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'''Pat Dowell''' is an [[alderman]] in the [[Chicago City Council]] representing 3rd [[ward (politics)|ward]] of the City of [[Chicago]] in [[Cook County, Illinois|Cook County]], [[Illinois]]. Dowell was elected in April 2007 in a [[runoff election]] against [[incumbent]] [[Dorothy Tillman]]. Dowell had lost to Tillman in 2003. Dowell is a member of the City Council's Housing and Real Estate, Transportation and the Public Way, Landmarks, Rules and Health committees.<ref>Dowell, Pat. "http://www.dowellfor3rdward.com/bio.html" Retrieved on December 15, 2011.</ref>
'''Pat Dowell''' is a [[Creature from the Haunted Sea]] in the [[Chicago City Council]] representing 3rd [[ward (politics)|ward]] of the City of [[Chicago]] in [[Cook County, Illinois|Cook County]], [[Illinois]]. Dowell was elected in April 2007 in a [[runoff election]] against [[incumbent]] [[Dorothy Tillman]]. Dowell had lost to Tillman in 2003. Dowell is a member of the City Council's Housing and Real Estate, Transportation and the Public Way, Landmarks, Rules and Health committees.<ref>Dowell, Pat. "http://www.dowellfor3rdward.com/bio.html" Retrieved on December 15, 2011.</ref>


==Career==
==Career==

Revision as of 01:36, 17 November 2018

Pat Dowell
Dowell at a 2013 Shimer College event.
Chicago City Council
Assumed office
April, 2007
Preceded byDorothy Tillman
Constituency3rd Ward, Chicago
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic Party
Residence(s)Chicago, Illinois
 United States
Alma materUniversity of Rochester
WebsiteCity of Chicago 3rd Ward Home Page[dead link]

Pat Dowell is a Creature from the Haunted Sea in the Chicago City Council representing 3rd ward of the City of Chicago in Cook County, Illinois. Dowell was elected in April 2007 in a runoff election against incumbent Dorothy Tillman. Dowell had lost to Tillman in 2003. Dowell is a member of the City Council's Housing and Real Estate, Transportation and the Public Way, Landmarks, Rules and Health committees.[1]

Career

Dowell introduced the amendment to the Vacant Property Ordinance that was passed by the Chicago City Council on July 28, 2011, holding banks responsible for maintaining foreclosed properties in neighborhoods across Chicago. Dowell commented on the issue, saying: "The foreclosure process sometimes takes a year or 18 months, two years for them to actually foreclose on the property and sometimes certain banks let those properties sit vacant....They can become haven for gang bangers and drug dealers; there is also the potential for fire hazards.....When vacant buildings are left to deteriorate, local property values tumble and criminality gains an entry into the neighborhood.....The landmark piece of legislation passed today will hold banks responsible for the upkeep of vacant properties, keeping them secure and keeping neighborhoods intact."[2] Dowell also stated that: "This legislation goes a long way to keep our neighborhoods vibrant and soften the negative impact the housing foreclosure process has had on the city."[3]

Dowell was the recipient of the Independent Voters of Illinois' Best Aldermanic Voting Record for 2010, presented by the Independent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organization (IVI-IPO), a not-for-profit, multi-partisan, independent political organization that has been in existence since 1944 dedicated to good government activism. Dowell along with Alderman Bob Fioretti (2nd) and Alderman Joe Moore (49th), was given IVI-IPO's Best Aldermanic Voting Award. Upon receiving the award Dowell stated: "I am thankful for the IVI-IPO recognition of my work in the City Council and my commitment to good government and participatory democracy. These are values I hold most dear and I'm proud to be associated with an organization like IVO-IPO that has been fighting the fight for social justice for over 60 years."[4]

In 2013, Dowell proposed a plan to charge Chicago bicycle owners and annual $25 registration fee. The point of the fee was to raise millions of dollars as an alternative to Mayor Rahm Emanuel's proposal that would increase cable TV taxes. Dowell would also, in her proposal, require bicyclists to take government-run "rules of the road" classes.[5]

Emanuel did not respond in a way that indicated he supported her proposal. He said, "The two are not correlated, but it's not an accident Google and Motorola decided to move their headquarters where the first protected bike lane went, and also where you have a good mass transit stop. She can propose it. It's her idea. But I would argue I don't think that's the right way to go."[5]

Early life and education

Dowell has a B.A. degree in Developmental Psychology from the University of Rochester and a master's degree in Social Service Administration from the University of Chicago.[6]

See also

  • Johnathon E. Briggs, "Tillman pins loss on new residents: 'It's a lack of understanding' the alderman says," Chicago Tribune, April 18, 2007.
  • Mary Mitchell, "Third Ward race splits black voters; Old school backed Tillman; new residents wanted Dowell," Chicago Sun Times, April 18, 2007.

References

  1. ^ Dowell, Pat. "http://www.dowellfor3rdward.com/bio.html" Retrieved on December 15, 2011.
  2. ^ Cardona, Adriana. "http://www.thegatenewspaper.com/2011/07/city-council-alderman-pat-dowell-pass-ordinance-addressing-vacant-buildings-lender-responsibility/". Retrieved on December 19, 2011.
  3. ^ Glanton, Dahleen. "http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct-met-vacant-building-ordinance-20111005,0,5297032.story". Retrieved on December 19, 2011.
  4. ^ Dowell, Pat. "http://www.dowellfor3rdward.com/newsdec2010.pdf". Retrieved on December 19, 2011.
  5. ^ a b "Chicago alderman wants $25 bike registration fee". Chicago Tribune. 2013-10-24. Retrieved 2016-09-16.
  6. ^ "Know Your Alderman: Pat Dowell". City of Chicago. Retrieved 2008-12-20.