Kristin Szakos: Difference between revisions

From Cvillepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(updated campaign website)
mNo edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
| name = Kristin Szakos
| name = Kristin Szakos
| photo = 20110815-Szakos headshot.JPG
| photo = 20110815-Szakos headshot.JPG
| caption =  
| caption = Kristin Szakos (D-Charlottesville)
| office1= Candidate<br/> [[Charlottesville City Council]]
| office1= Candidate<br/> [[Charlottesville City Council]]
| district1 =
| district1 = At-Large
| term_start1 =
| election1 = Nov. 5, 2013
| election1 = Nov. 5, 2013
| term_end1 = January 2014
| term_start1 = January 2014
| preceded1 = December 2017
| term_end1 = December 2017
| preceded1 =
| succeeded1 =
| succeeded1 =
| office2= Member<br/> [[Charlottesville City Council]]
| office2= Member<br/> [[Charlottesville City Council]]

Revision as of 16:06, 17 July 2013

Kristin Szakos
20110815-Szakos headshot.JPG
Kristin Szakos (D-Charlottesville)

District At-Large
Election Nov. 5, 2013
For term to start January 2014
Term End December 2017

Term Start 2010

Biographical Information

Spouse Joe Szakos
Children Anna & Maria[1]
Residence Charlottesville, Virginia
Alma mater Grinnell College
B.A. in Religious Studies
Northwestern University
M.S.J. in Print Journalism[1]
Profession Freelance writer & editor[1]
Website Campaign website
Campaign $ VPAP
Contributions $ VPAP
People.jpg This biographical article is a stub. You can help cvillepedia by expanding it.

Kristin Szakos (D) is a member of the Charlottesville City Council. She was elected as vice mayor on January 3, 2011. [citation needed] Szakos will run for a second term in the 2013 election. [2] [3]


Biography

Kristin Szakos signing documents after being sworn in by the Hon. Paul Garrett on December 23, 2009

Szakos has been a Charlottesville resident since 1994 [citation needed]. She is married to Joe Szakos and has two daughters. She currently lives with them in Locust Grove. She was president of the Burnley-Moran PTO, served on the city Special Education Advisory Committee and the board of the Charlottesville Branch NAACP, and currently, as of 2011, serves on the Trinity Episcopal Church Vestry.[1] A former journalist, Szakos spent two years as Volunteer Coordinator for the 2008 Obama presidential campaign in Charlottesville.

Szakos represents the City as vice chair of the MPO Policy Board [4]and is also a member of both Housing Advisory Committee and the Albemarle Charlottesville Regional Jail.[5]

Szakos and Councilor Satyendra Huja are potential candidates to succeed Dave Norris as Mayor of Charlottesville.[6]

Past policy positions

Szakos has called for the city to explore the introduction of a municipal composting system[7]

2013 election for City Council

Szakos was nominated by the Democratic Party in the June 11, 2013 primary when she won 1,307 votes, or 29 percent of the electorate. [8]

Szakos chose Valentine's Day to formally announce her campaign for a second term. Her campaign manager is Lisa Green. [9] Through May 29, 2013, Szakos had raised $2,941 in campaign foundations including a $1,000 donation from herself. [10]

Szakos also participated in a questionnaire on public housing conducted by the Public Housing Association of Residents. [11]

Audio of campaign announcement

<play audio>http://s3.amazonaws.com/cville/cm%2Fmutlimedia%2F20130214-Szakos-Announcement.mp3 </play audio>


2009 election for City Council

Campaign launch

Kristin Szakos announced in February 2009 that she would run as a Democrat seeking one of two available seats on council.

At her campaign launch, Szakos told a crowd of supporters that she had never considered herself a potential candidate for political office until experiencing the Obama campaign. "I never thought that I’d want to run for office," said Szakos. "Yet here I am and I am feeling really good about it."

Szakos said she intends to channel the energy from the Obama campaign into local issues at City Hall. "We need to talk about why there are still such great gaps in opportunity and education in Charlottesville, and work hard to close them," said Szakos. "We need to speak out about inequality in a town as seemingly progressive and prosperous as ours, and we need to work to change it."

Szakos identified the following items as her campaign pledge:

  • Make City government more responsive to under-served neighborhoods
  • Get people involved in the decisions that affect their lives
  • Listen to all perspectives and strive to find common ground
  • Find new and creative solutions to persistent community problems
  • Find new ways to save money and reduce energy consumption, and
  • Use "people power" to bring needed change.

