County Council At Large


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Democrat

Gabe Albornoz

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Democrat

Where you live: Kensington

Date of birth: March 22, 1976

Current occupation and employer:

President, Montgomery County Council (At-Large); director, Montgomery County Department of Recreation (appointed by County Executive Ike Leggett); deputy director, Latin American Youth Center

Political experience:

Elected chair, Montgomery County Democratic Central Committee (2012-2014 – first Latino to hold this position); elected to the Montgomery County Council, At-Large (2018-present)

Website: https://gabealbornoz.com/

Email: gabe@gabealbornoz.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GabeAlbornoz1

Twitter: https://twitter.com/GabeAlbornoz1

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gabealbornoz1/

Why are you running for this office?

As a lifelong resident, I love Montgomery County. I believe that elected office is a noble profession that provides a clear opportunity to impact social change and serve as a bridge between communities. Although I could never have imagined the immense challenges of guiding the county through a pandemic as chair of the council’s Health and Human Services Committee, I feel that I gained an even deeper appreciation of how local government touches people’s lives.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?

I am committed to supporting our most vulnerable residents and maintaining a high quality of life for all. The pandemic has exacerbated the inequities within our county, widened the achievement and opportunity gap among our youth, and disproportionately impacted our communities of color. We must build on the systems created during the pandemic to shore up our safety net services, tackle food insecurity and end childhood hunger, deliver culturally competent programs, strengthen mental health services for our youth and caretakers, and ensure our seniors and disabled residents have access to resources. We all succeed, when we all succeed.

What is one criticism you have received while in office and what is your response?

An issue that drew criticism from some was the implementation of mask mandates during the pandemic. We as a council followed the guidance of national and local public health officials, who consistently recommended masks to mitigate community spread especially when vaccines were not yet readily available. The use of masks helped ease our county’s transition back to safe and responsible social activities and protected those most at risk to a virus that tragically killed over 1 million Americans. As variants emerge, I am committed to following the data and adapting our policies to reflect the current environment.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?

Since 2018, I have served our county’s 1.1 million residents as an at-large County Council member. My time as recreation director in Leggett’s administration enabled me to quickly step into leadership roles as chair of the Health and Human Services Committee, and now as council president. I have dedicated over 23 years to advocating for youth, seniors, and other vulnerable residents. I am a former student of MCPS, MBA graduate, Leadership Montgomery alumnus, and the son of Latino immigrants. I am proud of my service record and believe we need trusted and experienced leadership to move the country forward.


Brandy Brooks

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Democrat

Where you live: Kensington-Wheaton

Date of birth: July 31, 1976

Current occupation and employer:
Founder & CEO, Radical Solutions LLC – 2019-present
Director of Strategy & Development/co-director, One Square World, Inc. – 2019-2022

Political experience:
Democratic candidate for Montgomery County Council At-Large, 2018
Somerville, Mass., Zoning Board of Appeals, 2013-2014

Website: https://brandy4montgomery.com
Email: info@brandy4moco.com
Facebook: https://facebook.com/brandy4moco
Twitter: https://twitter.com/brandy4moco
Instagram: https://instagram.com/brandy4moco

Why are you running for this office?
We are building a countywide movement rooted in political and civic leadership from all our communities. Our voices must be centered in setting the policy agenda for our County, developing legislation, monitoring implementation, and evaluating results. I am committed to partnering with people of color, immigrants, poor and working people, LGBTQIA+ people, women, seniors, and young people – those often missing from the decision-making table, yet most severely affected by the issues the County Council addresses.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
Montgomery County is facing a deep and longstanding affordable housing crisis. My core goals around housing are to protect the ability of residents to remain in their homes, and to effectively produce the scale of affordable housing that we need. I support rent stabilization, a right to counsel, enhanced eviction protections, and strong code enforcement. I support protecting low and moderate income homeowners from rapid increases in property taxes. I support the county using a much wider variety of tools to produce affordable housing, including its first right of refusal for purchasing rental properties and support for community land trusts.

What is one major issue that has been handled poorly and what would you have done differently?
The Thrive 2050 process, conducted at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, failed to meaningfully engage the vast majority of county residents, resulting in a plan that fails to concretely address critical issues for our county, including producing truly affordable housing, building resilience in the face of climate change, and correcting deep racial inequity and segregation rooted in land use decision-making. I support the call of community organizers for a just and inclusive planning process that will address our communities’ needs, which would require 12 to 18 additional months using best practices in participatory planning.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
I am an Afro-Latina educator, facilitator, designer, and community organizer with 15-plus years of experience working in land use, environmental and racial justice, and civic participation. I have organized with my community for equity and justice in housing, transportation, community food systems, education, employment and economic development, policing, health care, and fair elections. I have founded and managed small businesses and nonprofit organizations. My work requires the boldness to have difficult conversations; the compassion to understand how lived experiences shape our perspectives; and the ability to synthesize multiple viewpoints to develop solutions that diverse groups of stakeholders can agree on.


Dana Gassaway (Information not submitted)


Evan Glass

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Democrat

Where you live: Silver Spring

Date of birth: Jan. 30, 1977

Current occupation and employer:
Vice president, Montgomery County Council

Former CNN journalist
Former nonprofit executive director

Political experience:
At-large council member, 2018 – current

Candidate for council District 5 in 2014

Website: https://evanglass.com
Email: info@evanglass.com
Facebook: EvanMGlass
Twitter: @EvanMGlass
Instagram: @EvanMGlass

Why are you running for this office?
I’m proud of my work to make our community a more fair, equitable and welcoming place for everyone. From passing pay equity legislation and supporting public transportation, to protecting our environment and encouraging new businesses to open here, I’ve been working hard to make Montgomery County an even better place to live, work and play.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
My top priority for a second term is providing for the health and safety of all Montgomery County residents. The pandemic exposed the gaps in medical access within our community, and I’m committed to strengthening our local healthcare network and social safety net to ensure that everyone has the ability to live healthy and productive lives.

What is one criticism you have received while in office and what is your response?
I have often been told that I ask too many questions. As a former CNN journalist, asking pointed questions and holding people accountable is in my nature. The reason I ask tough questions because I want to ensure that taxpayer dollars are being used efficiently and that residents receive the high-quality services they deserve. We must demand transparency and accountability in our local government.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
I have the honor of currently serving as vice president of the council. My colleagues elected me to this position because of my ability to work with diverse stakeholders to find common ground in policies that make meaningful progress. The next council will grow from nine members to 11, bringing more diversity of thoughts and opinions, and I am well prepared to bring us together so we can better serve the residents of Montgomery County.


Scott Evan Goldberg

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Democrat

Where you live: Silver Spring

Date of birth: Aug. 16, 1982

Current occupation and employer:
CEO & general counsel, Streamline Management
Past chair, Montgomery County Democratic Party

Political experience:
Chair, Montgomery County Democratic Party, elected by colleagues, 2018-19
Member, Montgomery County Democratic Party, elected with 35,198 votes, 2017-present
Campaign Manager, Re-Elect Ike Leggett County Executive, 2014
Candidate, Maryland House of Delegates, District 16, 2010

Website: https://www.VoteScott.org
Email: Scott@VoteScott.org
Facebook: GoldbergInMD
Twitter: GoldbergInMD
Instagram: GoldbergInMD

Why are you running for this office?
In the last two years we’ve all thought about our own mortality. When I asked myself if I’ve done enough to leave this Earth a better place, the answer was “no”. Having a deep knowledge of the county and ability to have great relationships with people who disagree, I’m confident I can work with colleagues, the Executive, and every resident of this county to accomplish meaningful results that will make people’s lives easier.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
Housing. The most important issue in this race is doing what we need to so there’s enough housing and it’s affordable today, tomorrow, and 50 years from now. My plan is a combination of using government owned land to build mixed income housing, install protections against property taxes skyrocketing, use micro vouchers to make housing affordable for working class residents, easing restrictions near Metro stations, and requiring 3 and 4 bedroom units on larger projects. We also need to make it easier for 1st time homebuyers so our children can afford to become homeowners and communities with low homeownership rates can build generational wealth.

What is one major issue that has been handled poorly and what would you have done differently?
It’s continuing to happen right now: the treatment of our kids over the last two years. When the pandemic began, one of the first things we did was close schools and playgrounds. While these were reasonable emergency measures, today we’re pretending like we can just skip over the lost time. We owe it to them to offer accessible mental health services, have innovative learning in school, expand parks and playgrounds, hold free camps to enjoy, and put on interactive activities like fairs and festivals more frequently and for longer periods of time.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
The most successful legislators throughout history have a mastery of the issues and the ability to work really well with people. As the chair of the Western Montgomery County Citizens Advisory Board, an attorney, Public Policy Committee member of GCAAR, parent of two kids in public school, I’ve been to all 505 square miles of the county and know the laws.

Being elected chair of the County Democratic Party by my colleagues, managing County Executive Ike Leggett’s re-election, helping to set up Jamie Raskin’s first congressional campaign, employing dozens of people in my small business, and coaching tee ball, I excel at working with people under difficult circumstances.


Tom Hucker

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Democrat

Where you live: Silver Spring

Date of birth: April 9, 1967

Current occupation and employer:
County Council member

Political experience:
County Council president, 2021
County Council vice president, 2020
Council member, 2014-present
State legislator, 2006-2014
Washington Suburban Transit Commission, 2019-present
Board of Directors, Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, 2019-present

Website: https://www.tomhucker.com
Email: tom@tomhucker.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/friendsoftomhucker
Twitter: @tomhucker
Instagram: @tomhucker

Why are you running for this office?
I am running to return to the council as an at-large member to continue serving our county as a leader during this time of transition. I’ve always believed that each of us should play the role where you can do the greatest amount of good for people. I’ve spent the last two years leading the County Council through the recent pandemic and recession as president and vice president. And I’ve spoken with so many residents across our county about how we can move forward to build a county that is stronger, healthier and more equitable than we were before COVID.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
I believe that our most important responsibility on the County Council is to create an environment that supports and expands opportunity for all of our residents. From schools to jobs, from housing to climate change, we must take an intersectional approach to find solutions that lessen racial inequity and injustice. We must ensure that MCPS has equitable opportunities for all students including pathways to living wage jobs, that we make the county the economic engine of the state again, and that we build enough affordable housing so everyone from young families to seniors can call Montgomery County home.

What is one major issue that has been handled poorly and what would you have done differently?
With the pandemic behind us, I believe that the next council will have a responsibility to focus on our county’s economic recovery. We can do this by ensuring the administration fulfills its obligations to the 2021-2025 Economic Development Strategic Plan—a comprehensive economic roadmap ratified by the County Council. We trail other local jurisdictions in job growth. Small businesses create most of our jobs, so we must support them by streamlining regulations, expediting permits and increasing financing. We must build the conditions businesses and their employees want—affordable and accessible communities.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
I was unanimously elected by council members to serve as vice president and president of the council during the COVID pandemic and recession. The next council will have at least five new members, so I can continue to play an important role as an experienced and collaborative problem-solver. My eight years of experience as a state legislator position me well to secure vital resources. For example, as council president I led a statewide coalition to successfully advocate for $1 billion in relief to help small businesses, workers and those in need during the worst of the pandemic.


Will Jawando

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Democrat

Where you live: Ashton, MD

Date of birth: Jan. 2, 1982

Current occupation and employer:
Montgomery County Council member at-large

Political experience:
Maryland House of Delegates, District 20 Democratic, 2014
Congress in Maryland’s 8th district, 2016

Website: https://willjawando.com/
Email: info@willjawando.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/willjawando
Twitter: https://twitter.com/willjawando
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/willjawando

Why are you running for this office?
My wife, Michele, and I chose to raise our children in Montgomery County, because we are counting on Montgomery County to remain a safe, thriving and diverse community full of opportunity. We have made progress during the last three years, but we have also seen disparities made worse by the pandemic.

My priorities include: increasing the number of affordable and middle income housing units in the county, addressing challenges in our education system, finding ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and preparing for emergencies related to climate change. I am running for re-election to continue to extend Montgomery County’s unique promise to all of our citizens.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
The most important issue for the residents of Montgomery County is addressing the affordable housing crisis and making sure everyday people can earn a living wage that allows them to afford to live in Montgomery County. We must do everything we can to address the housing crisis, meaning we use every tool available including: leveraging all county owned land to build more affordable housing, ask our development community to contribute more, allow greater opportunities for building housing especially near transit, and allow some building of smaller units like duplexes in areas previously only zoned for single family housing. We also need to put in place anti-rent gouging protections so that renters can have reasonable and affordable increases. We should also consider new innovative opportunities and special tax credits for workforce housing- housing for teachers, healthcare workers, public safety, and childcare workers. The increase to $15 an hour was passed before my time on the council.

