in Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Grand Valley's Frederik Meijer Honors College. [7]
Bliss is an active member of her community and loves the outdoors. Her favorite place is the Two Hearted River in the U.P. and she says that she would like to kayak the entire length of the Grand River one day. She also enjoys music festivals as well as listening to local musicians. [5] She states that her favorite song is Cat Stevens' “Father &Son”from Tea for the Tillerman (1970). [8]
Bliss formerly served as director of residential services at DA Blodgett-St. John's,which provides emergency shelter and residential services for abused and neglected children. She also served as adjunct professor of social work at Grand Valley State University since 2006 and currently serves as the Frederik Meijer Endowed Chair in Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Grand Valley's Frederik Meijer Honors College. [9] [7]
Bliss is past president of the Michigan Municipal League, [10] Kent County Land Bank Authority,Downtown Development Authority,Experience Grand Rapids and Grand Valley Metro Council,among many other organizations. She is a member of the West Michigan Environmental Leadership Network.
In 2016,Bliss released a list of priorities,which were to improve racial equity and community-police relations,strengthen local schools,reduce homelessness,increase affordable housing and grow the local economy. [11]
Housing
Bliss established the Housing Advisory Committee in 2016 and tasked it with coming up with recommendations to improve zoning ordinances and increase the city’s affordable housing supply. The city had eleven recommendations in which nearly all of them were approved throughout 2018 and 2019 time frame. The goals that resulted in this process were aimed to allow for reduce requirements for duplexes,accessory dwelling units,protect applicants against predatory application fees and create an affordable housing density bonus. [12]
In her 2022 State of the City address,Bliss stated:"A four percent growth rate means that we need to build not dozens,not hundreds of more homes,we need to build thousands of more homes as quickly as possible," noting that affordable housing is already on the way. "We're currently tracking an additional 700 affordable new housing units in the development pipeline,and many of these units will be online and available in 2023." [12]
Economic goals
Bliss implemented a food truck ordinance for Grand Rapids. “That was an economic development issue because it’s an entry point for entrepreneurs who don’t have a significant amount of access to capital to open a brick and mortar,”Bliss said. "Knowing that many entrepreneurs get their foot in the door through a food truck,I wanted to create that opportunity for folks in our community. [12] She stated,“I also believe food trucks add to the vibrancy of a community." [12]
Bliss was first elected to the Grand Rapids City Commission in 2005. She was re-elected in 2009 and 2013. During her time as a city commissioner,she led a Blue Ribbon Panel on Parks,was a founding member of the non-profit organization Friends of Grand Rapids Parks and served on the millage campaign for Parks,Pools and Playgrounds. She served on the Uptown Corridor Improvement District and was a part of the Fulton Street Farmers Market Redevelopment,among other neighborhood and community initiatives.
In 2015,Mayor George Heartwell was prohibited from seeking a fourth term. Bliss was one of four candidates who entered the race to succeed Heartwell;the others were Robert Dean,John George,and Willard Lee. A primary election was held on August 4,2015;Bliss received 66% of the vote. Because she won a majority of the vote,Bliss was elected in the primary election without a need for a runoff election.
Bliss became the 59th mayor of Grand Rapids on January 1,2016. She is the first woman to hold that role,as well as the youngest mayor in 130 years.
Bliss’s first words as mayor were in regards to George Hartwell,the previous mayor of Grand Rapids. She expressed her gratitude by saying,“I am standing on the shoulders of many great leaders who came before me.” [13] During Bliss’s first term as mayor,she was joined on the commission by newcomers Jon O’Connor and David Allen who were both former school board members. As well as Ruth Kelly who was re-elected and library commissioners Rachel Anderson,James Botts and Sophia Brewer. [14]
During her inaugural State of the City speech,Bliss expressed her entire to-do list. This consisted of,“Foster racial equity,Provide more affordable housing. Enliven neighborhoods,Strengthen schools. Restore the Grand River’s rapids. Solve homelessness. Grow the local economy.” [14]
Another major action Bliss took in her first term as mayor was she was able to work with city workers to begin getting them implicit bias training. Bliss strongly believed this was important as she states,“We must confront a difficult issue that has grown to an unacceptable proportion in our city…It starts with how the city government looks and how we think. We learn to honestly assess our own biases,and know how those biases impact others,specifically in how they result in denying opportunities for others.” [14]
During her first term as mayor,Bliss also chose to prioritize bettering police–community relations. She refers to the police force as the “canopy that covers our neighborhoods” [14] and highly emphasizes the fact that a community and a police force would be stronger working together.
