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Tim Greimel

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American politician from Michigan
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Tim Greimel
Member of the Michigan House of Representatives
from the 29th district
In office
March 6, 2012 – January 1, 2019
Preceded byTim Melton
Succeeded byBrenda Carter
Minority Leader of the Michigan House of Representatives
In office
January 9, 2013 – January 1, 2017
Preceded byRichard Hammel
Succeeded bySam Singh
Mayor of Pontiac, Michigan
Assumed office
November 2021
Preceded byDeirdre Holloway Waterman
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic
Alma mater University of Michigan
WebsiteRep. Tim Greimel

Tim Greimel is an American politician who serves as Mayor of Pontiac, Michigan, and previously as a member of the Michigan House of Representatives, to which he was elected in a special election in 2012 following the resignation of Tim Melton. After Greimel's election to a full term in 2012, his colleagues elected him to serve as the House's minority leader.[1] [2]

In October 2017, Greimel announced his candidacy for the United States House of Representatives to represent Michigan's 11th congressional district but in the Democratic primary on August 7, 2018, he lost to Haley Stevens.[3]

In November 2021, Greimel was elected Mayor of Pontiac, Michigan, with 61.66% of the vote.[4] [5] [6]

Education and background

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Tim Greimel attended the University of Michigan, from which he received his bachelor's degree in economics and political science, a master's degree in public policy, and juris doctor degree.[7] [8] Greimel was admitted into the State Bar Association of Michigan on November 15, 2000.[9] He has a focus in labor and employment law, and civil rights law.[8]

Career

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In May 2005, Greimel was elected to serve on the Rochester Community School District Board of Education. He received 7,817 votes, the second-largest number of votes behind Michelle J. Shepherd, who received 7,989 votes.[10] During his time on the school board, Greimel briefly served as president of the board.[11] In August 2008, and again in 2010, Greimel was elected as County Commissioner of the 11th district.[12] [13] [clarification needed ] At the end of 2011, Greimel won a special election for District 29 in the Michigan House of Representatives.[14] Following the special election, Greimel won the election for a full term in 2012. Greimel served as the Democratic Leader for the House until 2018, when he lost the Democratic primary to Haley Stevens by 4,636 votes.[11]

In 2021, Greimel ran for mayor of Pontiac. Greimel delivered his first state of the city address for Pontiac on September 29, 2022.[15]

Views

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Education

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According to Ballotpedia, during his time in the legislature, Greimel supported legislation to expand and support technical careers education.[16] One of Greimel's main campaign promises was to improve Pontiac Public Schools by hiring liaisons-and-recreation coordinators, and working with Pontiac School District, Oakland Intermediate School District, local charter schools, and non-profits to improve recreation, after school activities, and early education, and increase technical education.[17]

Infrastructure

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Most of Greimel's views and work about infrastructure has been in roads. Greimel introduced legislation to refund Michigan drivers with a tax credit for car damage caused by damaged roads.[16] According to his campaign website, Greimel planned to spend more money on Pontiac's roads, specifically the Woodward Avenue loop, to improve access to downtown.[18] His campaign also promised to increase access to Wi-Fi and spend money on water-and-sewer repairs. During his time in the state legislature, Greimel called on former Governor Rick Snyder to resign after the Flint water crisis.[16]

Strengthening neighborhoods

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Greimel believed enforcing anti-blight policies and code enforcement for the appearance of buildings would help strengthen Pontiac's neighborhoods. He also planned on implementing adopt-a-highway and adopt-a-block programs, and to re-establish Community Development Block Grants.[19]

Job expansion and economic opportunity

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Greimel believed in making downtown a one-stop shop, and make Pontiac an easier-and-friendlier place to do business. This included consistent and accessible permits, moving the Farmer's Market downtown, facilitating free entrepreneurship classes, implementing more Pontiac-specific policies, and promoting women-and-minority-owned businesses.[16] Greimel acted on this and developed a Downtown Redevelopment Plan.[20]

