Misplaced Pages

Félix W. Ortiz

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Félix Ortiz) Puerto Rican politician
Félix W. Ortiz
Assistant Speaker of the New York State Assembly
In office
February 9, 2015 – 2021
Member of the New York State Assembly
from the 51st district
In office
January 1, 1995 – January 1, 2021
Preceded byJavier A. Nieves
Succeeded byMarcela Mitaynes
Personal details
Born (1959-11-02) November 2, 1959 (age 65)
Salinas, Puerto Rico
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materBoricua College (BS)
New York University (MPA)
WebsiteOfficial website
Military service
AllegianceUnited States of America
Branch/service United States Army
Years of service1986–1988

Félix W. Ortiz (born November 2, 1959, in Puerto Rico) is an American politician, formerly representing New York's 51st Assembly District. He is a Democrat and served as Assistant Speaker of the New York State Assembly.

Early life

Ortiz moved from Puerto Rico to New York City in 1980, becoming the first member of his family to move to the continental United States. He attended Boricua College, graduating in 1983 with a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration. He received a master's degree in public administration from New York University in 1986. Ortiz then joined the United States Army, serving from 1986 to 1988.

Children

  • Felix W. Ortiz III (Technology Entrepreneur & US Army Veteran)
  • Felix A. Ortiz
  • Daniel F. Ortiz Sr

Political career

Ortiz was first elected to the assembly in November 1994, defeating the incumbent Javier A. Nieves.

In 2000, Assemblyman Ortiz achieved passage of the nation's first law to ban the use of hand held cell phones while driving a motor vehicle. In 2001, he introduced a bill that would lower the drinking age to 18; he cited unfairness and difficulty with enforcement as his motivations.

In March 2010, Ortiz introduced a bill, co-sponsored with assembly members Margaret Markey and N. Nick Perry, that would prohibit the use of all forms of salt in the preparation and cooking of all restaurant food. Ortiz said he was inspired to introduce the bill after his father suffered a heart attack due to high blood pressure. The bill quickly gained media attention, and prompted negative comments from New York chefs such as Tom Colicchio, who said a salt ban would mean "no one would come here anymore," and New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, who called the bill "ridiculous". The proposal also earned Ortiz the title of "Nanny of the Month" for March 2010 from Reason.tv. Responding to the outcry, Ortiz issued a statement saying that his intention was to have the bill only outlaw the use of salt "as an additive", not as "a functional component of the recipe".

Ortiz has supported various progressive public policies. He has passed legislation in areas of worker rights and safety, obesity prevention, banning the use of cell phones while driving and advocating for increases in organ donations.

Ortiz, who has worked with First Lady Michelle Obama on obesity prevention measures, also introduced legislation mandating that fast food restaurants post calories counts for food items on their menus. The calorie counts are now standard practice at fast food eateries.

Ortiz has served as chair of several committees and legislative task forces including Cities, Veterans Affairs, Mental Health, Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Food, Farm and Nutrition and the Legislature's Puerto Rican and Hispanic Task Force.

He has also served on the executive committee of the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) and serves as co-chair of the NCSL Task Force on International Relations. He is the former chairman of the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators (NHCSL) and is a member of the Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Caucus. In February 2015 Assemblyman Ortiz was appointed Assistant Speaker of the New York State Assembly; he is the first Hispanic to hold the position.

Ortiz ran for the 38th district of the New York City Council in 2017, but lost in the primary to incumbent Carlos Menchaca.

On July 16, 2020, Ortiz conceded defeat against Democratic Socialist and political newcomer Marcela Mitaynes after absentee ballots from the June 23 Democratic primary had been counted. Once the votes were certified, Ortiz had lost by 280 votes in a 4-way primary.

References

  1. ^ Katinas, Paula (February 9, 2015). "Ortiz named assistant assembly speaker". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Retrieved August 23, 2015.
  2. Felix Ortiz New York State Assembly biography
  3. Lovett, Kenneth. "LET KIDS START DRINKING AT 18: BROOKLYN POL." The New York Post, May 1, 2006.
  4. New York State Assembly bill A10129
  5. Assemblyman seeking to ban all salt in restaurant cooking, Steve Barnes, Times Union blog, March 10, 2010
  6. Brooklyn Dem Felix Ortiz wants to ban use of salt in New York restaurants, Samuel Goldsmith, New York Daily News, March 11, 2010
  7. ^ Reports Of Salt's Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated Archived 2010-03-15 at the Wayback Machine, Elizabeth Benjamin, The Daily Politics, March 12, 2010
  8. Reason.tv: Nanny of the Month for March 2010 is Salt-Banning NY State Rep. Felix Ortiz!, Reason, April 1, 2010
  9. Slattery, Denis (16 July 2020). "Longtime Brooklyn Assemblyman Felix Ortiz concedes primary to Democratic Socialist Marcela Mitaynes". New York Daily News. Retrieved 16 July 2020.