Bliss got fellow commissioners on board to create a fund that can be donated to local neighborhoods in order to fund projects. “This would create an innovative,creative way to empower people to come together to work on projects”. [14]
At the beginning of Bliss’s mayoral term,she also urged colleagues to pass an ordinance in order to hold property owners accountable for blighted vacant properties. Bliss strongly believes that these vacant properties contribute to the lack of success in a neighborhood. “We can’t allow these properties to drag down neighborhoods like a diseased tree branch that,if left untrimmed,the disease spreads.” [14]
Bliss also created a general plan for the Grand Rapids movement towards sustainability. Some goals were to provide a city park within walking distance of all the citizens,completely make the change to renewable energy throughout the entire city by 2025,increase recycling habits,increase the tree canopy to 40% throughout the city,and pave over 100 miles of bike lanes to stray away from the use of motor vehicles.[ citation needed ]
Mayor Bliss hopes to be able to restore the aesthetic and accessibility of the Grand River in the City of Grand Rapids. “Imagine being at Riverside Park and seeing rowing on the river,canoeing or kayaking through the city,and the eventual capacity to ride your bike on a 10-mile urban trail all along the river from Riverside Park to Millenium Park and beyond.”Like all other of the policies that Bliss will be focusing on,she really is hoping to bring the Grand Rapids community closer. She then went on to say,“These are realistic dreams. The groundwork has already started to restore our namesake –Grand Rapids.”[ citation needed ]
She won reelection on November 5,2019. She defeated Daniel Schutte with over 83% of the vote. Bliss received 23,717 votes compared to Schutte,who only received 4,476 votes. [15] For Bliss’s second mayoral run,her campaign fund totaled to $87,200 going into election week. [14]
On the ballot for Bliss’s second election,voters also had the opportunity to vote for permanent parks millage which would ultimately create a fund for the city's public parks and pools. [16]
As mayor,Bliss joined 130 US mayors launching a ten-minute walk to a park campaign. [17] She was appointed by Governor Snyder to serve on the Child Lead Poisoning Elimination Board. [18] She has been a proponent of environmental sustainability with the city,twice receiving gold certification from the Michigan Green Communities Network in the Michigan Green Communities Challenge for their work in approving a bicycle action plan,zero cities project,having a strategic plan with sustainability as a core value and converting the city's yard waste site to a composting facility. [19] Bliss actively participated in the Living Cities Racial Equity Here initiative resulting in policy and budget process changes to incorporate a racial equity toolkit.
During the COVID-19 pandemic Bliss made sure to keep in touch with her community. In her letter she states safety precautions that could be taken in order to protect those who could be highly affected by the pandemic. She also went on to express the fact that there were many services being offered throughout the city of Grand Rapids. She also urged citizens to stay informed on the latest updates and initial steps towards combatting the pandemic. [20]
Kent County is located in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2020 Census,the county had a population of 657,974,making it the fourth most populous county in Michigan,and the largest outside of the Detroit area. Its county seat is Grand Rapids. The county was set off in 1831,and organized in 1836. It is named for New York jurist and legal scholar James Kent,who represented the Michigan Territory in its dispute with Ohio over the Toledo Strip.
Allendale is a census-designated place (CDP) in Ottawa County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 17,579 at the 2010 census. It is located within Allendale Charter Township,occupying approximately the northern two-thirds of the township,from the eastern boundary with the Grand River west along Pierce St.,north along 75th Ave.,then west along Lake Michigan Drive (M-45) to the western boundary of the township. It is a part of the Grand Rapids-Muskegon-Holland,Michigan combined statistical area,and is an exurb of Grand Rapids,due to its major commuter routes into the city.
Meijer Inc. is an American supercenter chain that primarily operates throughout the Midwestern United States. Its corporate headquarters are in Walker,Michigan,which is a part of the Grand Rapids metropolitan area. Founded in 1934 as a supermarket chain,Meijer is credited with pioneering the modern supercenter concept in 1962. About half of the company's 259 stores are located in Michigan,particularly in its birthplace of West Michigan;the others are in Illinois,Indiana,Kentucky,Ohio and Wisconsin. The chain is ranked by Forbes as the 14th-largest private company in the United States,and is the country's 23rd-largest retailer by revenue as of 2023.
