Louis Molnar
Louis Molnar | |
---|---|
Louis Molnar in front of Houston City Hall | |
Born |
Houston, Texas, US April 29, 1973 |
Nationality | triple Canadian-American-Hungarian Citizen |
Alma mater |
Trinity University University of London Western Governors University |
Occupation | Businessman, politician, author |
Louis Molnar (born April 29, 1973) is a businessman, politician, and author.
Biography
Early life
Louis Molnar was born in Houston, Texas. He is a first-generation American with triple Canadian-American-Hungarian citizenship through his Hungarian father, and is the second-born of three children to Alexander Louis Molnar and Rebecca (née de Morin). Molnar is a graduate of Galena Park High School, and obtained an MBA in international business strategy undergraduated in international relations from Trinity College, studying in London, England where he was proctored at the University of London. Molnar subsequently attended Western Governors University and studied accounting.
Business career
Louis Molnar started his first business at the age of nine employing neighborhood children for landscaping work benefiting the elderly in his community. This early experience in business led Molnar into business management. Molnar later founded, in 1992, operations consulting firm L I Molnar Consultants, which later became the partnership Kiraly Molnar Jansen.[1] By his mid-twenties Mr. Molnar's operations expertise had led to large projects around the world, including infrastructure development for the Republic of Chad.[2]
In a 2011 interview Louis Molnar called himself "a watchdog" of public spending, and has since said on many occasions he allies himself with individuals who seek efficiency in government. Both as a businessman and in his subsequent political career Molnar has placed a great deal of attention on urban planning, infrastructure, efficiency, environmental concerns, and economic development.[3] Molnar has worked with various municipal governments and organizations world-wide on these areas. In this same interview, Molnar spoke briefly about his tenure as the Chair of Law and Urban Planning at the Spencer School of Real Estate.[4]
Louis Molnar served as the Chair of the Houston Economic Summit's 11th biennial anniversary meeting of global leaders,[5] that year titled "20/20". At the Summit Mr. Molnar addressed logistics and infrastructure development of the inner city, which he identified as a passion of his. In 2010 Louis Molnar was presented with the Economist of the Year Award by the Houston Economic Summit.
In 2008 Louis Molnar was inducted into Strathmore's Who's Who in American Business[6] and in 2011 received a U.S. Congressional Proclamation noting his contributions in business and politics.[7]
Louis Molnar was identified in 2010 as the Compliance Officer of investment firm Carlyle Ultra during a brief lawsuit by the City of Houston alleging the firm's chief executive officer attempted to influence the outcome of permitting for a restaurant that was part of the Carlyle portfolio. Mr. Molnar resigned as Compliance Officer, the restaurant closed its doors, and the charges were subsequently dropped.[8]
In 2014 the Dallas Business Journal named Molnar in their list of "People on the Move".[9]
Political career
Louis Molnar served two terms as Chair (D) of Precinct 139 in Harris County, Texas from 2009–2012 and later one term as Presiding Judge,[10] with his final term in public office ending on August 1, 2013.
Mr. Molnar also served from 2009–2013 on the Harris County Executive Committee and as Chair of the Finance Committee from 2010–2012.[11]
Louis Molnar was also the first elected official to sign a nationwide dissenting MoveOn.org petition against the U.S. Supreme Court's 2010 decision in Citizens United v. FEC which gives corporations the same First Amendment rights as individuals.[12] After signing the petition he noted, "There are those, like me [a businessman], who do well for the common good with what we're provided," Molnar said. "But that's not what these tools [corporate funds] are meant for."
In 2011 Mr. Molnar was a candidate for Houston city council at-large position 4.[13] It was during this race that Louis Molnar wrote and recorded a song called "Erin", which he used as a fundraiser for his campaign under the name "P4" (for Precinct 4). The song was an homage to Erin Stevenson, a singer he was rumored as dating at the time.[14]
Louis Molnar was listed at #7 in a LinkedIn Top Elected Officials roster.[15]
Mr. Molnar has continued to provide political commentary on CNN as an iReporter and through social media.[16]
Advocacy
After being diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome (a mild form of autism) in 2013 at the age of 40, Louis Molnar found that there were a lot of misconceptions about autism, saying in an OutSmart Magazine article "being the consummate researcher, I learned that the perception of autism was one of disability and inability. That certainly didn’t describe me, so I set out to do what I could to help with that perception: I came out as an autistic in an iReport on CNN, and more recently founded Twainbow to bring awareness to this segment of the LGBT+ community." [17] He has written a college-level presentation to educators and mentors about students on the autism spectrum,[18] and speaks about autism in various media, including articles, radio and television, and social media.
