Age: 68
Occupation: New York State Assembly Member, (District 52)
Education: Iona College (B.A. Speech Pathology), Gallaudet University (M.A. Deaf Education), Fordham University School of Law (J.D.)
Jo Anne Simon is a State Assembly Member who has represented the 52nd District (northwest Brooklyn) since 2015. In the Assembly, Simon has sponsored legislation on gun control and campaign finance regulation; and served as chair of the Committee on Ethics and Guidance, the Subcommittee on Workplace Safety, and the Legislative Ethics Commission. Previously, she was a district leader and the president of the Boerum Hill neighborhood association. Before entering politics, Simon founded a disability civil rights law firm in Downtown Brooklyn. Citizens Union preferred her in her first campaign for the Assembly.
Simon’s foremost campaign priorities are reforming the roles of the Borough President in land use review procedures and community board appointments, and using the office’s capital funds to improve and augment eco-friendly transportation infrastructure. She has spoken about the need to “reset” the city’s land use paradigm, which she says is “fundamentally unfair to communit[ies]” and “developer-driver,” in order to build more affordable housing. As a replacement for ULURP, she envisions a long term planning process driven by local community boards and diverse leadership. Additionally, Simon wants to make Brooklyn’s 30 miles of waterfront environmentally resilient.
Simon has a long record in advocating for voting rights, government and police transparency (she was a co-sponsor of the repeal of section 50-a, which had shielded police records from public scrutiny), and campaign finance reform. She was also a Citizens Union member in the early 2000s. If elected, she would be the first ever female Brooklyn Borough President.
Simon has an impressive track record as an Assembly Member, civil rights attorney and community activist. She has a strong grasp of the powers of the office, and would make an excellent Borough President for Brooklyn, which is why Citizens Union prefers her in this race.