WGVU-TV is a PBS member television station in Grand Rapids,Michigan,United States. It operates a full-time satellite station,WGVK in Kalamazoo. The two stations are owned by Grand Valley State University,and maintain studios in the Meijer Public Broadcast Center,located in the Eberhard Center on the GVSU Pew Campus in downtown Grand Rapids. WGVU's transmitter is located near the GVSU main campus in Allendale,while WGVK's transmitter is based in Kalamazoo's Westwood neighborhood.
The Rapid is the public transit operator serving Grand Rapids,Michigan and its surrounding suburbs. The Rapid operates local service in urban areas in Kent County,and regional service to Ferris State University and Grand Valley State University in Mecosta and Ottawa Counties.
John Hoult Logie was an American attorney and politician who served as mayor of Grand Rapids,Michigan from 1992 to 2003,one of the longest-serving in the city's history.
Frederik Meijer Gardens &Sculpture Park is a 158-acre (64 ha) botanical garden,art museum,and outdoor sculpture park located in Grand Rapids Township,Michigan,United States. Opened in 1995,Meijer Gardens quickly established itself in the Midwest as a major cultural attraction jointly focused on horticulture and sculpture.
George Heartwell is an American politician. He was the mayor of the city of Grand Rapids in the U.S. state of Michigan. He was sworn in on January 1,2004,and exited his mayoral duties after ending his third term on January 16,2016.
The Grand Rapids Public Schools is a public school district serving Grand Rapids,Michigan.
Grand Rapids is a city in and county seat of Kent County,Michigan,United States. At the 2020 census,the city had a population of 198,893,making it the second-most populous city in Michigan,after Detroit. Grand Rapids is the central city of the Grand Rapids metropolitan area,which has a population of 1,162,950 and a combined statistical area population of 1,502,552.
Frederik Gerhard Hendrik "Fred" Meijer was an American billionaire businessman who was the chairman of the Meijer hypermarket chain,headquartered near his former hometown in Grand Rapids,Michigan.
The 2013 Grand Rapids flood lasted from April 12 to 25,2013,affecting multiple areas in the Grand Rapids metropolitan area. Sudden heavy rainfall,saturation of the ground from rainwater and the flow of tributaries caused the Grand River to rise dramatically,with the river cresting at 21.85 feet (6.66 m) in Grand Rapids on April 21,2013. The flooding caused thousands of residents in the area to evacuate their homes.
David LaGrand is an American politician who served in the Michigan House of Representatives from the 75th district,from 2016 to 2023. In 2022,he ran for election to the Michigan Senate in the 30th district,narrowly losing to incumbent Mark Huizenga. He resides in Grand Rapids,Michigan with his wife,Melissa LaGrand,and four children:John,Issac,Helen,and Julia. As of 2023,he is running for the position of Mayor of Grand Rapids against City Commissioner Senita Lenear.
Tommy Brann is an American politician from Michigan. Brann is a Republican member of Michigan House of Representatives from District 77.
Rachel Hood is an American politician from Michigan. Hood is a Democratic member of Michigan House of Representatives from the old District 76,but now represents District 81.
The 2015 Grand Rapids mayoral election took place on August 4,2015,to elect the Mayor of Grand Rapids,Michigan. It saw the election of Rosalynn Bliss.
Hillary Jeanne Scholten is an American attorney and politician serving as the U.S. representative from Michigan's 3rd congressional district since 2023. A member of the Democratic Party,she represents Grand Rapids and much of the urban core of West Michigan,in a district once represented by former President Gerald Ford.
The 2019 Grand Rapids mayoral election took place on November 5,2019,to elect the mayor of Grand Rapids,Michigan. This was the last election for mayor to take place in an odd-year after Grand Rapids voters approved Prop 1 in 2020,which moved city elections to even years,57% to 43%.
The 2024 Grand Rapids mayoral election took place on November 5,2024,to elect the mayor of Grand Rapids,Michigan,concurrently with other 2024 Michigan elections,including the 2024 United States presidential election,United States Senate election in Michigan,and elections to the Michigan state legislature. This is the first election for mayor to take place in an even-year after Grand Rapids voters approved Prop 1 in 2020,which moved city elections to even years.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)