What is one criticism you have received while in office and what is your response?
During my first term in office I have been a leader on police reform, which has drawn criticism from some quarters. Increasing transparency and accountability, while supporting our public safety officers, seems a common sense approach to police reform. We require officers to protect our community, but we cannot ignore the results of disproportionate outcomes that impact our Black and brown residents. I support expanding officer training, increasing pay, and removing certain types of responsibilities we have pushed onto police such as responding to mental health incidents or homelessness. We need a more focused, better trained, better compensated force that focuses on violent crime. We can and should support law enforcement while expecting transparency and accountability, because these concepts are not mutually exclusive.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
I am an at-large member of the council serving on the Planning, Housing & Economic Development and the Education and Culture Committees. I am a civil rights lawyer and former Obama White House staff member. I received my bachelors and law degrees from Catholic University. I was born and raised in Montgomery County, growing up in Silver Spring, and after college and law school returning to the county to raise my family. I worked for Discovery Communications and I am a father of four with students in MCPS. I have worked closely with our non-profit community, our social justice advocates, and with entities like WorkSource Montgomery and other organizations focused on moving Montgomery County forward. I believe together we can continue to make Montgomery County a better place for all of our residents.


Laurie-Anne Sayles

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Democrat

Where you live: Gaithersburg

Date of birth: Aug. 13, 1981

Current occupation and employer:
Senior project manager, Food & Drug Administration, 4/2019-3/2022
Substitute teacher/paraeducator, MCPS, 1/2018-5/2021
Communications consultant/special assistant, The Nature Conservancy, Mid-Atlantic Region, 7/2017-2/2018

Political experience:
Council member, City of Gaithersburg, 11/2017-11/2021
Candidate, City of Gaithersburg, 2015 – unsuccessful
Candidate,  House of Delegates, 2014 – unsuccessful

Website: https://www.laurieannesayles.org/
Email: info@laurieannesayles.org
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SaylesforMoCo/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/LaurieASayles
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/Sayles4moco/

Why are you running for this office?
I’m running for council at-large to bring S.M.A.R.T. government to Montgomery County. S.M.A.R.T. government is my acronym for the policies to position our economy for future success.

Strengthening 21st-century learning from cradle to career and beyond;
Making a living in Montgomery County more affordable;
Advancing local food production in the Ag Reserve;
Recovering from the pandemic while revitalizing the economy; and
Tackling climate change through multi-modal transportation solutions

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
Representation matters. Montgomery County has the most diverse population in our state, but we are not diverse in representation. Currently, there is only one woman out of nine Councilmembers. There has never been an upcounty resident elected to an at-large seat. There has never been a woman of color elected to an at-large seat. Why is this important? Because when a community celebrates its diversity in representation and population, it draws on the knowledge, talents, and experiences of its diverse population. The county council needs more upcounty representation and qualified women ready to lead and serve on day one.

What is one major issue that has been handled poorly and what would you have done differently?
Voters point to the County Council’s ability to work together for the benefit of the citizens of Montgomery County as a significant issue. The power of the County Council to fully engage our diverse population is essential. I am a consensus builder, forward-thinking, progressive public servant, and a publicly financed candidate with a track record of success. As a council member, I will be a fierce advocate and an active listener to craft policy that ensures equitable outcomes for our residents and economy. I’ll expand programs that work and apply tangible measurements to monitor, evaluate, and abandon those that no longer work.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
I am an experienced leader, change agent, policymaker, and advocate who believes that you can achieve any goal you set for yourself if you work smart. Elected in 2017, making history as the first African American council member elected in Gaithersburg, I hit the ground running. I have fought for affordable housing, expanded access to early childhood education, a $15 minimum wage, equal rights, immigration reform, and a cleaner, safer, and healthier environment. I have overcome challenging situations and used my experiences to fuel a steadfast commitment to helping others who are underserved, underrepresented, and less fortunate reach self-sufficiency.


