Preceded by Linda Carlisle Children 2 Preceded by Margaret Kluttz Name Susan Kluttz | Succeeded by Paul Woodson Spouse(s) William | |
![]() | ||
Alma mater Mt. Vernon Junior College;BA, UNC-Greensboro Education University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Mount Vernon College for Women |
Susan Wear Kluttz is the Secretary of the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources and a former longest serving mayor of Salisbury, North Carolina.
Contents
Early life and education
Kluttz is a graduate of Boyden High School (now Salisbury High School) and Mt. Vernon Junior College in Washington, D.C.. She graduated with a Bachelor's degree in English from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Career
She has worked in Rowan County at the Waterworks Visual Arts Center and YMCA.
Prior to becoming mayor of Salisbury, Kluttz served as an executive assistant to the Superintendent of the Rowan-Salisbury School System. Her father, John Wear, was a former mayor and encouraged her to run after the then-mayor, Margaret Kluttz (no direct relation), did not seek re-election in 1997. Susan Kluttz won the most votes in the election and served as the city's mayor until 2011, becoming the city's longest serving mayor.
After Pat McCrory, a Republican was elected Governor of North Carolina in 2012, he named Kluttz, a Democrat, to be Secretary of Natural and Cultural Resources. This position oversees the State Library of North Carolina, the North Carolina Museum of History, the North Carolina Symphony and other cultural and nature-related agencies. She took office on January 5, 2013.
Personal life
She currently lives in North Carolina with her husband William C. Kluttz, Jr., a District Court judge. They have two children.
She is also an active member of the St. Luke's Episcopal Church and is a part of Western North Carolina Rail Coalition committee.
Honors
She received a Citizen of the Year award in 2002 from the Salisbury Civitan club and a year later was awarded Woman of the Year award from the Lion's Club. In 2004 she received the Salisbury-Rowan Ministerial Association Community Spirit award and was awarded the Elizabeth Duncan Koontz Humanitarian Award the same year.
Catawba College established a scholarship in her name for students studying environmental science in 2007.