Lorie Zapf

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lorie Zapf
Official portrait, 2014
Member of the San Diego City Council
from the 2nd district
In office
December 10, 2014  December 10, 2018
MayorKevin Faulconer
Preceded byEd Harris
Succeeded byJennifer Campbell
Member of the San Diego City Council
from the 6th district
In office
December 2010  December 10, 2014
MayorJerry Sanders
Bob Filner
Kevin Faulconer
Preceded byDonna Frye
Succeeded byChris Cate
Personal details
Born1958 (age 6768)
Los Angeles, California
PartyRepublican
SpouseEric Zapf
Children2
Alma materCalifornia State University Northridge (BA)
University of Denver (MA) [1]
WebsiteCity Council District 2 website

Lorie Zapf (/zæf/; born 1958) is an American politician in San Diego, California. She served as a San Diego City Council member representing City Council District 2. She was first elected to office in November 2010 serving District 6, but switched districts in 2014 due to redistricting.[2] In 2018 Zapf lost a bid for reelection, becoming one of the first incumbent council members to lose a reelection campaign since 1992. She is a Republican, although city council positions are officially nonpartisan per California state law.

Committee assignments

When she was elected to District 6 in 2010, it included the neighborhoods of Bay Ho, Bay Park, Clairemont Mesa, Fashion Valley, Kearny Mesa, Linda Vista, Mission Valley, North Clairemont, and Serra Mesa.[3] Her home in Bay Ho, was moved to District 2 in the 2011 redistricting. She ran for the vacant District 2 seat under the new borders in 2014[4] and won election to that seat in the June primary, by getting more than 50% of the vote (53.65%).[5] The other neighborhoods in the new District 2 included Bay Park, Morena, Midway/North Bay, Mission Beach, Ocean Beach, Pacific Beach, and Point Loma.[6]

In the November 2018 election, Zapf lost her reelection bid to retired doctor Jen Campbell. This marked the first time that an incumbent had failed to be reelected to the City Council since 1992.[7]

  • Economic Development and Intergovernmental Relations Committee
  • Infrastructure Committee
  • Audit Committee (chair)
  • Public Safety and Livable Neighborhoods Committee
  • Budget Review Committee
  • Select Committee on Homelessness[8]

Source: Office of the City Clerk

Personal

Electoral history

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI