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{{confused|Orange County Board of Supervisors}}
The '''Board of County Commissioners''' ('''BCC''') is the governing body of '''[[Orange County, Florida]]'''. It runs in the manner of a [[county commission]]. It has six seats held by elected officials called "County Commissioners", each Commissioner in charge of their own District, led by a separate [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|Mayor of Orange County]].
The '''Board of County Commissioners''' ('''BCC''') is the governing body of [[Orange County, Florida]]. It runs in the manner of a [[county commission]]. It has six seats held by elected officials called "County Commissioners", each commissioner in charge of their own District, led by a separate [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|mayor of Orange County]].


==Current Board==
==Current Board==


===Mayor===
===Mayor===
The current [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|Mayor of Orange County]] is [[Teresa Jacobs]].
The current [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|mayor of Orange County]] is [[Jerry Demings]] (D).


===County Commissioners===
===County commissioners===
#District 1 Nicole Wilson (D)
#Scott Boyd
#District 2 Christine Moore (R)
#Fred Brummer
#District 3 Mayra Uribe (D)
#John Martinez
#District 4 Maribel Gomez Cordero (D)
#Jennifer Thompson
#District 5 Emily Bonilla (D)
#Ted Edwards
#District 6 Michael "Mike" Scott (D)
#Tiffany Moore-Russell


==2006 Board Election==
==2006 board election==
The Mayor and Commissioners each hold four-year terms, and are limited to two full terms each. The Mayor and the Commissioners of the even-numbered Districts are up for election during mid-term election cycles, while the Commissioners of the odd-numbered Districts are up for election during Presidential election cycles. Elections are non-partisan, but partisan politics do tend to play a role in the elections. The elections are contested during the September [[primary election]]. If a single candidate fails to get a simple majority of votes for their seat, then the top two candidates will face each other in a [[Two-round system|runoff election]] during the November [[general election]].
The mayor and commissioners each hold four-year terms, and are limited to two full terms each. The mayor and the commissioners of the even-numbered districts are up for election during mid-term election cycles, while the commissioners of the odd-numbered districts are up for election during presidential election cycles. Elections are non-partisan, but partisan politics do tend to play a role in the elections. The elections are contested during the September [[Nonpartisan primary|primary election]]. If a single candidate fails to get a simple majority of votes for their seat, then the top two candidates will face each other in a [[Two-round system|run-off election]] during the November [[general election]].


An election was held on September 5, 2006. [[Richard Crotty]] took over the position of [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|Mayor of Orange County]] during [[Mel Martinez]]'s 1998 term (Martinez was selected as [[George W. Bush]]'s [[Secretary of Housing and Urban Development]]), so he is still eligible for re-election in 2006. Both Bob Sindler and Homer Hartage were term-limited out, with Hartage running for Democratic nomination to [[Florida's 8th congressional district]], which he lost to [[Charlie Stuart]]. Sindler, also a Democrat, was running for the 38th District of the [[Florida House of Representatives]], but was disqualified from campaigning for the seat due to failure to adhere to resign to run rules. Not coincidentally, the man that won District 2 in the primary, Fred Brummer, a Republican, was term-limited out of the same seat Sindler considered running for, and so essentially ran as an incumbent.
An election was held on September 5, 2006. [[Richard Crotty]] took over the position of [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|Mayor of Orange County]] during [[Mel Martinez]]'s 1998 term (Martinez was selected as [[George W. Bush]]'s [[Secretary of Housing and Urban Development|secretary of housing and urban development]]), so he is still eligible for re-election in 2006. Both Bob Sindler and Homer Hartage were term-limited out, with Hartage running for Democratic nomination to [[Florida's 8th congressional district]], which he lost to [[Charlie Stuart]]. Sindler, also a Democrat, was running for the 38th District of the [[Florida House of Representatives]], but was disqualified from campaigning for the seat due to failure to adhere to resign to run rules. Not coincidentally, the man that won District 2 in the primary, Fred Brummer, a Republican, was term-limited out of the same seat Sindler considered running for, and so essentially ran as an incumbent.


[[Richard Crotty]] won the election for [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|Mayor of Orange County]], with 69.69% of the vote. Sally Baptiste was his only opponent.
[[Richard Crotty]] won the election for [[Mayor of Orange County, Florida|Mayor of Orange County]], with 69.69% of the vote. Sally Baptiste was his only opponent.


