King County Executive

King County Executive

Logo of the King County Government
Incumbent
Dow Constantine

since November 24, 2009
Appointer Electorate
Metropolitan King County Council (unexpired terms)
Term length 4 years
Inaugural holder John Spellman
Formation 5 November 1968 (charter approved)
1 May 1969 (charter took effect)
Salary $181,227 (2008)
Website King County Executive

The King County Executive is the highest elected official representing the government of King County, Washington, USA. The post was established with the implementation of the Home Rule Charter for King County on November 5, 1968.[1] Previously the powers of the County Executive were vested in a three-member County Commission, which with the implementation of the Home Rule Charter in 1969 ceased to exist. The County Executive is elected every four years and the post is nonpartisan.

The first county executive was John Spellman, from 1969 to 1981. The current Executive is Dow Constantine, elected to replace Ron Sims since he resigned to become Deputy Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the Obama administration on May 8, 2009.

List of Executives

Order King County Executive Took office Left office Terms
1 John Spellman March, 1969 January, 1981[lower-alpha 1] 3+
2 Ron Dunlap January 14, 1981[lower-alpha 2] November 18, 1981 <1
3 Randy Revelle November 18, 1981 January 1, 1986 1
4 Tim Hill January 1, 1986 January 4, 1994 2
5 Gary Locke January 4, 1994 January 15, 1997[lower-alpha 1] <1
6 Ron Sims January 15, 1997[lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3] May 8, 2009[lower-alpha 4] 2+
7 Kurt Triplett May 8, 2009[lower-alpha 2] November 24, 2009 <1
8 Dow Constantine November 24, 2009 Incumbent 2

Notes

  1. 1 2 Resigned after being elected Governor
  2. 1 2 3 Appointed to serve out remainder of term
  3. Subsequently elected to full four-year term
  4. Resigned to serve as United States Deputy Secretary of Housing and Urban Development

References

  1. HistoryLink Essay: King County voters approve first Home Rule Charter on November 5, 1968

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.