Charles I. Ecker

Charles Isaac Ecker
5th County Executive of Howard County, Maryland
In office
December 1990  December 1998
Preceded by Elizabeth Bobo
Succeeded by James N. Robey
Personal details
Born (1928-12-08)December 8, 1928
Uniontown, Maryland
Died October 21, 2015(2015-10-21) (aged 86)
Political party Republican
Profession Councilman, Superintentdent
Website Howard County Government

Charles Issac Ecker (December 8, 1928 - October 21, 2015) was the former County Executive of Howard County, Maryland.[1][2]

Education and History

Born in Uniontown, Maryland, December 8, 1928. Attended Westminster High School. Worked in feed mills and Lehigh Portland Cement Co. as a laborer. Served in U.S. Navy, 1945-47. University of Maryland; Western Maryland College (now McDaniel College), B.A. (biology & physical education), 1951; University of North Carolina, M.E.D. (physical education), 1955, and Ph.D. (education administration). In 1956 he returned to a family bakery business and carnival prize supply business. In 1964 He worked for the Carroll County, Maryland school system after writing a paper on Gymnasium efficiency. He became the President, Association of School Business Officials, 1971-72. In 1984 he was a finalist for the Howard County Public School Superintendent, losing to Micheael E. Hickey. Delegate, Republican Party National Convention, 1996. Board of Directors, American Lung Association of Maryland, 1998-. Member, Executive Committee (at large), Maryland Council on Economic Education, 2003. Trustee Alumni Award, McDaniel College, 2010. Ecker was married with two children, eleven grandchildren.[3]

School Superintendent

Dr. Ecker served as Assistant Superintendent of schools.[4] After Dr. Ecker became Superintendent of Carroll County Schools. In 2006 He gained attention for banning the book The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things for language, starting a student petition against the book ban.[5]

Political activity

Dr. Ecker was the County Executive for Howard County from 1990-1998. Councilman Darrel Drown recommended Ecker for a candidate against incumbent Elizabeth Bobo. Ecker changed from Democratic to Republican party to run for the position.[6] Ecker approved the loan started before his term to renovate the historic Savage Mill.[7] Early in his term, he removed an 18 month building restriction prior to implementing an Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance.[8] In 1994, Ecker implemented the first use of self-insurance of the county to settle the case of the death of Carl Jonathan Bowie at Oakland Mills High School.[9]

In 1998 Ecker ran for Governor of Maryland against Ellen R. Sauerbrey.[6]

Member, Baltimore Regional Council of Governments, 1990–92; Governor's Task Force on School Construction, 1992–93; Baltimore Metropolitan Council, 1992-98 (chair, 1997–98). Board of Visitors, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland Medical System, 1992-. Assistant Superintendent of Schools, Howard County, 1963-67. Director of Business Affairs, Assistant Superintendent of Schools, Prince George's County, 1967-74. Assistant Superintendent, Deputy Superintendent of Schools, Howard County, 1974-89. Co-Chair, Economic and Workforce Development Task Force of Commission on the Future of Howard Community College, 1998-99. Co-Chair of the Ryland Homes Rouse sponsored Howard County Vision group.[10]

Superintendent of Schools, Carroll County, 2002-10 (interim superintendent of schools, 2000-02 & former assistant superintendent of schools).[11]

Member, Task Force to Study Public School Facilities, 2003; Governor's Commission on Quality Education, 2004-05 (vice-chair, subcommittee on global best-practices in education); Task Force on Comparable Testing Methods for the Maryland High School Assessments, 2004–06; Public School Labor Relations Board, 2011-.

Election history

Year Office Election Subject Party Votes % Opponent Party Votes % Opponent Party Votes %
1994 Howard County Executive General Charles I. Ecker[12] Republican 64% Susan B. Gray Democratic 36%  
1998 Maryland Governor Primary Charles I Ecker[13] Republican 17.2% Ellen Sauerbrey Republican 82.8%  

References

  1. Egbert Tellegen, Maarten Wolsink. Society and Its Environment: An Introduction. p. 143.
  2. "Charles I. Ecker, former Howard County executive, has died". The Baltimore Sun. 23 October 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  3. "Maryland Manual Online". Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  4. "HPSS board Minutes 1979" (PDF). Retrieved 17 June 2014.
  5. Gina Davis (7 December 2005). "Book banning spurs protest Carroll students seek to get novel returned to school libraries". The Baltimore Sun.
  6. 1 2 Scott Wilson (30 August 1998). "In Md., Stuck on Stumping; Charles Ecker's GOP Bid for Governor Is a Testament to His Will". The Washington Post.
  7. "Howard County Mill-to-Mall Developers Ask for Break on Loan". The Washington Post. 20 November 1997.
  8. "Howard County Abandons Growth Limits". The Washington Post. 34 January 1991. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. James M. Coram (9 August 1994). "Police brutality lawsuit cost county $30,000 before settlement reached". Baltimore Sun.
  10. Pinnie L Ross (21 May 1999). "Howard County Vision for the Future". Baltimore Afro-American.
  11. Charles Schelle (13 June 2010). "Ecker's final school board meeting is picture perfect Retiring superintendent praised by staff, officials". Carrol Eagle.
  12. "HOWARD COUNTY; Ecker Reelected; Republicans to Control Council". The Washington Post. 9 November 1994.
  13. "1998 Electioon Results". Retrieved 2 January 2014.
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