Kenny Alexander

Kenneth Cooper Alexander (born October 17, 1966) is an American politician currently serving as mayor of Norfolk, Virginia.

Alexander also serves as chancellor for twenty career colleges which includes: (i) Centura College; a healthcare, business, and skilled trade programs school with four campuses in Hampton Roads and one in Richmond, Virginia; (ii) Aviation Institute of Maintenance (AIM), founded in Norfolk and now operating fourteen campuses nationwide and growing to become the largest system of aviation maintenance schools in the country; (iii) Tidewater Tech, a trade school located in Norfolk which offers welding and automotive mechanics programs and is currently the largest supplier of certified welders and HVAC technicians in the Commonwealth. The growth and work of this trade schools college system led to the establishment of the only Wind Turbine Technician program in the Mid-Atlantic, currently being offered at the Centura Norfolk Campus.

Alexander also serves as president of Metropolitan Funeral Services.

A native of Norfolk, he served in the Virginia House of Delegates from 2002 to 2012, representing the 89th District in Norfolk. He served in the Senate of Virginia from 2012 to 2016, representing the 5th District in Norfolk and Chesapeake.

Alexander has been a guest columnist in Virginia newspapers, lecturer on political science and leadership studies, and he is the author of Persistence: Evelyn Butts and the African American Quest for Full Citizenship and Self-Determination (2021).

Early life and education
Born in 1966, Alexander grew up in the neighborhoods of Berkley and South Norfolk, at the crossroads of the cities of Norfolk and Chesapeake. He attended Lake Taylor High School where he was drum major of the marching band and served as parliamentarian of the student body, graduating in 1985.

Alexander next earned an associate degree in Mortuary Science from Brightpoint Community College, formerly John Tyler Community College, and a bachelor's degree in Political Science from Old Dominion University. He completed a master's degree in Diplomacy from Norwich University. In 2019, Alexander earned a PhD in Leadership and Change from Antioch University.

Career
Alexander was a political science instructor at Tidewater Community College. In May 2002, Governor Mark Warner appointed the 89th District incumbent, Jerrauld Jones, to be director of the Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice. Alexander won the Democratic nomination, and won the special election on August 6 with 72% of the vote in a three-way race.

Alexander was unopposed in two of his three succeeding elections.<!--Unsourced; please only restore with reliable sources Alexander's decade of service in the General Assembly has been distinguished by legislative accomplishments and constituent service. As a freshman legislator, Alexander gained passage of half of the bills that he introduced in his first session of the General Assembly by finding common ground among his colleagues. He gained health care legislation to address postpartum depression and the provision of official IDs for recently released individuals of Virginia's behavioral health facilities.

During the 2004 Session, Alexander passed legislation extending ballot access to young voters who at 17 were not eligible to vote in primaries, though they would have reached 18 by election day in November. Until Alexander's efforts, this class of young voters were denied the ability to participate in primary elections and other nominating contests. Alexander's profile grew during the 2005 Session. In addition, to ushering important changes to Norfolk's charter, he passed a series of bills concerning the well-being of youth. This included legislation that allowed those grandparents who serve as sole guardians to have access to their grandchildren's birth certificates, and required daycare centers to notify parents in the event of a child's injury.

Before 2005, the state did not require plans outlining the duties, duration of stay, and terms of foster care from foster care providers. In addition, interviews with prospective foster parents and inspection of their homes was optional. Alexander introduced legislation to require surveys of the child's pending foster environment, as well as a plan for the temporary care to be created by both the prospective foster parent and foster child (with assistance by the child's state social service representative).

In the 2006 and 2007 sessions, Alexander introduced a series of success bills ensuring truth in labeling for Kosher and Halal foods, mitigating the impact of lead poisoning, and providing citizens with the right of public hearings as a part of the approval process for pending actions by housing authorities. He also championed legislation that provided extended medical coverage to injured or ill young adult students who were forced to take a leave of absence from their studies. Recognizing the high incidence of hypertension among public safety workers, Alexander authored legislation that allowed heart disease to be covered under worker's compensation for workers at Norfolk Airport.

The growing number of Virginia's senior citizens and their rapidly increasing need for services prompted Alexander to author legislation in 2008 that required the Department of Aging to develop and submit four-year plans. In 2009, he ushered a proposed constitutional amendment to automatically restore voting rights to former non-violent felons who have served their sentences, through the full House Committee on Privileges and Elections. That same year, he also gained relief for Arthur Lee Whitfield, a Norfolk resident who was wrongly convicted of a violent crime. Alexander followed his successes in restorative justice by serving as patron for legislation that required the automatic issue of a writ of innocence in 2010 for individuals found to have been wrongly convicted.

Alexander has fought for additional government disclosure and transparency in recent sessions. He gained legislation that forced candidates and campaign committees to provide full disclosure for campaign-related phone calls. In 2011, Alexander also passed consumer rights legislation that prohibited phone service providers from adding services without the consent of customers; another required school systems to be more accountable in addressing student absenteeism and truancy. In 2012, Alexander forced the disclosure of the Department of Transportation's plans for proposed tolls on Norfolk's Downtown Tunnel, Midtown Tunnel, and Martin Luther King Freeway (MLK) Extension. -->On December 15, 2008, Alexander was chosen as chair of the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus. In a special election on September 4, 2012, Alexander was elected to the Virginia Senate representing the 5th Senate District; he succeeded Senator Yvonne Miller, who died in office.

On May 3, 2016 he was elected mayor of Norfolk, Virginia with 51.6% of the vote in a three-way race. He is the city's first black mayor.

He has served as President of the Beacon Light Civic League, vice-chair of Norfolk's Planning Commission, and member of Norfolk's Human Service Commission and Economic Development Authority. He helped found the Norfolk Chesapeake Portsmouth Community Development Federal Credit Union, a financial institution that provides access to low-cost financial services. Alexander was instrumental in developing new single-family homes in Berkley and a shopping center that attracted a major supermarket chain.