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To know Marion Barry, Jr., is to understand his
stalwart assertion to public
service. Marion Barry, Jr., has
dedicated 40 years of his life to
public service living by the motto
of “always fighting for the people”.
He is one of America’s most
accomplished public officials living
today. He is directly responsible
for the success of more African
American Millionaires than any other
person in the country. He served an
unprecedented 16 years as Mayor of
the District of Columbia taking the
once sleepy southern migration hub
to a major metropolitan city.
Fighting for justice, freedom,
equality and jobs has always been at
the forefront for Mr. Barry. It
continues to be as significant
today, as a District of Columbia
City Councilmember from Ward 8, than
it was as his tenure as Mayor.
In 1971,
Barry was elected to serve on
Washington, DC’s first school
board. Upon Congress granting the
District of Columbia the right to
hold its own local elections, Barry
won a seat on the DC City Council in
1974, becoming the highest vote
getter, and was named chairman of
the Finance Committee. Under his
leadership as chair, he “helped put
the city’s finances in order; pushed
the executive to present accurate
figures and budgets; offered
trailblazing property tax
legislation; established an
equitable income tax system; and cut
taxes for senior citizens.” While
serving as a member of the Council,
Mr. Barry spearheaded the movement
to require that all contracts
considered by the District
government for services, supplies
and development include a mandatory
35% participation for minority owned
companies. Barry was the catalyst
for the expansion of the city’s
Black middle class…..he insisted
that professional positions in the
District government be filled by
minorities and that the city’s
minority business community
participate in District government
contracts. His support of awarding
the district’s cable franchise to
the team led by Robert Johnson’s
Black Entertainment Television
enabled BET to grow and prosper.
Barry was reelected to the City
Council in 1976.
After
building a strong coalition of
supporters amongst blacks, senior
citizens, liberal whites, women,
members of the gay community, arts
and cultural community…..Barry
became the second Mayor ever elected
in DC in the year of 1978 and served
as Mayor for three terms until 1990.
His campaign for mayor pulled
together the city as never
before…..Barry supports formed a
coalition that changed the landscape
of elective politics in the
District. He achieved a stunning
come from behind victory, defeating
incumbent Mayor Walter Washington
and Council Chairman Sterling
Tucker, to become the city’s second
elected mayor. His first
administration was a model of
municipal governance. He attracted
some of the best minds in the
country to work in city
administration, transportation,
public works, planning, health care,
housing, finance and economic
development. In his first term as
Mayor, Barry directed all of his
Department heads to comply fully
with the 35% goal of minority
participation. As a result of his
leadership, DC contracts increased
from a mere 3% to 47%. Thus millions
of dollars have been awarded to
qualified African American and
Latino businesses. This percentage
was unmatched by anyone else in the
country. In a similar way, his
support of the purchase of WOL-Radio
by the team led by Dewey and Cathy
Hughes enabled Radio One to grow and
prosper. Don Peebles, developer and
owner of hotels across the country,
got his start under the tutelage of
Mayor Marion Barry. While these
business giants have a reach that
can be measured nationally and a
reputation recognized
internationally, Barry enabled a
score of local minority companies to
flourish as well….Chartered Health,
Urban Systems, Inc., Jones & Artist,
DH Lloyd & Associates, Ft. Myers
Construction, Faith Construction and
countless others. He was and still
is, an advocate for economic
inclusion…..inclusion for African
American…inclusion for
women…inclusion for Hispanics, Asian
and Pacific Islanders.
Barry
instructed Department heads to cut
through red tape. He wooed
developers. As a result, his
administration is principally
responsible for the revitalization
for the entire downtown corridor.
Along with the Pennsylvania Avenue
Development Corporation, where he
served on the board of directors,
Barry led the efforts to develop
Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Barry was
principally responsible for the
revitalization of downtown, the
development of the east end, the
rebuilding of the west end and the
resurgence of the “U” Street
corridor with the construction of
the Reeves Center at 14th
and U Street, N.W., as the anchor as
well as the epicenter of the riots
following the assassination of Dr.
Martin Luther, King, Jr. Because of
his vision for downtown, commitment
to hard work, dedication of cutting
through the bureaucracy and
attracting outstanding developers to
reshape the nation’s capital are
reason that have made Washington,
D.C., the dynamic and diverse place
it is today.
Under the
direction of Barry, despite
Washington being 16th in
population, it became third in the
amount of downtown office space
right behind New York and Chicago.
Barry’s
administrations shall be remembered
for balancing the budget, overseeing
the construction boom downtown and
providing thousands of jobs to
District residents.
Perhaps
Barry’s most memorable legacy to DC
residents was his creation of the
District Youth’s Employment Act of
1979 guaranteeing a summer job to
every young person who resided in
the District of Columbia regardless
of their economic status. As a
result, more than 100,000 young
people have received summer
employment through the program.
Today, in 2008, Barry cannot walk
the streets or enter an
establishment without someone
remembering that they got their
first summer job from Marion Barry.
In 1992,
Barry returned to DC politics by
winning a seat on the City Council
and made history in 1994 by winning
a landslide victory returning him to
the Mayoral seat.
Barry
retired from politics in 1998 and
aborted a run for City Council in
2002. However, Barry could not
refuse the numerous and consistent
pleas from Ward 8 residents to
reenter politics. He decided to run
for the Ward 8 City Council seat and
won with 96% of the vote in November
2004. The election as Councilmember,
Barry is determined to make Ward 8
the best ward in the city. Now in
2008, Barry plans his 10th
career political campaign as he runs
for re-election to the Ward 8 seat.
Today Barry continues to serve this
ward, this city and his country….the
legacy of building is a lasting
one...and it will serve to motivate
future generations to a lifetime of
public service.
Marion Barry, Jr., was born on March 6, 1936,
to Marion Barry, Sr., a
sharecropper, and Mattie Barry in
Itta Bena, Mississippi. At the age
of eight years old Barry, his mother
and his sister moved to Memphis,
Tennessee on the way to Chicago,
Illinois.
In
Memphis, Barry attended Booker T.
Washington High School where he was
not only an “A” student through most
of his high school years, but also a
skilled football and basketball
player. Barry graduated in 1954.
He then entered Le Moyne College, a
small commuter HBCU (Historically
Black Colleges and Universities), on
scholarship where he earned a
bachelor’s degree. He furthered his
education at Fisk University in
Nashville, Tennessee earning a
master’s degree on a full
scholarship. Barry completed three
years of the doctoral program in
chemistry at the University of
Tennessee before abandoning it to
become immersed in the civil rights
movement full-time. In 1960 the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC) was founded and Mr.
Barry became the first chairman of
SNCC and moved to Washington, D.C.,
in 1965 and has been a full-time
resident of the city ever since. He
has never left the nation’s capitol.
Barry has one son, Marion
Christopher Barry, who resides in
Washington, D.C.
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