Fred Brummer, previously representing the overlapping 38th District in the [[Florida House of Representatives]], won District 2 with 53.61% of the vote. Lawrence Kolin was second, with 20.23% of the vote. Two others ran for the seat.
Fred Brummer, previously representing the overlapping 38th District in the [[Florida House of Representatives]], won District 2 with 53.61% of the vote. Lawrence Kolin was second, with 20.23% of the vote. Two others ran for the seat.
Line 25: Line 26:
Linda Stewart successfully defended her seat, winning a second term for District 4 with 51.46% of the vote. Jennifer Thompson was second, with 31.45% of the vote. Two others ran for the seat.
Linda Stewart successfully defended her seat, winning a second term for District 4 with 51.46% of the vote. Jennifer Thompson was second, with 31.45% of the vote. Two others ran for the seat.


The race for District 6 was hotly contested, and ended in a virtual dead heat in the primary, with Tiffany Moore and Bruce Antone getting 37.92% and 37.46% of the vote, respectively. E.[[Juan Lynum]], the son of Orlando City Commissioner Daisy Lynum, was third in a field of five.<ref>{{cite web|title=Moore, Antone in runoff|url=http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2006-09-06/news/METRO06_1_brummer-runoff-moore|publisher=Orlando Sentinel|accessdate=1 November 2012|coauthors=Damron, David and Ailworth, Erin|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/6Br3F7aCk|archivedate=1 November 2012|date=6 September 2006}}</ref> Tiffany Moore ultimately won the election at the General Election, defeating Bruce Antone by a 53%-47% margin.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/orange/orl-orcounty0806nov08,0,3250657.story?coll=orl-news-headlines-orange|title=For Moore, 3rd time is a charm|first=Erin|last=Ailworth|publisher=[[Orlando Sentinel]]|date=2006-11-08|accessdate=2006-11-08}}</ref>
The race for District 6 was hotly contested, and ended in a virtual dead heat in the primary, with Tiffany Moore and Bruce Antone getting 37.92% and 37.46% of the vote, respectively. E.[[Juan Lynum]], the son of Orlando city commissioner Daisy Lynum, was third in a field of five.<ref>{{cite web|title=Moore, Antone in runoff|url=https://www.orlandosentinel.com/2006/09/06/moore-antone-in-runoff/|publisher=Orlando Sentinel|access-date=1 November 2012|author1=Damron, David |author2=Ailworth, Erin |name-list-style=amp |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140308034034/http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2006-09-06/news/METRO06_1_brummer-runoff-moore|archive-date=8 March 2014|url-status=live|date=6 September 2006}}</ref> Tiffany Moore ultimately won the election at the General Election, defeating Bruce Antone by a 53%-47% margin.<ref>{{cite web|last=Ailworth|first=Erin|title=For Moore, 3rd time is a charm|url=https://www.orlandosentinel.com/2006/11/08/for-moore-3rd-time-is-a-charm/|publisher=Orlando Sentinel|access-date=1 November 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110715015127/http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2006-11-08/news/ORCOUNTY08_1_moore-antone-county-commission|archive-date=15 July 2011|url-status=live|date=8 November 2006}}</ref>


==2008 Board Elections==
==2008 board elections==
In District 1, where [[Teresa Jacobs]] could not run again due to term limits, Scott Boyd and Sharon Gravitte finished in a near dead heat, 35.31% to 33.81% respectively, in the 2008-08-26, primary election. In a runoff held during the general election on November 4, Boyd won the election with 55% of the vote.
In District 1, where [[Teresa Jacobs]] could not run again due to term limits, S. Scott Boyd and Sharon Gravitte finished in a near dead heat, 35.31% to 33.81% respectively, in the 2008-08-26, primary election. In a runoff held during the general election on November 4, Boyd won the election with 55% of the vote.


In District 3, Mildred Fernandez successfully defended her seat in a one-on-one election between her and challenger John Kelly Harris in the general election on November 4. She received 56.75% of the vote.
In District 3, Mildred Fernandez successfully defended her seat in a one-on-one election between her and challenger John Kelly Harris in the general election on November 4. She received 56.75% of the vote.


In District 5, [[Bill Segal]] ran unopposed, and retained his seat
In District 5, Bill Segal ran unopposed, and retained his seat

==2014 board elections==
In District 2, incumbent commissioner Fred Brummer of [[Apopka]] was term-limited out of office. State representative Bryan Nelson came with one percent of the vote to avoid a November runoff election as he finished first in the six-way primary with 49% of the vote. Eatonville vice-mayor finished in second place and advanced to the runoff with 18% of the vote, finishing a few hundred votes ahead of corrections officer Patricia Rumph, who finished third. Two other candidates, Prince Brown and Greg Jackson finished with a combined 15% of the vote.

