Peter Brownell
Peter C. Brownell is an American politician who served as the 39th Mayor of Burlington, Vermont. Prior to his tenure as mayor he was active in local politics with him serving on the school board and the city council. After his tenure as mayor he served in the Vermont Senate. He is the most recent Republican elected as mayor of Burlington.
Brownell was born in New York City, and was educated at Choate Rosemary Hall, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Vermont. After serving in the United States Air Force he moved to Burlington, Vermont, where he would enter politics. He was elected to the city's school board in 1983, and again in 1986. Brownell was elected to the city council in a 1989 special election and reelected in the 1990 and 1992 elections.
Brownell ran in the 1993 Burlington mayoral election against incumbent Progressive Coalition Mayor Peter Clavelle despite Clavelle's fundraising and campaign volunteer advantage. His victory was the first time a Republican held the mayoralty since Edward A. Keenan in 1965. Brownell lost reelection to Clavelle in 1995. He was elected to the state senate in the 1996 election and reelected in 1998, but lost renomination in 2000 due to his support for same-sex civil unions.
Early life and education
Brownell was born in New York City, New York, in 1948, to Mary Hester Gaskill and Lincoln C. Brownell. Chauncey W. Brownell, his great-grandfather, served as Secretary of State of Vermont and in the Vermont Senate. During his childhood he traveled between Long Island, New York and Saigon, South Vietnam, due to his father's business.Brownell graduated from Choate Rosemary Hall. He married Christina Bratton, who he had met while at the University of Pennsylvania, in Maryland in 1969. In 1970, he graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a bachelor's degree in sociology, after having originally majored in chemical engineering, and graduated from the University of Vermont with a master's degree in business administration in 1978. He served in the United States Air Force for six years. He moved his family to Burlington, Vermont, in 1978. Brownell worked as a financial analyst for General Electric for fifteen years.
Career
School board
Brownell attempted to gain a job on the Burlington police or airport commissions, but he was rejected every time. In 1983, Diana Gallagher, a member of the school board, ran for a seat on the city council from the 6th district. Brownell won the Republican nomination to succeed her on the school board from the 6th district by a unanimous vote and defeated independent Hans J. Puck in the general election. He did not seek reelection as he wanted to spend more time with his family in 1985, and Elizabeth Van Buren, a member of the Democratic Party, was unopposed to succeed him. Brownell won the Republican nomination to run for the school board from the 6th district in 1986, and won in the general election without opposition. He did not run for reelection in the 1988 election.During his tenure on the board he served as chair of the Finance committee and consider running for chair of the board in 1986, but he did not have enough support.
City council
In 1989, David Thelander, a Republican member of the city council, resigned to work in Washington, D.C. for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Brownell received the Republican nomination and defeated Democratic and Progressive Coalition nominee Greg Guma in the special election. During the campaign Brownell raised $2,170 and spent $472 while Guma raised $875 and spent $640.He defeated Green Party nominee Bea Bookchin in the 1990 election. He won reelection without opposition in 1992. After Brownell was elected as mayor he resigned from the city council. A special election was held to fill the vacancy and it was won by Republican nominee Tom Ryan.
During his tenure on the city council Brownell served on the Finance committee. Following the resignation of Jane Watson, a member of the city council from the 5th district, Browell became interested in running for chair of the city council as Watson's resignation left the Democrats without enough votes, but Brownell later declined to run.
Mayoralty
Elections
The Vermont Republican Party had not nominated a candidate in the 1985, 1987, 1989, and 1991 mayoral elections. Brownell announced on January 14, 1993, that he would run for the Republican nomination and won the nomination on January 20. Brownell defeated Clavelle in the election while only winning two of the city council wards despite Clavelle having outraised Brownell and Clavelle having 220 volunteers compared to Brownll's 20. Brownell's victory ended the Progressive Coalition's control of the mayoral office that it had held since the 1981 election and he became the first Republican to hold the office since Edward A. Keenan left office in 1965. Clavelle stated that he had lost due to him passing legislation to have Burlington pay for the health care benefits for domestic partners of city workers.Former Republican Mayor Robert K. Bing was happy with Brownell's victory while United States Representative Bernie Sanders, who served as mayor from 1981 to 1989, stated that he was disappointed by Clavelle's defeat. Brownell victory in the 1993 election is the most recent time the Republicans have won election as mayor of Burlington.
Brownell announced on January 9, 1995, that he would seek reelection to another term. However, he was defeated in the general election by Clavelle. During the campaign Clavelle had raised $41,020 and spent $40,644, Brownell raised $22,263 and spent $16,527, and Paul Lafayette raised $16,152 and spent $16,040.
Tenure
In 1993, Brownell made multiple appointments which were illegal under a rarely enforced section of Burlington's city charter which required all officials appointed by the mayor to be voters in Burlington. The city council voted to approve his nomination's despite complaints from councilor Maurice Mahoney.During his tenure as mayor Brownell made multiple trips to Montpelier to lobby for a $63.9 million capital construction bill, which included $1.3 million to buy twenty-five acres of waterfront on Lake Champlain from a land trust. The city borrowed $1.2 million from the retirement fund to develop the waterfront which made the city pay $120,000 in interest per year. Brownell proposed leasing three to five acres of the waterfront to pay back the debt.
Brownell's 1993 budget reduced the city's budget by $1 million, eliminated ten positions in the city government, and reduced all general fund operating budgets while increasing property taxes by 2.8%. The budget was approved by the city council by a vote of seven to six. Brownell proposed merging the police and fire departments in 1994, but the city council voted twelve to two against the measure.
On September 27, 1993, the city council voted seven to four in favor of passing legislation to create a new tax to pay for a citywide recycling program. All three Republican members of the city council voted against the tax and Brownell conducted his first veto in office against the legislation. However, the city council voted to overturn his veto on October 12, with only the Republican members voting to sustain his veto.
In the 1993 election the Republicans gained one seat on the city council from the Democrats while the Progressives retained all of their seats bringing the composition of the city council to four Progressive Coalition members, four Democratic members, three Republican members, and two independents. The Republicans lost one seat on the city council in the 1994 election while the Progressive Coalition gained control over the council by expanding their seat total to eight including three independents caucusing with them. During the 1994 elections there were two ballot initiatives to increase taxes, one was a $3.5 tax increase and another was a $1.26 school tax increase, and Brownell supported both ballot measures, but both were defeated in the election. The Republicans gained two seats in the 1995 election.
Vermont Senate
Elections
In 1991, Brownell had considered running for a seat in the Vermont House of Representatives to succeed Helen Riehle. After losing the mayoral election Brownell considered either running for a seat in the Vermont Senate or running for mayor again in the 1997 election. On July 11, 1996, he announced that he would run for one of six seats in the state senate from Chittenden County. Brownell placed second out of eight candidates in the Republican primary and fourth out of twelve candidates in the general election. Brownell spent $11,039 during the campaign.Brownell ran for reelection in the 1998 election, placed first out of six candidates in the Republican primary, and placed fourth out of fourteen candidates in the general election. Brownell spent $9,051 during the campaign.
During the 2000 election Brownell and other state senators were targeted by Reverend David Stertzbach, an anti-gay pastor, due to Brownell's support for civil unions. Brownell lost renomination in the Republican primary after placing eighth out of eight candidates and it was stated that his defeat was caused by Stertzbach. Representatives John Edwards, Marion Milne, William Fyfe, and Robert Kinsey, who had also supported civil unions, also lost renomination. He chose to not run in the general election as an independent candidate.