Ann Kitchen

Ann Elizabeth Kitchen is the District 5 City Council member for Austin, Texas.

Ann Kitchen
Member of Austin City Council
for the 5th District
Assumed office
January 6, 2015
Preceded byOffice established
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the 48th district
In office
January 9, 2001  January 14, 2003
Preceded bySherri Greenberg
Succeeded byTodd Baxter
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Mark Yznaga

Personal life

Kitchen is married to Mark Yznaga, a lobbyist with the City of Austin.[1] Prior to her election to the State Legislature, Kitchen was an attorney,[2] and later managed the health care regulatory group of Price Waterhouse Coopers.

Political career

Kitchen also served as a policy adviser to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission. She began her career in the Texas Attorney General's consumer protection division.[3]

Texas House of Representatives

Ann Kitchen was elected to the Texas State House of Representatives, District 48, in the election of 2000.[4] She was defeated for reelection in 2002 by Republican Todd Baxter following the 2000 redistricting in Texas.[5]

In the legislature, she is best remembered for her contributions to House Bill 1156, which expanded women's access to health care, and Senate Bill 11, the Medical Records Privacy Act.[6]

After leaving the legislature, Ann Kitchen was Executive Director of the Indigent Care Collaboration (ICC) a regional collaboration of public and private hospitals, clinics, MHMR, public health departments, university medical departments, and medical society responsible for providing care for uninsured individuals.[7]

Austin City Council

Ann Kitchen is currently Vice Chair of the City of Austin Charter Revision Committee and is City Councilmember for District 5.[8] Kitchen was elected to Austin City Council District 5 on November 4, 2014. She garnered 54% of the vote in a field of seven candidates and avoided a runoff election. She was sworn in on January 6, 2015.[9] [10]

In 2015, Kitchen proposed regulations on ridesharing companies such as Uber and Lyft. These regulations were presented as necessary for public safety, such as a requirement for fingerprinting rideshare drivers. Opponents, noting that Kitchen received campaign contributions from taxi companies,[11] claimed that the gross receipts tax, rules on fares, and other regulations included in the proposal threatened to drive those companies out of Austin.

On May 9, Kitchen's proposed regulations went into effect after a ballot proposition to alter them, backed by an $8 million Uber/Lyft-funded PAC,[12] was defeated in a special election. In response, Uber and Lyft ceased services in Austin.

In May 2017, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 100, which overruled local ride-share regulations and removed the fingerprint-screening requirement. The non-profit Texans for Public Justice reports that Uber and Lyft spent up to $2.3 million in support of the statewide legislation.[13]

2018 Re-Election

In 2018, Ann Kitchen was elected to her second term in City Council after running unopposed.[14]

Recall Efforts

In January 2016, a recall petition against Kitchen was circulated and submitted to the City Clerk in February 2016 by the Austin4All PAC. Austin4All was criticized by city leaders[15] and many Austinites for its purported lack of transparency and multiple ethics complaints were filed against the PAC, claiming Austin4All violated state election law by knowingly accepting political contributions and making political expenditure over $500 without filing a campaign treasurer appointment. Groups supporting Councilwoman Kitchen were formed as well in order to oppose Austin4All's petition.

In February 2016, Austin4All submitted 5,289 signatures to the city clerk's office. City Clerk Jannette Goodall rejected the recall petition shortly after, citing the group's failure to sign petition sheets in the presence of a notary.[16]

In October 2019, Kitchen was one of several Austin City Council members, along with Mayor Steve Adler, faced a recall effort due to the City’s handling of homelessness camping regulations. As of May 2020, the recall effort was still active but had not successfully gained the number of signatures required to put the recall on a ballot.

gollark: Maybe it would be easier to just run it a lot, and calculate the time complexity.
gollark: I can't actually understand this.
gollark: Strassen, then?
gollark: I assumed that the only entry not doing that (or calling out to external stuff which did ???) was mine, which did an equally inefficient algorithm in a weird recursive way.
gollark: Really? Interesting.

References

  1. Smith, Amy (November 12, 1999). "Naked City". Austin Chronicle.
  2. "Attorney Directory". Texas State Bar. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  3. "Freshman Class Act". Austin Chronicle.
  4. "Freshman Class Act". Austin Chronicle.
  5. Smith, Amy, "Dream on, Dream Team",Austin Chronicle, Nov 8, 2002
  6. "Freshman Class Act". Austin Chronicle.
  7. "Board Member". Liveable City. Archived from the original on 21 April 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  8. "2012 Charter Revision Final Report". austin4georep. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  9. "Ann Kitchen". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  10. Lim, Andra (2014-11-05). "Delia Garza, Ann Kitchen win Council seats; other races head to runoff". Austin American-Statesman.
  11. "Street Fight: Taxi Companies Poured Cash into Council Member's Campaign as Uber and Lyft Lobbied and Rallied Public Support". Austin Inno. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  12. "Austin's Uber War Is the Dumbest One Yet". CityLab. Retrieved 2019-09-21.
  13. "40 Ride-Hail Lobbyists Land Up to $2.3 Million" (PDF). Texans for Public Justice. Retrieved 2019-09-21.
  14. "Ann Kitchen to serve second term as District 5 Austin City Council member". KVUE. Retrieved 2019-02-12.
  15. "Austin4All Finally Speaks". Austin Monitor. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  16. "City Clerk Tosses Petition to Oust Ann Kitchen". Fox 7 Austin. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
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