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Nicholas "Nick" C. Wasicsko (; May 13, 1959 – October 29, 1993) was an American politician from New York and the youngest-ever mayor of Yonkers, New York. As mayor he fought for the desegregation of public housing. ==Biography== Wasicsko was born May 13, 1959, in Yonkers to Nicholas and Anne Slota Wasicsko.〔 He attended public schools in Yonkers.〔James Feron, (Upset Puts a Young Democrat in the Mayor's Seat in Yonkers ), ''New York Times'' (November 5, 1987).〕 He graduated from Gorton High School in Yonkers in 1977.〔 Wasicsko graduated from Manhattan College in 1981 with a degree in government and served for a year as a county police officer.〔〔 His father died in 1985.〔 In 1986 and 1987 he served as 7th Ward councilman while simultaneously attending New York Law School, from which he was graduated in 1987, the same year he was elected mayor.〔〔 He was admitted to the bar in New York and Connecticut.〔 On Nov. 3, 1987, at the age of 28, Wasicsko defeated six-term Republican-Conservative incumbent Angelo R. Martinelli, age 60, to become the youngest-ever mayor of Yonkers, and the youngest mayor in a major American city. Wasicsko won by a margin of 1,466 votes of the 42,700 cast.〔 The major issue in the 1988 election was the court-ordered integration of public housing in Yonkers.〔 As a candidate, Wasicsko advocated for "for resisting the court-ordered integration by legal appeals."〔 Martinelli and Wasicsko "had not taken dramatically opposite positions on the integration dispute, but ... Mayor Martinelli had become identified with much of the emotion surrounding the issue," contributing to his loss.〔 As mayor, Wasicsko changed his position when the city's lawyers told him that the case was hopeless. He did so not because he thought it was right, but because he had no choice but to comply.〔 After his death, his executive aide at the time said that "He wasn't pro-desegregation, he was pro-compliance."〔 Wasicsko waged an aggressive battle to set in motion a housing desegregation plan for the city. Although he received numerous accolades for his position, including a runner-up citation for the 1991 John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award,〔 opposition was equally strong, and he received death threats.〔 The city council initially signed a consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice and the Yonkers NAACP on a housing plan, but in August 1988, on a procedural vote, the city council voted 4 to 3 to rescind its support for the binding consent decree. A federal court proposed fines to the city of Yonkers that would have risen within weeks to $1 million per day, and fines for the individual Yonkers city council members who opposed the integration plan of $500 per day, and would have jailed them within a month. On September 9, 1988, with the fines mounting, city services being curtailed, and 630 city employees about to be laid off, the city council relented, and the housing integration plan was approved.〔 As a result of the controversy, Wasicsko lost a bid for re-election as mayor in 1989.〔 Once out of office, Wasicsko practiced law, taught at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and hosted a local radio talk show.〔 He returned to elected office in 1991 as 2nd District councilman. He was named Democratic minority leader. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Nick Wasicsko」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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