External links

New York State Assembly
Preceded byJavier A. Nieves New York State Assembly, 51st District
1995–2021
Succeeded byMarcela Mitaynes
Members of the New York State Assembly
205th New York Legislature (2023–2024)
Speaker of the Assembly
Carl Heastie (D)
Speaker pro tempore
Jeffrion Aubry (D)
Majority Leader
Crystal Peoples-Stokes (D)
Minority Leader
Will Barclay (R)
  1. Fred Thiele (D)
  2. Jodi Giglio (R)
  3. Joe DeStefano (R)
  4. Ed Flood (R)
  5. Douglas M. Smith (R)
  6. Philip Ramos (D)
  7. Jarett Gandolfo (R)
  8. Michael J. Fitzpatrick (R)
  9. Michael Durso (R)
  10. Steve Stern (D)
  11. Kimberly Jean-Pierre (D)
  12. Keith P. Brown (R)
  13. Charles D. Lavine (D)
  14. David McDonough (R)
  15. Jake Blumencranz (R)
  16. Gina Sillitti (D)
  17. John Mikulin (R)
  18. Taylor Darling (D)
  19. Ed Ra (R)
  20. Ari Brown (R)
  21. Brian F. Curran (R)
  22. Michaelle C. Solages (D)
  23. Stacey Pheffer Amato (D)
  24. David Weprin (D)
  25. Nily Rozic (D)
  26. Edward Braunstein (D)
  27. Sam Berger (D)
  28. Andrew Hevesi (D)
  29. Alicia Hyndman (D)
  30. Steven Raga (D)
  31. Khaleel Anderson (D)
  32. Vivian E. Cook (D)
  33. Clyde Vanel (D)
  34. Jessica González-Rojas (D)
  35. Jeffrion Aubry (D)
  36. Zohran Mamdani (D)
  37. Juan Ardila (D)
  38. Jenifer Rajkumar (D)
  39. Catalina Cruz (D)
  40. Ron Kim (D)
  41. Helene Weinstein (D)
  42. Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn (D)
  43. Brian Cunningham (D)
  44. Robert Carroll (D)
  45. Michael Novakhov (R)
  46. Alec Brook-Krasny (R)
  47. William Colton (D)
  48. Simcha Eichenstein (D)
  49. Lester Chang (R)
  50. Emily Gallagher (D)
  51. Marcela Mitaynes (D)
  52. Jo Anne Simon (D)
  53. Maritza Davila (D)
  54. Erik Martin Dilan (D)
  55. Latrice Walker (D)
  56. Stefani Zinerman (D)
  57. Phara Souffrant Forrest (D)
  58. Monique Chandler-Waterman (D)
  59. Jaime Williams (D)
  60. Nikki Lucas (D)
  61. Charles Fall (D)
  62. Michael Reilly (R)
  63. Sam Pirozzolo (R)
  64. Michael Tannousis (R)
  65. Grace Lee (D)
  66. Deborah J. Glick (D)
  67. Linda Rosenthal (D)
  68. Eddie Gibbs (D)
  69. Daniel J. O'Donnell (D)
  70. Inez Dickens (D)
  71. Al Taylor (D)
  72. Manny De Los Santos (D)
  73. Alex Bores (D)
  74. Harvey Epstein (D)
  75. Tony Simone (D)
  76. Rebecca Seawright (D)
  77. Landon Dais (D)
  78. George Alvarez (D)
  79. Chantel Jackson (D)
  80. John Zaccaro Jr. (D)
  81. Jeffrey Dinowitz (D)
  82. Michael Benedetto (D)
  83. Carl Heastie (D)
  84. Amanda Septimo (D)
  85. Vacant
  86. Yudelka Tapia (D)
  87. Karines Reyes (D)
  88. Amy Paulin (D)
  89. J. Gary Pretlow (D)
  90. Nader Sayegh (D)
  91. Steven Otis (D)
  92. MaryJane Shimsky (D)
  93. Chris Burdick (D)
  94. Matt Slater (R)
  95. Dana Levenberg (D)
  96. Vacant
  97. John W. McGowan (R)
  98. Karl A. Brabenec (R)
  99. Chris Eachus (D)
  100. Aileen Gunther (D)
  101. Brian Maher (R)
  102. Christopher Tague (R)
  103. Sarahana Shrestha (D)
  104. Jonathan Jacobson (D)
  105. Anil Beephan Jr. (R)
  106. Didi Barrett (D)
  107. Scott Bendett (R)
  108. John T. McDonald III (D)
  109. Patricia Fahy (D)
  110. Phil Steck (D)
  111. Angelo Santabarbara (D)
  112. Mary Beth Walsh (R)
  113. Carrie Woerner (D)
  114. Matthew Simpson (R)
  115. Billy Jones (D)
  116. Scott Gray (R)
  117. Ken Blankenbush (R)
  118. Robert Smullen (R)
  119. Marianne Buttenschon (D)
  120. William A. Barclay (R)
  121. Joe Angelino (R)
  122. Brian Miller (R)
  123. Donna Lupardo (D)
  124. Christopher S. Friend (R)
  125. Anna Kelles (D)
  126. John Lemondes Jr. (R)
  127. Albert A. Stirpe Jr. (D)
  128. Pamela Hunter (D)
  129. Bill Magnarelli (D)
  130. Brian Manktelow (R)
  131. Jeff Gallahan (R)
  132. Phil Palmesano (R)
  133. Marjorie Byrnes (R)
  134. Josh Jensen (R)
  135. Jennifer Lunsford (D)
  136. Sarah Clark (D)
  137. Demond Meeks (D)
  138. Harry Bronson (D)
  139. Stephen Hawley (R)
  140. William Conrad III (D)
  141. Crystal Peoples-Stokes (D)
  142. Patrick B. Burke (D)
  143. Monica P. Wallace (D)
  144. Michael Norris (R)
  145. Angelo Morinello (R)
  146. Karen McMahon (D)
  147. David DiPietro (R)
  148. Joseph Giglio (R)
  149. Jonathan Rivera (D)
  150. Andy Goodell (R)
Majority caucus (100)
Democratic (100)
Minority caucus (48)
Republican (48)
Other (2)
▌Vacant (2)
Categories: