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Nelson Wolff

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Preceded by
  
Cyndi Taylor Krier

Name
  
Nelson Wolff

Preceded by
  
Lila Cockrell

Role
  
Politician

Constituency
  
8th District

Party
  
Democratic Party

Nationality
  
American


Nelson Wolff wwwclecomimagesimagefilesSANWAT11CKWolffjpg

Spouse(s)
  
Melinda Wolff (1961-1988) Tracy Hoag (1989-Present)

Children
  
Kevin Lyn Marie Scott Matthew

Succeeded by
  
William E. "Bill" Thornton

Books
  
Transforming San Antonio, Baseball For Real Men, Nelson Wolff's Challenge of Change

Education
  
St. Mary's University, Texas, Saint Mary's University

Nelson wolff wants toll roads his words his plan


Nelson William Wolff (born 27 October 1940) is a Democratic politician from San Antonio, Texas. He represented Bexar County in the Texas House of Representatives from 1971 to 1973 and then the Texas Senate from 1973 to 1975. He served on the San Antonio City Council as the representative of District 8 and then as mayor of San Antonio from 1991 to 1995 and has been since 2001 the Bexar County Judge.

Contents

Wolff was initially appointed to this current position in 2001 to succeed Cyndi Taylor Krier, a Republican, who resigned to accept an appointment from then Governor Rick Perry as a regent of the University of Texas System. Wolff has since been elected to this position three times. In January 2012, he announced that he would seek a fourth full term in 2014. He defeated in the general election the Republican candidate, Carlton L. Soules, a former member of the San Antonio City Council from the North Side. Known as a "budget hawk" while on the council, Soules since entered into an alliance with the unsuccessful 2017 San Antonio mayoral candidate Manuel Medina, the chairman of the Bexar County Democratic Party organization. The two had opposed a defunct a downtown street car project, which they considered a "boondoggle."

Nelson Wolff Nelson Wolff Wikipedia

UTSA Alumni Association - Nelson Wolff


Biography

Nelson Wolff Nelson Wolff strives to touch immortality San Antonio ExpressNews

Wolff is only the second person to serve as both San Antonio mayor and county judge of Bexar County. (The first was Bryan Callaghan, Jr., who became mayor in 1885 and county judge in 1892.)

Nelson Wolff Nelson Wolff

Since 1989, Wolff has been married to his second spouse, the former Tracy Hoag. He has four children from the first marriage to Melinda Wolf: Kevin Alan, Lyn Marie, Scott, and Matthew. He has two stepchildren through the second marriage. His oldest son from his first marriage, Kevin Wolff(born c. 1965), a Republican, serves with his father on the Bexar County Commissioners' Court as the Precinct 3 commissioner. The two disagreed over a downtown streetcar plan favored by the father and adamantly opposed by the son. They agreed on a proposal to build a rail system with the use of eighteen miles of existing Union Pacific track from downtown San Antonio to Leon Springs.

Nelson Wolff SB4 Archives Rivard Report

Wolff is working with the commissioners court to restore the former Hot Wells hotel, spa, and bathhouses, which flourished in the first two decades of the 20th century, along the San Antonio River in the southside of San Antonio. In October 2015, the commissioners authorized $4 million to begin the partial restoration of the facility, which once attracted celebrities from throughout the nation.

Nelson Wolff County Mulls Salary Increases Approves Overtime

Wolff is interested in baseball, poker, cigars, and is a lifelong reader with an extensive collection of books. With his late father and two brothers, he owned several businesses, most notably Sun Harvest Farms grocery stores and Green Fields Market, a health foods and organic grocery store in San Antonio, which Wolff sold in 2011. He is a graduate of St. Mary's University and St. Mary's University School of Law, both in San Antonio.

Wolff has penned four books. In Challenge of Change, he describes his experience in the Texas legislature and his participation in the 1974 Constitutional Convention, of which he was instrumental in bringing about. In Baseball for Real Men, Wolff reflects on life and his love of the game. Mayor is a memoir of San Antonio politics focusing on his time in City Hall. In Transforming San Antonio (Trinity University Press) Wolff gives an insider's view on signature economic-development projects with which he was involved: the AT&T Center, a Toyota factory, the PGA Village, and the extension of the San Antonio River Walk.

In 2017, Wolff rose to defend his friend Ricardo Romo, who after eighteen years of service resigned as president of the University of Texas at San Antonio amid reports that Romo had inappropriately hugged and embraced women on campus who he greeted. Wolff claims that the University of Texas System mishandled the investigation into Romo's conduct. Wolff said that he too often embraces men and women in the workplace: "It's a tradition in the Hispanic community that you do that. ... It's just a tradition, one [in which] I participate."

The Nelson W. Wolff Municipal Stadium, home field of the San Antonio Missions located off U.S. Highway 90 near the intersection with State Highway 151, is named in his honor.

References

Nelson Wolff Wikipedia