Personal life
Louis Molnar has been an actor in film, television, stage, radio and voice-over work.[19] According to Molnar, he has been creating art since his childhood, and had his first break-out exhibit of sketches, paintings, and photographic samples in June 2016 at the prestigious OCAD Grand Gallery alongside collaborative works featuring artist and arts professor Cheryl Pope. During this presentation he mentioned creating "hundreds of pieces" that he will exhibit. Molnar has mentioned being blinded when he was "about 6 or 7" as a defining moment for him.[20]
In 2013 Mr. Molnar was diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome, a mild form of autism. He wrote about his experiences in a CNN iReport and a LinkedIn Pulse article.[21] In 2015 he founded Twainbow, a global not-for-profit dedicated to advocacy for those who are both LGBT+ and autistic, where he serves as its chairman.[22]
Published works
Books
• Operations 101: A Primer[23]
• Property Management in Texas: Law and Ethics, Principles and Practices[24]
White papers
• "Benefits of Having a Real Estate License in Property Management"[25]
• "A Step Beyond AI: Artificial Philosophy"[26]
• "Environmental Sampling and Analysis: developing the infrastructure of Chad"[27]
Research papers
• "Plant Neurological Responses and Learning"[28]
Presentations
• "Autism in Education: A Resource for the Student Mentor" [29]
References
- ↑ "Louis Molnar public search", Radaris.com, (retrieved June 13, 2013)
- ↑ "Chad infrastructure development", ResearchGate, (retrieved February 1, 2013).
- ↑ "LWV educational guide", LWV candidate positions (retrieved September 30, 2012).
- ↑ "Louis Molnar interview", Off the Kuff blog, (retrieved August 30, 2014).
- ↑ "Houston leaders ponder city's economic growth at Rice summit", The Houston Chronicle, September 15, 2012.
- ↑ "Louis Molnar Interview", ZoomInfo: Louis Molnar, (retrieved August 30, 2014)
- ↑ "Louis Molnar: Chief Operations Officer", Urban SW Capital: leadership team, (retrieved June 30, 2014)
- ↑ "Carlyle Ultra profile", Carlyle Ultra Inc., (retrieved March 11, 2016)
- ↑ "Louis Molnar | People on the Move", Dallas Business Journal, (retrieved March 30, 2014).
- ↑ "List of Precinct Chairs", Harris County Democratic Party website, (retrieved April 3, 2012).
- ↑ "Louis Molnar announces campaign", GuidryNews.com, (retrieved November 15, 2013).
- ↑ "MoveOn.org Throws a Little Protest in Houston", Houston Press, (retrieved July 1, 2011).
- ↑ "Louis Molnar as Candidate for City Council", Campos Communications blog, (retrieved May 3, 2014).
- ↑ "Erin", ZoomInfo, (retrieved May 3, 2014).
- ↑ "LinkedIn Top Elected Officials", LinkedIn, (retrieved March 11, 2016).
- ↑ "CNN Political Ticker Blog", CNN Politics, (retrieved February 15, 2013).
- ↑ "A Tale of Two Closets: Twainbow Aids the LGBT+ and Autistic Communities", OutSmart Magazine, (retrieved August 17, 2016).
- ↑ "Autism in Education: A Resource for the Student Mentor", SlideShare, (retrieved November 8, 2016).
- ↑ "Louis Molnar in Finding Serenity", OutSmart Magazine, (retrieved November 17, 2015).
- ↑ "15 June 2016 at OCAD's Grand Gallery visual arts slam.", YouTube presentation at OCAD, (retrieved June 23, 2016).
- ↑ "My Story: Asperger Syndrome in Leadership", LinkedIn Pulse, (retrieved August 17, 2016).
- ↑ "A Tale of Two Closets: Twainbow Aids the LGBT+ and Autistic Communities", OutSmart Magazine, (retrieved August 17, 2016).
- ↑ "Operations 101: A Primer", Amazon.com website, (retrieved May 2, 2014).
- ↑ "Property Management in Texas: Law and Ethics, Principles and Practices", Amazon.com website, (retrieved May 2, 2014).
- ↑ "thesis: Benefits of Having a Real Estate License in Property Management", ResearchGate, (retrieved May 2, 2014).
- ↑ "article: Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications", ResearchGate, (retrieved November 25, 2014).
- ↑ "conference paper: Africa Energy Information Forum, 2001", ResearchGate, (retrieved March 18, 2007).
- ↑ ", ResearchGate DOI: 10.13140/2.1.4677.3442 , (retrieved February 15, 2013).
- ↑ "Autism in Education", ResearchGate website DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.30585.26728 , (retrieved April 6, 2016).
External links
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