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Molly Henderson

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Molly S. Henderson
Lancaster County Commissioner
In office
January 5, 2004 – January 5, 2008
Preceded byRon Ford
Succeeded byCraig Lehman
Personal details
Born (1953-09-14) September 14, 1953 (age 71)
Cumberland, Maryland
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseAlex Henderson

Molly Henderson (born September 14, 1953) is a former Commissioner of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. [1] The Commissioners are the chief executive and legislative officials of the County, which has 500,000 residents spread over 940 square miles (2,400 km2) and an annual County budget of $300 million. [2] Henderson was elected in 2003 to a four year term [3] and was the lone Democrat on the Board of Commissioners in a County where Republicans outnumber Democrats two to one. [4]

Henderson was previously Head of Public Health for the City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the County seat. [5] She is a former high school and college teacher, holding a doctorate degree from Temple University, a master's degree from West Chester University and her B.S. from James Madison University.[6] Henderson is also a Respiratory Therapist and worked at Lancaster General Hospital prior to her teaching [7] and government careers. Henderson is married to Alex Henderson and has two children, Alexander "Ander" Henderson and Leslie Henderson.[8]

Henderson is a notable opponent of the Lancaster County Convention Center Authority's controversial $170 million hotel/convention center in downtown Lancaster on the site of the former Watt & Shand building.[9] [10] The project's supporters believe it would promote the revitalization of the city's center. Its opponents, however, feel it poses an unacceptable risk to taxpayers.[7] Henderson is married to Alex Henderson and has two children, Alexander "Ander" Henderson and Leslie Henderson.[11] [1] The hotel portion of the project is owned 50% by Lancaster Newspapers, Inc. which have been accused of using their monopoly print position in the County to promote the project and stifle opposition. Henderson has been referenced in more than 2,200 newspaper articles, over 700 of which concern the Lancaster County Convention Center project, many of them attacking her position.[12]

Henderson was not re-elected as Lancaster County Commissioner on November 7, 2007.[13] Henderson was succeeded by Craig Lehman as the minority Commissioner.

References

  1. ^ Susanna M., Blain (2006). ""Lancaster County Public Officials Directory"". Latter Day Sa….
  2. ^ Harris, Bernard (December 13, 2005). ""New Commissioners get ready by Dividing Duties"". Lancaster New Era.
  3. ^ Nurse, Tom (November 5, 2003). ""Shellenberger, Shaub, Henderson Win. Why it Happened and What it Means"". Lancaster New Era.
  4. ^ Quinn, Justin (November 5, 2003). ""Democrat Henderson Wins, Joins 2 from GOP as Commissioners". Intelligencer Journal.
  5. ^ Caldwell, Carrie (March 22, 2004). ""Henderson Named Recipient of Jean Royer Kohr Award"". Intelligencer Journal.
  6. ^ Caldwell, Carrie (December 26, 2003). ""After Years of Preparation, It's Time"". Intelligencer Journal.
  7. ^ a b Keever, Wythe (April 28, 1991). ""College Tackles Growing Number of Cases"". Patriot News.
  8. ^ David, O'Connor (November 22, 2003). ""She's Learning on the Run"". Lancaster New Era.
  9. ^ Colwell Adams, Helen (April 30, 2005). ""Good Golly Molly! Democrat Who Had Republican Support Acts Independently. Henderson's Questions on Downtown Project Rile Her Friends in Both Parties"". Lancaster Sunday News.
  10. ^ Hart Nibbrig, Christiaan A. (2007-02-01). "Lancaster Convention Center Battle Shatters Amish Country Calm". Budget & Tax News. Retrieved 2007-04-27.
  11. ^ Staff (November 22, 2003). ""'Yellow Journalism' … Intell Uses Shaub as Puppet to Attack Commissioners"".
  12. ^ Editorial (March 2, 2006). ""Demo Henderson's Role as GOP Spoiler"". Lancaster New Era.
  13. ^ Pigdeon, Dave (2007-11-07). "Lehman wins over incumbent Henderson". Retrieved 2007-12-19.

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