Republican

Chris P. Fiotes Jr.

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Republican

Where you live: Gaithersburg

Date of birth: Dec. 12, 1933

Current occupation and employer:
Commercial real estate broker

Political experience:
I have not held elected office. However, I worked in the U.S. Senate for over 10 years. I ran for Montgomery County Council at-large in 2014 and 2018.

Email: cfiotes@comcast.net

Why are you running for this office?
I want to ensure that Montgomery County is ready to address the challenges of the future and remain a place where families and business can thrive.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
We need good economic leadership. Fiscal responsibility is key to future success in Montgomery County. We need to focus on lowering taxes and controlling spending so we can continue investing in the things that matter to our citizens.

What is one major issue that has been handled poorly and what would you have done differently?
Poor oversight of county infrastructure projects such as the Silver Spring Transit Center led to budget overruns and delays that cost the citizens of Montgomery County time and money. I would ensure that experienced professionals are overseeing these projects.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
I’ve owned and operated my own businesses for most of my life, and have experience in zoning, construction and capital investments. I also worked in the U.S. Senate, where I gained a thorough understanding of legislation and budget formulation.


Lenard Lieber

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Republican

Where you live: Gaithersburg

Date of birth: Feb. 6, 1968

Current occupation and employer:
Retired, previously worked at Montgomery College for 32 years.

Political experience:
None

Website: https://www.lenardlieber.com/
Email: lenardlieber@outlook.com
Facebook: Lenard Lieber
Twitter: @purplepursuer

Why are you running for this office?
The council’s disastrous and neurotic response to covid, such as pushing a known flawed medical treatment that doesn’t prevent spread, and on the flip side treating healthy people as Typhoid Mary types.

To remove the hindrance of the MoCo government to real economic well being.
To ensure that the police are truly being used to protect person, property and the peace.

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
An insular council and executive that pat themselves on the back while having presided over the decline of the county, the school system, the desirability of being a destination for business, and a police force that is told to back off pursing complaints if it might impact minority groups.

What is one major issue that has been handled poorly and what would you have done differently?
Allowing MCPS to conduct so called virtual learning that severely impacted those in the lower economic spectrum, this while in Europe it was demonstrated that the schools could be kept open with little to no impact on the number of covid cases. This is not a matter of curriculum, but actual access to learning, making it a clear council matter, not something under the Board of Education purview.

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
Many years of clear, skeptical, reasoned analysis of what government is supposed to be and what it is not to be. Unlike too many who see government as an instrument to bring about their projects, their shaping of society, I understand the rightful role of government as a disinterested referee, not picking winners and losers.


Dwight Patel

What office are you running for? County Council

Political party: Republican

Where you live: Montgomery County

Date of birth: July 30, 1972

Current occupation and employer:
IT project manager

Political experience:
I have run for Maryland State Senate twice (2010 and 2018) and the House of Delegates (1994)

Website: https://www.dwightformoco.com
Email: info@dwightformoco.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DwightforMOCO/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/dwightformoco
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dwightformoco/

Why are you running for this office?
I am running to fix the problems in Montgomery County
– Kids-first education
– Road and highway funding 
– Public safety
– Lower taxes
– Help businesses succeed

What is the most important issue in this race and what specific plans do you have to address it?
Quality of life in Montgomery County
– Inflation/high price of gas
– Traffic congestion
– Education
– Public safety
– Property tax relief
– New business development

What is one major issue that has been handled poorly and what would you have done differently?
Transportation. Montgomery County Council has offered no substantive solutions to our traffic woes. The council’s only solution is buses and bike lanes. We need to look at inner chain improvements and make use of overpasses and underpasses where available. Add Hot Lanes, make use of reversible lanes, modernize the synchronization of traffic lights, make use of roundabouts where possible, and connect local roads to offer multiple routes, rather than forcing local traffic onto the interstates and other major highways. 

What experience (work, political or other) has prepared you to hold this office?
I have managed many projects over the years. My experience working with many different players on projects and bridging all sides to come up with a coherent solution. This would lend itself well to working with the current county council. I am a natural problem solver, and a problem solver is what the county needs, not a problem creator.