Jacques Roy (mayor)

Jacques Maurice Roy
23rd Mayor of Alexandria, Rapides Parish, Louisiana, USA
Assumed office
December 4, 2006
Preceded by Ned Randolph (D)
Personal details
Born (1970-09-25) September 25, 1970
Alexandria, Louisiana, USA
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Wendy Hendrix Roy
Relations Christopher Roy, Jr. (brother)
Children Son, daughter
Profession Attorney
Religion Roman Catholic
Signature
Website www.jacquesroyformayor.com

Jacques Maurice Roy (born September 25, 1970) is the twenty-third mayor of Alexandria, the parish seat of Rapides Parish in Central Louisiana.

A Democrat, Roy is the son of Christopher Roy, Sr., an ad hoc judge of the Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeal. He is the brother of Christopher Roy, Jr., a former one-term member of the Louisiana House of Representatives and a 2014 candidate for district attorney of the 9th Judicial District Court, based in Alexandria.

Roy graduated in 1988 from Holy Savior Menard Central High School, the Roman Catholic secondary institution in Alexandria. Prior to his having been elected mayor, Roy practiced law with his brother Chris, Jr., in Alexandria. His father, Chris Roy, Sr., was formerly affiliated with the firm of the legendary Alexandria lawyer Camille Gravel. Roy attended Louisiana State University, at which he majored in Political Science, with concentration in American government and politics, and Southern University Law Center, both in Baton Rouge.

In 1995, Roy married the former Wendy Hendrix (born February 26, 1972), formerly of Pine Bluff, Arkansas. They have a daughter and a son.

Election history

Roy announced his candidacy for mayor during the first week of August 2006, the fifth of seven candidates to step forward. He campaigned on the issues of smart growth, government transparency, and inclusiveness.

On September 20 that year, Roy finished in first place in the nonpartisan blanket primary, having received over 33 percent of the vote. Delores Brewer, a Republican and chief of staff to outgoing Democratic Mayor Ned Randolph, finished in second place by a margin of only seventeen votes over Roy's fellow Democrat and Alexandria City Councilman-at-large, Roosevelt Johnson, an African American.

Although both Roy and Brewer promised to stay positive during the general election, Brewer quickly went on the offensive. She launched two highly controversial television commercials, one of which was covered nationally.

On November 7, 2006, Roy was elected by a landslide. He captured 76 percent of the vote. In 2010, Roy easily won re-election in the primary, winning more thean 63 percent of the vote in a crowded field.

In his bid for a third term as mayor in the primary election on November 4, 2014, Roy faces Jamar Gailes, Jeff Hall, Mitzi "Gibson" LaSalle, and Nicholas R. P. Wright.[1]

Roy is a potential Democratic candidate in 2016 for the United States Senate seat being vacated by Republican David Vitter, who failed in a bid for governor in 2015. Another potential Democratic candidate for the seat is State Representative Robert Johnson of Marksville in Avoyelles Parish. Republican candidates for the seat included U. S. Representatives Charles Boustany of Lafayette and John C. Fleming of Minden and Rob Maness, a favorite of the Tea Party movement, who ran unsuccessfully for the Senate in 2014.[2]

Accomplishments

During his first term, Roy launched the S.P.A.R.C. (Special Planned Activity Redevelopment Corridors) Initiative, the largest redevelopment program in the city’s history. Economist Donovan Rypkema believes S.P.A.R.C. is the “right” kind of “stimulus project,” and renowned architect Frederic Schwartz considers S.P.A.R.C. to be “the most concise vision” for revitalization in the country.

Veteran Mayor Joseph Riley of Charleston, South Carolina, has also praised Roy’s vision and his leadership. "Show me a community with real inventive, aggressive, thoughtful, creative leadership (like Roy), and I will show you a community on the move," Riley told Alexandria Town Talk.

Roy created Alexandria's first-ever diversity program, Diversity in Action, which he referenced in his first inaugural address. “Diversity works; inclusiveness makes money; community-based planning positively affects cities,” Roy said. As a result of his initiative, Roy has significantly increased the number of small, emerging, minority, and/or women-owned businesses that work with the city of Alexandria.