In District 4, incumbent Jennifer Thompson ran for re-election with opposition from union representative Euri Cerrud and homemaker Maribel Cordero. She easily beat out both, winning outright with 65% of the vote.

In District 6, incumbent commissioner Tiffany Moore Russell was term-limited and entered the race for the Orange County clerk of courts. Businessman Derrick "Shine" Wallace and lawyer and husband of [[Gary Siplin]], Victoria Siplin emerged from the primary with 21% and 28% of the vote respectively. They will both take part in the November runoff. Other candidates receiving votes were former Moore Russell aide Roberta Walton, Virginia Whittington, former Orange County commissioner Homer Hartage and community activist Luwanna Gelzer.

== 2024 board elections ==

=== District 1 ===
{{Infobox election
| election_date = August 20, 2024 (first round)<br>November 5, 2024 (runoff)<br>{{nobold|''Officially nonpartisan''}}
| election_name = 2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners District 1 election
| type = presidential
| previous_year = 2020
| seats_for_election = Florida's 40th State House District
| image_size = x150px
| image1 = File:3x4.svg
| nominee1 = Nicole Wilson
| party1 = Florida Democratic Party
| popular_vote1 =
| percentage1 =
| image2 = File:3x4.svg
| nominee2 = Austin Arthur
| party2 = Republican Party of Florida
| popular_vote2 =
| percentage2 =
| map_image = File:2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners, District 1 primary election by precinct.svg
| map_size =
| map_caption = First round precinct results <br> '''Wilson:''' {{legend0|#8da9e2|50–55%}} {{legend0|#678cd7|55–60%}} {{legend0|#584CDE|>60%}} <br/>'''Arthur:''' {{legend0|#ed8783|50–55%}} {{legend0|#e55651|55–60%}} {{legend0|#d02923|>60%}}
| title = County commissioner
| posttitle = Elected county commissioner
| before_party = Florida Democratic Party
| before_election = Nicole Wilson
| after_election =
| after_party =
| next_year = 2028
| flag_image = Flag of Orange County, FL.png
| 1blank = First round
| 1data1 = '''14,062<br/>49.98%'''
| 1data2 = '''14,060<br/>49.97%'''
| 2blank = Runoff
| 2data1 = ''TBD''
| 2data2 = ''TBD''
| nominee3 = Stephen Davis
| party3 = Write-in
| 1data3 = 15<br>0.05%
| 2data3 = ''Eliminated''
| image3 = File:3x4.svg
}}

=== District 3 ===
{{Infobox election
| election_date = August 20, 2024 (first round)<br>November 5, 2024 (runoff)<br>{{nobold|''Officially nonpartisan''}}
| election_name = 2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners District 3 election
| type = presidential
| previous_year = 2020
| seats_for_election =
| image_size = x150px
| image1 = File:3x4.svg
| nominee1 = Mayra Uribe
| party1 = Florida Democratic Party
| popular_vote1 =
| percentage1 =
| image2 = File:Linda Stewart Portrait (cropped).jpg
| nominee2 = [[Linda Stewart]]
| party2 = Florida Democratic Party
| popular_vote2 =
| percentage2 =
| map_image = File:2024 Orange County, FL Board of County Commissioners District 3, primary election by precinct.svg
| map_size =
| map_caption = First round precinct results <br> '''Uribe:''' {{legend0|#E6CDFF|30–40%}} {{legend0|#CCAAFF|40–50%}} {{legend0|#B380FF|50–60%}} <br/>'''Stewart:''' {{legend0|#AAE5AA|30–40%}} {{legend0|#87DE87|40–50%}} <br/>'''Martinez:''' {{legend0|#FFCCA9|30–40%}}
| title = County commissioner
| posttitle = Elected county commissioner
| before_party = Florida Democratic Party
| before_election = Mayra Uribe
| after_election =
| after_party =
| next_year = 2028
| flag_image = Flag of Orange County, FL.png
| 1blank = First round
| 1data1 = '''9,861<br/>44.7%'''
| 1data2 = '''7,655<br/>34.7%'''
| 2blank = Runoff
| 2data1 = ''TBD''
| 2data2 = ''TBD''
| nominee3 = Gus Martinez
| party3 = Republican Party of Florida
| 1data3 = 4,548<br>20.6%
| 2data3 = ''Eliminated''
| image3 = File:3x4.svg
}}

=== District 5 ===
{{Infobox election
| election_date = August 20, 2024 (first round)<br>November 5, 2024 (runoff)<br>{{nobold|''Officially nonpartisan''}}
| election_name = 2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners District 5 election
| type = presidential
| previous_year = 2020
| seats_for_election =
| image_size = x150px
| image1 = File:3x4.svg
| nominee1 = Kelly Semrad
| party1 = Florida Democratic Party
| popular_vote1 =
| percentage1 =
| image2 = File:3x4.svg
| nominee2 = Steve Leary
| party2 = Republican Party of Florida
| popular_vote2 =
| percentage2 =
| map_image = File:2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners District 5 primary election by precinct.svg
| map_size = 350px
| map_caption = First round precinct results <br> '''Semrad:''' {{legend0|#BDD3FF|30–40%}} {{legend0|#A5B0FF|40–50%}} {{legend0|#8da9e2|50–60%}} {{legend0|#678cd7|60–70%}} <br/> '''Leary:''' {{legend0|#FFC8CD|30–40%}} {{legend0|#FFB2B2|40–50%}} <br> '''Semrad/Leary Tie:''' {{legend0|#AE8BB1|}}
| title = County commissioner
| posttitle = Elected county commissioner
| before_party = Florida Democratic Party
| before_election = Emily Bonilla
| after_election =
| after_party =
| next_year = 2028
| flag_image = Flag of Orange County, FL.png
| 1blank = First round
| 1data1 = '''12,168<br/>41.1%'''
| 1data2 = '''9,366<br/>31.6%'''
| nominee3 = [[Joy Goff-Marcil]]
| party3 = Florida Democratic Party
| nominee4 = Joel Montilla
| party4 = Republican Party of Florida
| 1data3 = 4,596<br/>15.5%
| 2blank = Runoff
| 2data3 = ''Eliminated''
| 2data4 = ''Eliminated''
| 2data1 = ''TBD''
| 2data2 = ''TBD''
| 1data4 = 3,490<br/>11.8%
| image3 = File:Joy Goff-Marcil.jpg
| image4 = File:3x4.svg
}}


==See also==
==See also==
Line 40: Line 181:


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
<references /></div>


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.orangecountyfl.net/cms/GOVERN/bcc/default.htm Orange County Board of County Commissioners] Official Website
* [http://www.orangecountyfl.net/?tabid=375 Orange County Board of County Commissioners] Official Website
* [http://www.ocfelections.com/results/06prim/ballotflow.asp Orange County Supervisor of Elections] Results for September 5, 2006, Primary
* [http://www.ocfelections.com/results/06prim/ballotflow.asp Orange County Supervisor of Elections] Results for September 5, 2006, Primary


{{Authority control}}

[[Category:County government in Florida]]
[[Category:Orange County, Florida]]
[[Category:Orange County, Florida]]

Revision as of 00:52, 17 October 2024

The Board of County Commissioners (BCC) is the governing body of Orange County, Florida. It runs in the manner of a county commission. It has six seats held by elected officials called "County Commissioners", each commissioner in charge of their own District, led by a separate mayor of Orange County.

Current Board

Mayor

The current mayor of Orange County is Jerry Demings (D).

County commissioners

  1. District 1 Nicole Wilson (D)
  2. District 2 Christine Moore (R)
  3. District 3 Mayra Uribe (D)
  4. District 4 Maribel Gomez Cordero (D)
  5. District 5 Emily Bonilla (D)
  6. District 6 Michael "Mike" Scott (D)

2006 board election

The mayor and commissioners each hold four-year terms, and are limited to two full terms each. The mayor and the commissioners of the even-numbered districts are up for election during mid-term election cycles, while the commissioners of the odd-numbered districts are up for election during presidential election cycles. Elections are non-partisan, but partisan politics do tend to play a role in the elections. The elections are contested during the September primary election. If a single candidate fails to get a simple majority of votes for their seat, then the top two candidates will face each other in a run-off election during the November general election.

An election was held on September 5, 2006. Richard Crotty took over the position of Mayor of Orange County during Mel Martinez's 1998 term (Martinez was selected as George W. Bush's secretary of housing and urban development), so he is still eligible for re-election in 2006. Both Bob Sindler and Homer Hartage were term-limited out, with Hartage running for Democratic nomination to Florida's 8th congressional district, which he lost to Charlie Stuart. Sindler, also a Democrat, was running for the 38th District of the Florida House of Representatives, but was disqualified from campaigning for the seat due to failure to adhere to resign to run rules. Not coincidentally, the man that won District 2 in the primary, Fred Brummer, a Republican, was term-limited out of the same seat Sindler considered running for, and so essentially ran as an incumbent.

Richard Crotty won the election for Mayor of Orange County, with 69.69% of the vote. Sally Baptiste was his only opponent.

Fred Brummer, previously representing the overlapping 38th District in the Florida House of Representatives, won District 2 with 53.61% of the vote. Lawrence Kolin was second, with 20.23% of the vote. Two others ran for the seat.

Linda Stewart successfully defended her seat, winning a second term for District 4 with 51.46% of the vote. Jennifer Thompson was second, with 31.45% of the vote. Two others ran for the seat.

The race for District 6 was hotly contested, and ended in a virtual dead heat in the primary, with Tiffany Moore and Bruce Antone getting 37.92% and 37.46% of the vote, respectively. E.Juan Lynum, the son of Orlando city commissioner Daisy Lynum, was third in a field of five.[1] Tiffany Moore ultimately won the election at the General Election, defeating Bruce Antone by a 53%-47% margin.[2]

2008 board elections

In District 1, where Teresa Jacobs could not run again due to term limits, S. Scott Boyd and Sharon Gravitte finished in a near dead heat, 35.31% to 33.81% respectively, in the 2008-08-26, primary election. In a runoff held during the general election on November 4, Boyd won the election with 55% of the vote.

In District 3, Mildred Fernandez successfully defended her seat in a one-on-one election between her and challenger John Kelly Harris in the general election on November 4. She received 56.75% of the vote.

In District 5, Bill Segal ran unopposed, and retained his seat

2014 board elections

In District 2, incumbent commissioner Fred Brummer of Apopka was term-limited out of office. State representative Bryan Nelson came with one percent of the vote to avoid a November runoff election as he finished first in the six-way primary with 49% of the vote. Eatonville vice-mayor finished in second place and advanced to the runoff with 18% of the vote, finishing a few hundred votes ahead of corrections officer Patricia Rumph, who finished third. Two other candidates, Prince Brown and Greg Jackson finished with a combined 15% of the vote.

In District 4, incumbent Jennifer Thompson ran for re-election with opposition from union representative Euri Cerrud and homemaker Maribel Cordero. She easily beat out both, winning outright with 65% of the vote.

In District 6, incumbent commissioner Tiffany Moore Russell was term-limited and entered the race for the Orange County clerk of courts. Businessman Derrick "Shine" Wallace and lawyer and husband of Gary Siplin, Victoria Siplin emerged from the primary with 21% and 28% of the vote respectively. They will both take part in the November runoff. Other candidates receiving votes were former Moore Russell aide Roberta Walton, Virginia Whittington, former Orange County commissioner Homer Hartage and community activist Luwanna Gelzer.

2024 board elections

District 1

2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners District 1 election

← 2020 August 20, 2024 (first round)
November 5, 2024 (runoff)
Officially nonpartisan
2028 →
 
Nominee Nicole Wilson Austin Arthur Stephen Davis
Party Democratic Republican Write-in
First round 14,062
49.98%
14,060
49.97%
15
0.05%
Runoff TBD TBD Eliminated

First round precinct results
Wilson:      50–55%      55–60%      >60%
Arthur:      50–55%      55–60%      >60%

County commissioner before election

Nicole Wilson
Democratic

Elected county commissioner

TBD

District 3

2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners District 3 election

← 2020 August 20, 2024 (first round)
November 5, 2024 (runoff)
Officially nonpartisan
2028 →
 
Nominee Mayra Uribe Linda Stewart Gus Martinez
Party Democratic Democratic Republican
First round 9,861
44.7%
7,655
34.7%
4,548
20.6%
Runoff TBD TBD Eliminated

First round precinct results
Uribe:      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%
Stewart:      30–40%      40–50%
Martinez:      30–40%

County commissioner before election

Mayra Uribe
Democratic

Elected county commissioner

TBD

District 5

2024 Orange County Board of County Commissioners District 5 election

← 2020 August 20, 2024 (first round)
November 5, 2024 (runoff)
Officially nonpartisan
2028 →
 
Nominee Kelly Semrad Steve Leary Joy Goff-Marcil
Party Democratic Republican Democratic
First round 12,168
41.1%
9,366
31.6%
4,596
15.5%
Runoff TBD TBD Eliminated

 
Nominee Joel Montilla
Party Republican
First round 3,490
11.8%
Runoff Eliminated

First round precinct results
Semrad:      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%
Leary:      30–40%      40–50%
Semrad/Leary Tie:      

County commissioner before election

Emily Bonilla
Democratic

Elected county commissioner

TBD

See also

References

  1. ^ Damron, David & Ailworth, Erin (6 September 2006). "Moore, Antone in runoff". Orlando Sentinel. Archived from the original on 8 March 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  2. ^ Ailworth, Erin (8 November 2006). "For Moore, 3rd time is a charm". Orlando Sentinel. Archived from the original on 15 July 2011. Retrieved 1 November 2012.