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词条 Bob Scott (mayor)
释义

  1. Early years

  2. Business career

  3. Political career

  4. Footnotes

{{Infobox politician
|name = Bob Scott
|image =
|office = 59th Mayor of Sioux City, Iowa
|term_start = 1 January 1990
|term_end = 1 January 1998
|predecessor = Kenneth Lawson
|successor = Criag Berenstein
|office1 = 64th Mayor of Sioux City, Iowa
|term_start1 = 1 January 2012
|term_end1 = 1 January 2020
|predecessor1 = Mike Hobart
|birthname = Robert Edward Scott
|birth_date = {{birth date and age|1947|5|11}}
|occupation = Businessman
|children = 1 daughter, 3 sons
|spouse = Karen Scott
|}}Robert Edward "Bob" Scott (born May 11, 1947) is an American politician from the state of Iowa. Scott is the longest-serving mayor of Sioux City, Iowa, having been elected to four non-consecutive terms as the city's top elected official.[1]

Early years

Robert Edward Scott, commonly known as "Bob," was born May 10, 1951 in Sioux City, Iowa. Graduated From East High School in 1969.

Business career

Scott is the owner of the R.E. Scott Company, a tax preparation service established in 1982, as well as a commercial insurance agency, Business Insurors of Iowa.[2] Scott is also the majority owner of the Sioux City Bandits,[3] a team in the Champions Indoor Football (CIF) league.

Political career

Scott was first elected to the Sioux City city council in November 1986, leading a field of six candidates in the field for three non-partisan seats with a tally of just over 8,400 votes.[4] He was sworn in for the four-year term along with fellow newcomers Stanley W. Evans and Joanne Grueskin to the five member council on December 29 of that year, with the term scheduled to begin on the first of the year.[5] Scott quickly emerged as a fiscal conservative, casting the lone dissenting vote against the city's $46.5 million operating budget for fiscal year 1986-87, declaring that the council had failed its responsibility to make significant spending cuts.[6]

In March 1989 Scott drew fire along with fellow city council members Grueskin and Evans when they were sued by the Iowa Freedom of Information Council and the Greater Sioux City Press club for allegedly having skirted Iowa's open meeting law by having met with a candidate for interim city manager in October 1986 in South Sioux City, Nebraska.[7] Iowa law prohibited gatherings of the city council without the posting of a meeting announcement and publication of a meeting agenda. In attempting to dodge these provisions by secretly meeting with retired Midwest Energy Company executive Frank Griffith across the river in Nebraska, the trio (along with a fourth council member, the late Cornelius "Connie" Bodine) had nevertheless run afoul of Iowa's restrictive open meeting requirements, the lawsuit charged.[7] Scott and his colleagues were cleared of the charge in April 1989 when Judge Richard J. Vipond ruled that the conclave did not constitute a "meeting" according to Iowa code; the lawsuit was therefore dismissed with prejudice.[8]

In September 1989, Scott announced his decision to run for a second four-year term on the Sioux City city council, indicating a desire to expand the number of industrial jobs in the community and pledging to hold the line on city utility rates and property taxes.[2]

Footnotes

1. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.kwwl.com/story/30882377/2016/01/Monday/sioux-city-appoints-longest-serving-mayor-and-other-council-members|title=Scott sworn in as Sioux City's longest-serving mayor|access-date=2018-09-14|language=en}}
2. ^Bob Gunsolley, [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/23755488/bob_scott_seeks_reelection_to_city/ "Scott Seeks Re-Election to City Council,"] Sioux City Journal, Sept. 2, 1989, pg. A3.
3. ^Lynn Zerxchling, [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/23749733/two_mayors_one_vote_familiar_names/ "Two Mayors, One Vote: Familiar Names Padgett, Scott Bid to Return as Sioux City Mayor,"] Sioux City Journal, Nov. 5, 2011, pg. 1.
4. ^[https://www.newspapers.com/clip/23749903/sioux_city_council_vote_made_official/ "City Council Election Vote Made Official,"] Sioux City Journal, Nov. 13, 1986, Metro pg. 1.
5. ^"The Final Days," Sioux City Journal, Dec. 29, 1985, pg. B7.
6. ^Bob Gunsolley, [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/23750226/sioux_city_council_approves_budget_for/ "Council Approves Budget,"] Sioux City Journal, April 22, 1986, pg. 22.
7. ^Kathy Hoeschen Massey, [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/23754830/sioux_city_council_defends_nebraska/ "Council Defends Nebraska Meeting,"] Sioux City Journal, vol. 125, no. 227 (March 30, 1989), pg. 1.
8. ^Kathy Hoeschen Massey, [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/23755164/court_rules_sioux_city_council_didnt/ "Court Rules Council Didn't Violate Law,"] Sioux City Journal, vol. 125, no. 239 (April 11, 1989), pg. 1.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Scott, Bob}}

4 : 1947 births|Living people|Politicians from Sioux City, Iowa|Mayors of places in Iowa

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