During his first term, Roy ordered a comprehensive audit of the Alexandria Police Department, which was conducted by the International Association of Chiefs of Police. Roy is a proponent of community policing and Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) strategies. Gregory Saville, co-founder of the International CPTED Association, wrote in an article titled "Uptapping Kinetic Energy: Civic Potential Under the Surface": "... I met one of those rare leaders committed to making that kinetic energy work - re-elected Mayor Jaques Roy. He absolutely got what SafeGrowth can mean in his community. He is also just the quality of civic leader to muster the community energy to make it happen."

On July 15, 2013, Roy was among nine mayors who established Social Media Giving Day to encourage citizens to support charities via social media.[3]

Roy is involved with the Louisiana Municipal Association. He co-chaired Louisiana’s first-ever World Cultural Economic Forum, which was spearheaded by then Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu, the mayor of New Orleans. Landrieu's sister, U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu, considers Roy among the nation's leading advocates for smart growth: "He's been one of the most outstanding mayors in our whole state and actually our whole country on this issue," she told KALB-TV in Alexandria.

Executive staff

T. W. Thompson- Chief Operating Officer

Joseph Page- Chief of Policy and Planning/Chief Diversity Officer

Bill Hess- Chief of Economic Development

Vacant- Deputy Chief Operating Officer/Police Commissioner/Director of Public Works

Notes

  1. "Rapides Parish candidates listed". Alexandria Town Talk. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  2. Richard P. Sharkey (January 6, 2016). "UPDATE: Mayor Jacques Roy may run for U.S. Senate seat". The Alexandria Town Talk. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  3. http://www.socialmediaexplorer.com/social-media-marketing/hey-put-your-twitter-where-your-mouth-is/
  1. ^ Louisiana Secretary of State Official Parish Election Results for Election Date: 11/07/06
  2. ^ Louisiana Secretary of State Election Results by Precinct-Official Results for Election Date: 11/07/06 Mayor, City of Alexandria
  3. ^ Louisiana Secretary of State Official Parish Election Results Results for Election Date: 9/30/06
  4. ^ Louisiana Secretary of State Election Results by Precinct-Official Results for Election Date: 9/30/06 Mayor City of Alexandria
  5. ^ JacquesRoyForMayor.com
  6. ^ Louisiana Secretary of State Parish Elected Officials: Rapides
  7. ^ Campaign Ads - What Do You Think? KALB-TV Video blog
  8. ^ Brewer, Roy and Johnson Interviews Election Night KALB-TV Video blog
  9. ^ Conversation with the Candidates - The Race for Mayor of Alexandria KALB-TV Video blog
  10. ^ http://www.jacquesroyformayor.com/sparc-and-economy SPARC and the Economy
  11. ^ http://www.thetowntalk.com/article/20101218/NEWS01/312180025/Alexandria-SPARC-summit-speaker-Leadership-infrastructure-investment-key-to-progress Alexandria SPARC summit speaker: Leadership, infrastructure investment key to progress
  12. ^ http://www.diversityinaction.org Diversity in Action
  13. ^ http://cenlamar.com/2007/01/15/mayor-roy-there-is-a-new-deposit-in-the-bank-of-justice/ Mayor Roy: There Is a New Deposit in the Bank of Justice
  14. ^ http://www.cityofalexandriala.com/documents/Executive_Order_JMR2009_2.pdf Jacques Roy Executive Order 2009-2
  15. ^ http://safe-growth.blogspot.com/2010/12/tapping-kinetic-energy-potential-under.html Untapping Kinetic Energy: Civic Potential Under the Surface
  16. ^ https://www.youtube.com/hBlG_ipIszM Landrieu Praises Alexandria Mayor's Vision, Leadership
Political offices
Preceded by
Ned Randolph
Mayor of Alexandria, Louisiana

Jacques Maurice Roy
2006

Succeeded by
Incumbent
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