Downtown redevelopment plan

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During his mayoralty, Greimel worked with Oakland County officials to redevelop Pontiac's downtown area and increase foot traffic.[20] Greimel planned to demolish the Phoenix Center and replace it with a recreational space that would serve as a city center.[21] Greimel described the Phoenix Center as a "dilapidated eyesore of a derelict parking structure".[22]

Oakland County purchased two buildings to be used as office space in downtown Pontiac. Greimel expected the increased foot traffic from county employees and the new city center would boost economic activity in Pontiac's downtown area. The redevelopment project is expected to cost around 120ドル–130 million, most of which would come from the state, Oakland County, and the American Rescue Plan Act.[20] Greimel said the downtown redevelopment plan "will ensure the city owns a large space that can facilitate outdoor concerts and serve as a town square and public place for the community".[22]

References

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  1. ^ 2013-2014 Michigan Manual: State Representative Tim Greimel
  2. ^ Martin, Tim (November 8, 2012). "Michigan House Republicans stick with Jase Bolger; Democrats select Tim Greimel as their leader". Booth Newspapers . Retrieved January 30, 2015.
  3. ^ Spangler, Todd (October 17, 2017). "State Rep. Tim Greimel joins crowded congressional field". Detroit Free Press.
  4. ^ Proxmire, Crystal (January 3, 2022). "Phoenix Rising in Pontiac as City Gets all New Council, Tim Greimel as Mayor". Oakland County Times. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  5. ^ Laitner, Bill (November 3, 2021). "Pontiac election results: New mayor and council bring potential for change". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  6. ^ Laitner, Bill. "Pontiac election results: New mayor and council bring potential for change". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved November 15, 2023.
  7. ^ "Welcome to Pontiac, MI". www.pontiac.mi.us. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
  8. ^ a b Cunningham, Peter (March 2015). "Michigan's Lawyer-Legislatures of the 98th State Legislature" (PDF). Michigan Bar Journal: 22.
  9. ^ "Timothy A. Greimel". State Bar of Michigan. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
  10. ^ "Open Oakland Clerk's Public Document Search". openoakland2.oakgov.com. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
  11. ^ a b "Tim Greimel". Ballotpedia. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
  12. ^ "Past Election Results | Oakland County, MI". www.oakgov.com. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
  13. ^ "Open Oakland Clerk's Public Document Search". openoakland2.oakgov.com. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
  14. ^ "Open Oakland Clerk's Public Document Search". openoakland2.oakgov.com. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
  15. ^ "Pontiac 'State of City' to be delivered on Sept. 29". The Oakland Press. September 24, 2022. Retrieved December 6, 2023.
  16. ^ a b c d "Tim Greimel". Ballotpedia. Retrieved November 20, 2023.
  17. ^ "Tim Greimel". Michigan League of Conservation Voters. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  18. ^ By (December 13, 2021). "Q&A with incoming Pontiac Mayor Tim Greimel". The Oakland Press. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  19. ^ Martindale, Mike. "Greimel wins mayoral race in Pontiac, Fournier reelected in Royal Oak". The Detroit News. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
  20. ^ a b c Golston, Hilary (August 17, 2023). "130ドル million Pontiac redevelopment plan has officials hoping for downtown rebirth". FOX 2 Detroit. Retrieved December 6, 2023.
  21. ^ "Oakland County leaders announce a 100ドル million investment to redevelop downtown Pontiac". WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit. August 17, 2023. Retrieved December 6, 2023.
  22. ^ a b "Pontiac Mayor Tim Greimel discusses future plans for Phoenix Center, Ottawa Towers - CBS Detroit". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved December 6, 2023.
103nd Legislature (2025–2027)
Speaker of the House
Matt Hall (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Rachelle Smit (R)
Majority Floor Leader
Bryan Posthumus (R)
Minority Leader
Ranjeev Puri (R)
  1. Tyrone Carter (D)
  2. Tullio Liberati (D)
  3. Alabas Farhat (D)
  4. Karen Whitsett (D)
  5. Regina Weiss (D)
  6. Natalie Price (D)
  7. Tonya Myers Phillips (D)
  8. Helena Scott (D)
  9. Joe Tate (D)
  10. Veronica Paiz (D)
  11. Donavan McKinney (D)
  12. Kimberly Edwards (D)
  13. Mai Xiong (D)
  14. Mike McFall (D)
  15. Erin Byrnes (D)
  16. Stephanie Young (D)
  17. Laurie Pohutsky (D)
  18. Jason Hoskins (D)
  19. Samantha Steckloff (D)
  20. Noah Arbit (D)
  21. Kelly Breen (D)
  22. Matt Koleszar (D)
  23. Jason Morgan (D)
  24. Ranjeev Puri (D)
  25. Peter Herzberg (D)
  26. Dylan Wegela (D)
  27. Rylee Linting (R)
  28. Jamie Thompson (R)
  29. James DeSana (R)
  30. William Bruck (R)
  31. Reggie Miller (D)
  32. Jimmie Wilson Jr. (D)
  33. Morgan Foreman (D)
  34. Nancy Jenkins-Arno (R)
  35. Jennifer Wortz (R)
  36. Steve Carra (R)
  37. Brad Paquette (R)
  38. Joey Andrews (D)
  39. Pauline Wendzel (R)
  40. Matthew Longjohn (D)
  41. Julie Rogers (D)
  42. Matt Hall (R)
  43. Rachelle Smit (R)
  44. Steve Frisbie (R)
  45. Sarah Lightner (R)
  46. Kathy Schmaltz (R)
  47. Carrie Rheingans (D)
  48. Jennifer Conlin (D)
  49. Ann Bollin (R)
  50. Jason Woolford (R)
  51. Matt Maddock (R)
  52. Mike Harris (R)
  53. Brenda Carter (D)
  54. Donni Steele (R)
  55. Mark Tisdel (R)
  56. Sharon MacDonell (D)
  57. Thomas Kuhn (R)
  58. Ron Robinson (R)
  59. Doug Wozniak (R)
  60. Joseph Aragona (R)
  61. Denise Mentzer (D)
  62. Alicia St. Germaine (R)
  63. Jay DeBoyer (R)
  64. Joseph Pavlov (R)
  65. Jaime Greene (R)
  66. Josh Schriver (R)
  67. Phil Green (R)
  68. David Martin (R)
  69. Jasper Martus (D)
  70. Cynthia Neeley (D)
  71. Brian BeGole (R)
  72. Mike Mueller (R)
  73. Julie Brixie (D)
  74. Kara Hope (D)
  75. Penelope Tsernoglou (D)
  76. Angela Witwer (D)
  77. Emily Dievendorf (D)
  78. Gina Johnsen (R)
  79. Angela Rigas (R)
  80. Phil Skaggs (D)
  81. Stephen Wooden (D)
  82. Kristian Grant (D)
  83. John Wesley Fitzgerald (D)
  84. Carol Glanville (D)
  85. Bradley Slagh (R)
  86. Nancy De Boer (R)
  87. Will Snyder (D)
  88. Greg VanWoerkom (R)
  89. Luke Meerman (R)
  90. Bryan Posthumus (R)
  91. Pat Outman (R)
  92. Jerry Neyer (R)
  93. Tim Kelly (R)
  94. Amos O'Neal (D)
  95. Bill G. Schuette (R)
  96. Timothy Beson (R)
  97. Matthew Bierlein (R)
  98. Gregory Alexander (R)
  99. Mike Hoadley (R)
  100. Tom Kunse (R)
  101. Joseph Fox (R)
  102. Curt VanderWall (R)
  103. Betsy Coffia (D)
  104. John Roth (R)
  105. Ken Borton (R)
  106. Cam Cavitt (R)
  107. Parker Fairbairn (R)
  108. David Prestin (R)
  109. Karl Bohnak (R)
  110. Gregory Markkanen (R)

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