Mike Thurmond | |
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Chief Executive Officer of DeKalb County, Georgia | |
Assumed office January 1, 2017 |
|
Preceded by | Burrell Ellis |
Georgia Labor Commissioner | |
In office January 11, 1999 – January 10, 2011 |
|
Governor |
Roy Barnes (1999-2003) Sonny Perdue (2003-2011) |
Preceded by | Marti Fullerton |
Succeeded by | Mark Butler |
Personal details | |
Born |
Athens, Georgia, U.S. |
January 5, 1953
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Zola Thurmond |
Children | Mikayla Thurmond |
Alma mater |
Paine College University of South Carolina, Columbia |
Profession | Politician, lecturer, author |
Michael L. Thurmond (born 5 January 1953) is the Chief Executive Officer of DeKalb County, Georgia. He has distinguished himself as an attorney, author, lecturer and public servant. Thurmond served as the interim superintendent of the DeKalb County School District, the third largest district in the state of Georgia from 2013-2015. The district serves nearly 99,000 students with over 13,400 employees. Thurmond was the Democratic Party's nominee for United States Senate in 2010. Prior to becoming DeKalb's Schools Superintendent, Thurmond was an attorney at Butler Wooten Cheeley & Peak LLP, a nationally known civil trial practice that has four times set the record civil jury verdict in the State of Georgia and also obtained for its client the largest collected judgment in U.S. history.
Thurmond was raised as a sharecropper's son in Clarke County, Georgia. He graduated Cum Laude with a B.A. in Philosophy and Religion from Paine College and later earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of South Carolina School of Law. He also completed the Political Executives program at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
In 1986, he became the first African-American elected to the Georgia General Assembly from Clarke County since Reconstruction. During his legislative tenure, Thurmond authored major legislation that has provided more than $250 million in tax relief to Georgia's senior citizens and working families.
Following his legislative service, Thurmond was called upon to lead the state Division of Family and Children's Services and direct Georgia's historic transition from welfare to work. He created the innovative Work First program, which helped over 90,000 welfare-dependent Georgia families move from dependence into the workforce.
In 1997, Thurmond became a distinguished lecturer at the University of Georgia's Carl Vinson Institute of Government. The following year in November, he was elected Georgia Labor Commissioner, becoming the first non-incumbent African American to be elected to statewide office in Georgia.