Elisa Chan

Elisa Chan (Chinese: 戰琬瑜; pinyin: Zhàn Wǎnyú) is a Taiwanese-American politician and businesswoman who has served as a member for District 9 of the San Antonio City Council in San Antonio, Texas.

Personal and business life

She migrated from Taiwan to the United States in 1988, and in 1992 Chan and her husband, Clifford Hew, co-founded Unintech Consulting Engineers, Inc. (UNINTECH), a structural and civil engineering design and consulting firm. She became a citizen of the United States in 1999.

Chan attended the Beijing University of Technology, where she received her B.S. in Computer Software Engineering in 1987, and later received her Master's degree in computer science at the University of Texas at San Antonio in 1993.

Political life

In May 2009, Chan was elected to the San Antonio City Council, becoming the first Asian-American and first immigrant member of the council.

In 2013, Chan received criticism for comments made during a secretly-recorded conversation between herself and a colleague in which she called bisexuality "disgusting"; this occurred four months prior to the city council debated a proposed human rights ordinance which would protect lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender residents from discrimination. After defending her comments on the basis of freedom of speech, she voted against the ordinance, although the ordinance passed 8-3.[1]

In October 2013, Chan announced her resignation from the city council effective October 18. She filed as a candidate against Tea Party Republican Donna Campbell for the March 2014 primary election to represent Texas Senate district 25.[2]

gollark: No, the ads could just say "allow access from any domain".
gollark: LocalStorage and IndexedDB would be replaced with WebSQL or something, which is just an interface to SQLite.
gollark: It'll send your cookies with it and stuff, so if you could see the response it would be a horrible security problem.
gollark: Yes. The situation now is that browsers will happily send requests from one origin to another, but only if it's a GET or POST request, not allow custom headers with it, and, critically, do bizarre insane stuff to avoid letting code see the *response*.
gollark: Oh, and unify ServiceWorker and WebWorker and SharedWorker and whatever into some sort of nicer "background task" API.

References

  1. Baugh, Josh (September 5, 2013). "S.A. council passes nonbias ordinance". San Antonio Express-News.
  2. Moravec, Eva Ruth (October 7, 2013). "Elisa Chan resigns from council effective Oct. 18". San Antonio Express-News.
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