2009 Unassembled Caucus

Szakos faced incumbents Dave Norris and Julian Taliaferro in the first-ever unassembled caucus held by the Charlottesville Democratic Party on May 9, 2009. Szakos won the nomination along with Norris[12].

Szakos won the caucus and ran in the general election with fellow Democrat and Mayor Dave Norris[citation needed].

General election results

Candidates Votes %
Dave Norris (D) incumbent 6,300 38.7
Kristin Szakos (D) 5,083 31.2
Bob Fenwick (I) 3,293 20.2
Paul Long (I) 1,214 7.5
Andrew Williams (I, write-in) 237 1.5
Other Write-In 141 0.9
Source: City of Charlottesville[13]

Overall voter turnout for City of Charlottesville in this election was 37.31%. Each voter could vote for up to two candidates.

Candidate Profile Resources
Candidate Kristin Szakos (D) - Challenger * WINNER
Office Charlottesville City Council
Election year 2009 election
Logo-small25.jpg Candidate interviews by Charlottesville Tomorrow
Candidate interview transcript
Candidate interview audio

<mp3player>http://www.cvillepedia.org/mediawiki/images/20090901-szakos-interview.mp3</mp3player>
Source website


Confederate statue controversey

At the 2012 Virginia Festival of the Book, Szakos asked civil war expert and former UVa professor Ed Ayres if the city should consider removing statues to confederate generals or balance them out with other statues.[14] The question prompted outrage from many who feel that the city's Civil War statues are an important reminder of the area's history.[15] Szakos said that as a result of her comments she was the subject of hostility but felt that the situation still warranted community conversation.[16]

Contact Information

Kristin Szakos
1132 Otter St
Charlottesville, VA 22901
(434) 984-4022 (h)
(434) 987-1042 (M)
k.szakos@embarqmail.com


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Candidate Submissions to Charlottesville Tomorrow
  2. Web. City Democrats to decide method for nomination process, Sean Tubbs, Charlottesville Tomorrow, December 1, 2012, retrieved December 3, 2012.
  3. Web. Szakos makes bid for second Council term official, Sean Tubbs, Charlottesville Tomorrow, February 14, 2013, retrieved March 14, 2013.
  4. Web. MPO Policy Board, Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission, retrieved August 16, 2011.
  5. Charlottesville City Council Meeting. City Hall, Charlottesville. 7 February 2011. Public Meeting.
  6. Web. Who will be the next mayor of Charlottesville?, Chiara Canzi, C-VILLE Weekly, Portico Publications, December 27, 2011, retrieved December 22, 2011. Print. December 27, 2011 , 23.52, .
  7. Web. Councilor likes idea of public composting, Rachana Dixit, Daily Progress, Lee Enterprises, November 6, 2010, retrieved November 8, 2010.
  8. Web. Bellamy, Fenwick in dead heat; Szakos wins easily, Aaron Richardson, Daily Progress, Lee Enterprises, June 12, 2013, retrieved June 12, 2013.
  9. Web. Szakos makes bid for second Council term official, Sean Tubbs, Charlottesville Tomorrow, February 14, 2013, retrieved February 19, 2013.
  10. Web. Palmer, McKeel lead local candidates in fundraising, Daily Progress Staff Reports, Daily Progress, Lee Enterprises, June 7, 2013, retrieved June 10, 2013.
  11. Web. [ Questionnaire for City Council Candidatesurl=http://www.pharcville.org/2013/06/04/phar-questionnaire-for-city-council-candidates/], June 4, 2013, retrieved June 10, 2013.
  12. "Charlottesville Democrats nominate Norris and Szakos for City Council" Charlottesville Tomorrow News Center. Charlottesville Tomorrow, 9 May 2009. Web. 10 Aug. 2009.
  13. Official Results November 3, 2009 General Election. City of Charlottesville, 6 Nov. 2009. Web. 6 Nov. 2009. <http://www.charlottesville.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=14908>.
  14. Web. Historian talks Civil War as councilor wonders if statues should be torn down, Ted Strong, Daily Progress, Lee Enterprises, March 22, 2012, retrieved April 10, 2012.
  15. Web. City's Civil War statues remind us of our past, Daily Progress, Daily Progress, Lee Enterprises, March 27, 2012, retrieved August 22, 2012.
  16. Web. Szakos decries response to statue comments, Graham Moomaw, Daily Progress, Lee Enterprises, retrieved April 10, 2012.

External Links

Charlottesville Tomorrow’s News Center