Mark Weprin

Mark Weprin (born June 5, 1961) represented District 23 in the New York City Council, the most ethnically diverse district in New York City,[1] which contains the Queens neighborhoods of Hollis Hills, Queens Village, Little Neck, Doulgaston, Bayside, Bellerose, Floral Park, Glen Oaks, New Hyde Park, Hollis, Hollis Park Gardens, Holliswood, Fresh Meadows, and Oakland Gardens.[2]

Mark S. Weprin
Member of the New York City Council from the 23rd District
In office
January 1, 2010  June 14, 2015
Preceded byDavid Weprin
Succeeded byBarry Grodenchik
ConstituencyQueens: 23rd District
Personal details
NationalityUnited States
Political partyDemocratic
ResidenceOakland Gardens, Queens, United States
Alma materBrooklyn Law School
ProfessionLawyer & Politician
WebsiteNYC Council: District 23

Career

Weprin holds an undergraduate degree in Communications from State University of New York at Albany, as well as a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School. Weprin was an associate at the law firm of Shea & Gould. He has also worked in the administration of former mayor Edward I. Koch and as an account executive in public relations and marketing.

New York State Assembly

Weprin was chosen to replace his father, former Speaker of the Assembly Saul Weprin, in a special election held in 1994. Weprin was Chairman of the Standing Committee on Small Business, as well as a member of the Aging, Codes, Insurance and Judiciary committees. He also served as Chairman of the Assembly Ethics and Guidance Committee, as well as Co-Chair of the Joint Senate/Assembly Legislative Ethics Commission. Prior to that, he served in the capacity of Secretary to the Majority Conference and Chairman of the Subcommittee for Outreach and Oversight of Senior Citizen Programs.

New York City Council

On November 3, 2009, Mark Weprin was elected to represent the 23rd district of the New York City Council, which encompasses a large portion of North Eastern Queens, replacing his brother David Weprin, who had chosen to run for Comptroller instead of reelection to the City Council, but lost the Democratic primary election.

In May 2015, Mark Weprin announced that he will resign from his position on the New York City Council to become a Federal and State legislative deal- breaker for the Cuomo Administration. Weprin's new title is Deputy Secretary of Legislative Affairs.[3] Weprin officially left office on June 14, 2015. His seat remained empty until the general election in November. Barry Grodenchik was elected and will serve out the remainder of Weprin's term until 2017

gollark: Yes.
gollark: I'm aware of the Landauer limit, but just make your computer be at a temperature of 0 and it is fine.
gollark: Yes, quantum computers DEFINITELY solve this.
gollark: The halting "problem" is only an issue if your computer is too slow.
gollark: Just compute faster.

References

  1. "Queens Courier". Archived from the original on 2013-07-06. Retrieved 2013-06-25.
  2. "City Council 23". Gotham Gazette. Retrieved 2010-01-01.
  3. Queens councilman will resign to work for Gov. Cuomo by Kenneth Lovett, in the New York Daily News on May 11, 2015
New York State Assembly
Preceded by
Saul Weprin
New York State Assembly, 24th District
19942009
Succeeded by
David Weprin
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.