Mayor don williamson biography
Don Williamson
American politician and businessman (–)
For other people with the same name, see Donald Williamson (disambiguation).
Donald J. Williamson (February 2, – April 2, ) was an American businessman and politician who served as the mayor of Flint, Michigan from to He was married to Patsy Lou Williamson, who owned several car dealerships in the Flint area. He was chairman of The Colonel's International, Inc., which manages two raceways.
Background
Williamson was born and raised in Flint, Michigan. He married Patsy Lou, and together they managed a growing number of car dealerships.
In , Williamson was convicted for several business scams. He served three years in prison before being paroled. He bought cars with bad checks and purchased other items without paying for them.[2]
Williamson owned Brainerd International Raceway and Colonel's. He merged them into The Colonel's International, Inc. He sold Brainerd International Raceway to Jed & Kristi Copham in [3]
Political life
In Don Williamson challenged incumbent Mayor Woodrow Stanley and lost. After Stanley was recalled, Williamson was elected to his first full term in , defeating former State Representative Floyd Clack. Willamson faced off against Flint Club founder and former president, Dayne Walling, in , when he won reelection.[4]
Election controversy
During his mayoral campaign, Williamson was accused of bribing citizens for votes by handing out more than $20, at the car dealership that his wife owns as part of a "Customer Appreciation Day." Each person who received money also was given his campaign literature.[5]
During the campaign, Williamson claimed that the city had an $ million surplus. But, after the mayoral elections, he revealed that the city had a $4 million deficit. Williamson had to fire 60 city employees: he proposed firing 60 police officers and 9 firefighters, and closing the city jail.[citation needed]
In both elections, Williamson, a Democrat, was opposed by the state Democratic party for a variety of reasons. They disapproved of him and his wife having made substantial campaign donations to the presidential campaigns of Republican George W. Bush. They contributed the maximum amount.[5]
Administration
The Williamson administration had reported a balanced budget for fiscal year , and delivered a balanced budget for fiscal year The City of Flint received a national budget award for [citation needed] After he replaced the Budget Director, and the city began a downward spiral of "emergency spending", leading to the city finishing the fiscal year with an $ million deficit, and likely staring at another multimillion-dollar deficit in [6] In March , projections were for the deficit to exceed 14 million dollars.[7]
Williamson appointed Darryl Buchanan, a city councilman, as the City Administrator after his second term election.[8] At present, the city is in a $9 million deficit, much of it due to the various lawsuits against Don Williamson.
In February , Williamson sued Flint city clerk Inez Brown for not convening a panel to investigate "her profane and threatening" language with an employee.[9] During the Flint mayoral election, Williamson said that paving of hundreds of miles of roads was one of his proudest achievements as mayor.[2]
Time magazine ranked Flint the "most dangerous city in America" in a issue. The 14th Annual CQ press publication of "Most Dangerous Cities in America" ranked Flint as third.[10] Residents and officials disputed this study.[11]
Recall campaign
In October , petitions were submitted in the city clerk's office to recall Williamson as mayor. There were enough valid signatures to proceed. Williamson's legal challenges were unsuccessful, and a recall election was scheduled for February 24, [12]
Resignation
Williamson began making major changes in department heads. He replaced the City Administrator, Darryl Buchanan, with Michael Brown, and appointed Buchanan to the nonexistent position of deputy mayor.[13] On February 8, , Williamson announced his resignation as mayor effective Saturday, February 14, stating health reasons.[14]
Because he resigned, under Michigan law, the scheduled recall election was canceled. On February 16, , city administrator Michael Brown succeeded as temporary mayor.[15]
Williamson ran for governor of Michigan in [16]
Death
Williamson died on April 2, , at the age of 85 due to complications from a respiratory illness.[17]
References
- ^PRIMARY ELECTIONArchived at the Wayback Machine GENESEE COUNTY, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, AUGUST 6,
- ^ ab
- ^"Brainerd Int'l Raceway Hosts Memorial Day Carnival and Drag Races"
- ^Raymer, Marjory (). "Two white candidates make history". Flint Journal. Flint, Michigan: Booth Newspapers. Retrieved
- ^ abMarjory Raymer (November ). "Walling, Williamson start final push". Flint Journal. Retrieved
- ^"New Flint administration announces deficit", Flint Journal, February
- ^"Flint's budget deficit is $ million", Flint Journal , March
- ^"Flint Mayor Don Wiliamson appoints longtime community leader Mike Brown as new city administrator to replace Darryl Buchanan". Flint Journal. April 19, Retrieved May 6,
- ^Flint Journal photo (February ). "Flint Mayor Don Williamson sues Flint City Clerk Inez Brown". Flint Journal. Retrieved
- ^"Experts say 'most dangerous city' rankings twist numbers". CNN. Archived from the original on April 17,
- ^Julie Morrison (20 November ). "Residents, officials dispute study that labels Flint third most dangerous city ". Retrieved
- ^[1]Archived January 27, , at
- ^"Mayor of Flint, Michigan resigns for health reasons". Wikinews. WikiMedia Foundation. February 11, Retrieved
- ^"Flint Mayor Don Williamson resigns". Flint Journal. Flint, Michigan: Booth Newspapers. February 9, Retrieved February 9,
- ^"Mayor of Flint, Michigan resigns for health reasons". February 11, Retrieved February 18,
- ^"Don Williamson will run for governor". Archived from the original on May 21, Retrieved February 18,
- ^"Former Flint Mayor Don Williamson passes away". WJRT-TV. April 2, Archived from the original on April 3, Retrieved April 2,