peoplepill id: nancy-floreen
NF
United States of America
1 views today
1 views this week
Nancy Floreen
Maryland politician

Nancy Floreen

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Maryland politician
Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Age
72 years
Residence
Garrett Park, Montgomery County, Maryland, USA
Education
Smith College,
Bachelor of Arts
(-1973)
Rutgers School of Law–Newark,
Juris Doctor
(-1976)
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Nancy M. Floreen (born September 29, 1951) is an American politician who was a member of the Montgomery County Council in Maryland from 2002 to 2018, serving four terms. She previously served two terms on the Montgomery County Planning Board from 1986 to 1994, was mayor of Garrett Park, Maryland from 2000 to 2002, and ran unsuccessfully as an independent for Montgomery County Executive in 2018.

Early years

Floreen was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on September 29, 1951. She graduated from Smith College with a bachelor of arts degree in American Studies in 1973. She earned a juris doctorate from Rutgers University School of Law–Newark in 1976.

In 1983, the Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection allowed Permanent Financial Corporation to build an office building at Wayne and Cedar avenues in downtown Silver Spring that was taller, wider, and closer to the street than county code allowed. Floreen represented a group of nine families living nearby who protested the building's violations. Floreen argued that constructing a building prior to the discovery of zoning violations does not excuse the builder from the compliance, nor does it allow them an automatic zoning variance. The Allied Civic Group, a coalition of county civic associations, awarded Floreen its Thomas B. Cook Award for her work representing the families in the case. The Montgomery County Board of Appeals rejected Permanent Financial Corporation's request for after-the-fact building variances, and the Montgomery County Circuit Court subsequently upheld that decision, ruling that the owner must remove the top two floors of the building and make other modifications to the building to comply with zoning codes.

In 1985, the Montgomery County Zoning Board approved construction of a six-story residential building for elders in Silver Spring. The building was to be built on land zoned for single-family homes. Floreen represented the Woodside Civic Association in its appeal of the decision, saying the building would be too dense for the neighborhood, and that the fact that there were already large buildings in nearby downtown Silver Spring was irrelevant.

Political career

Montgomery County Planning Board

Floreen became a member of the Montgomery County Planning Board in 1986. The Montgomery County Council appointed her with a vote of 5 to 2, although the Council later moved to officially record the vote as unanimous. Floreen succeeded Mable Granke after her term expired. Floreen said she would give up her part-time law practice to sit on the board in order to avoid any conflict.

The board considered a $250 million development plan for downtown Silver Spring in 1988. The plan included retail, office, and hotel space. Floreen was opposed to the plan, saying it was too much too soon, and she was particularly to the proposed three-story bridge over Georgia Avenue.

Because members of the Planning Board are limited to two four-year terms, Floreen stepped down from the board in 1994.

Mayor of Garrett Park

Floreen was elected mayor of the town of Garrett Park in 2000. While mayor, she supported a renovation to Penn Place, a 104-year-old Victorian house and one of the oldest buildings in the town. The building's porches were rebuilt, previous alterations were removed, and the building was brought up to building codes, safety standards, and historical preservation requirements.

Montgomery County Council

Floreen ran for an at-large seat on the Montgomery County Council in 2002. Her campaign focused on reducing traffic, building the Intercounty Connector, expanding all-day kindergarten, reducing class sizes, and increasing funding for health and human services. Her candidacy was endorsed by Montgomery County Executive Douglas M. Duncan and the editorial board of the Washington Post. She received enough votes in the Democratic Party primary to advance to the general election, and she won a seat on the Council during the general election.

On the subject of transportation, Floreen has supported building the Intercounty Connector, supported building Montrose Parkway, and opposed establishing bus rapid transit between Bethesda and Silver Spring,

On development, Floreen supported increases to the recordation and transfer taxes, supported lifting restrictions on the height of buildings in the southern part of the county, supported lifting residential construction bans in the central part of the county, supported strengthening the county's Moderately Priced Dwelling Unit program, supported requiring ten percent of homes built in new developments near Metro stations be set aside for middle-income families, opposed increasing taxes on developers, opposed closing two MARC train stations with low ridership, and opposed reducing the maximum allowable height of a residential house height from 35 feet to 30 feet.

