Walter W. Austin | |
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20th Mayor of San Diego | |
In office May 4, 1931 – May 2, 1932 |
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Preceded by | Harry C. Clark |
Succeeded by | John F. Forward, Jr. |
Personal details | |
Born | September 22, 1880 Kendall, Wisconsin |
Died | July 12, 1951 (aged 70) Idyllwild, California |
Political party | Republican |
Walter Wolcott Austin (September 22, 1880 – July 12, 1951) was an American Republican politician from California.
Austin was born 1880 in Kendall, Wisconsin, and moved to Chicago, Illinois with his family, where he was a newsboy at age 7, and to Aberdeen, South Dakota. In 1912, he moved to San Diego, California.
In San Diego Austin started out as employee of the H. D. Field Safe Co., which he later purchased half-interest then full interest and renamed it Austin Safe and Desk Company. Austin sold the business, and the company later specialised in office furniture then interior design. Austin entered the real estate and insurance business around 1931, and vice president of Fraser Mortgage Co.
Austin was elected mayor of San Diego in 1931 as a young reformer. The main issue was the $8.5 million spent for water projects, such as the Lake Hodges Dam, with little to show for it. Austin served as mayor until 1932. In 1940, he supported construction of San Vicente Dam and extending the water system.
While mayor, the city sold unemployment bonds to increase jobs locally. Funds were spent on projects such as building pedestrian tunnels near schools. Austin also backed establishing a school traffic patrol system.
Austin was the first mayor under a new city charter, approved in the same election that elected him mayor. The charter specified a "weak mayor" or council-manager government. A City Manager appointed by the City Council managed day-to-day business and the mayor presided over the Council meetings, with no veto power. The motivation was to help stem police corruption, under the idea that an appointed city manager is less subject to bribes and campaign contribution favors than an elected strong Mayor. Council-manager government originated with the Progressive movement in Staunton, Virginia. This form survived until 2006 when it was replaced by a strong mayor city government.