On environmental issues, she supported removing trash cans from most county parks and supported increasing the fine for deliberately violating the county's forest conservation law.

She also supported banning smoking in restaurants and bars, opposed cutting the Montgomery County Public Libraries' budget, opposed a plan to import lower-cost prescription drugs from Canada for county employees and retirees, and supported a law requiring permits for lawn signs displayed for more than 30 days.

Floreen was reelected in 2006, 2010, and 2014.

Montgomery County Executive race

In the 2018 race for Montgomery County Executive, Floreen endorsed Rose Krasnow, who came in third behind businessman David Blair and long-time Montgomery County Council Member Marc Elrich in the Democratic Party primary. Floreen subsequently switched her party affiliation from Democrat to independent (unaffiliated) and filed to enter the race for Montgomery County executive, submitting 20,343 signatures to election officials by the deadline of August 6, 2018. She faced Elrich and Republican Robin Ficker, a local attorney and sports heckler, in the November general election. Floreen positioned herself as a moderate alternative to Elrich and campaigned for support from centrist Republicans, independents, and Democrats dissatisfied with Elrich. On November 6, Floreen was defeated in the general election for County Executive by Marc Elrich, who won the three-way race with 64.4% of the vote.

Personal life

Floreen lives in Garrett Park, Maryland, with her husband, David O. Stewart. She has three adult children and one grandchild.

Electoral history

2002

PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticNancy Floreen184,52820
DemocraticSteven Silverman182,83420
DemocraticMichael L. Subin181,85620
DemocraticGeorge L. Leventhal172,63119
RepublicanScott Dyer95,77511
RepublicanJoe Dollar89,26210
 Write-in5,1641

2006

PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticNancy Floreen193,26918
DemocraticGeorge L. Leventhal191,03718
DemocraticMarc Elrich185,66717
DemocraticDuchy Trachtenberg182,99817
RepublicanSteve Abrams96,5869
RepublicanTom Reinheimer76,4527
RepublicanShelly Skolnick73,8097
RepublicanAmber Gnemi71,1217
 Write-in1,1190

2010

PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticMarc Elrich47,83918
DemocraticHans Riemer40,49315
DemocraticNancy Floreen39,50015
DemocraticGeorge L. Leventhal38,76114
DemocraticDuchy Trachtenberg34,78013
DemocraticRebecca R. Wagner32,21312
DemocraticJane de Winter15,1716
DemocraticFred Evans10,9894
DemocraticRaj Narayanan8,7513
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticMarc Elrich179,00817
DemocraticNancy Floreen177,57217
DemocraticGeorge L. Leventhal169,91216
DemocraticHans Riemer166,13016
RepublicanRobert Dyer82,7738
RepublicanMark D. Fennel81,6348
RepublicanBrandon Rippeon80,6358
RepublicanRobin N. Uncapher78,0758
GreenGeorge Gluck16,3592
 Write-in1,0650

2014

PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticMarc Elrich57,56321
DemocraticNancy Floreen53,92419
DemocraticHans Riemer49,93218
DemocraticGeorge L. Leventhal46,28617
DemocraticBeth Daly39,64215
DemocraticVivian Malloy25,5999
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticMarc Elrich160,91417
DemocraticNancy M. Floreen159,03017
DemocraticGeorge L. Leventhal150,90216
DemocraticHans Riemer143,04815
RepublicanShelly Skolnick81,6989
RepublicanRobert Dyer80,9918
RepublicanChris P. Fiotes, Jr.73,3558
RepublicanAdol Woen-Williams67,0347
GreenTim Willard22,2742

2018

PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticMarc Elrich225,90064.3%
IndependentNancy Floreen67,40219.2%
RepublicanRobin Ficker57,48916.4%
Write-ins3560.1%
Majority158,49845.1%
Total votes351,150100.0%
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 06 Aug 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Nancy Floreen is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Reference sources
References
Nancy Floreen
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes