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Heather Edelson
American politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Heather Edelson (/ˈɛdəlsən/ ED-əl-sən; born April 4, 1981) is an American politician who is a member of the Hennepin County Board of Commissioners. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 2019 to 2024, representing District 50A in the western Twin Cities metropolitan area, which includes Edina and parts of Hennepin County.[1][2] In 2024, she was elected to the Hennepin County Board of Commissioners from the 6th district.[3]
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Early life, education, and career
Edelson was raised in north Minneapolis and attended Columbia Heights High School. She attended Hamline University for her undergraduate studies and the University of Minnesota for her master's degree in social work.[1]
Edelson has worked as a mental health therapist and served as a guardian ad litem in Hennepin County. She served on the Edina Public School Board Special Education Advisory Council and the Edina Race and Equity Working Group. Edelson also served as Edina's Human Rights and Relations Commissioner.[1][4]
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Minnesota House of Representatives
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Edelson was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 2018 and has been reelected every two years since. She first ran for the DFL party endorsement in 2016, losing to Ron Erhardt, an 11-term incumbent who switched from the Republican to the DFL party in 2010.[5][6] Erhardt lost the general election, and Edelson won the DFL endorsement in 2018, going on to defeat one-term Republican incumbent Dario Anselmo.[1][7][8]
Edelson served as vice chair of the Ways and Means Committee, and sat on the Education Finance, Environment and Natural Resources Finance and Policy, Public Safety and Finance and Human Services Policy Committees. In 2021–22, she served as an assistant majority leader.[1]
Edelson resigned from the Minnesota House in May 2024, after being elected to the Hennepin County Board of Commissioners.[9]
Public policy
Public Health and Human Services
Edelson has advocated funding school-linked mental health programs.[10] She carried legislation that would raise the legal age of tobacco, e-cigarettes and vaping devices from 18 to 21, and supported efforts to raise youth awareness of the harms of vaping.[11][12][13] She supported Governor Tim Walz's proposal to raise taxes on nicotine and tobacco products, saying increased revenue could go to prevention efforts.[14]
Edelson worked with Representative Tony Albright on bipartisan legislation to fix the competency restoration program, adopting recommendations from a task force dealing with gaps in the system for those found incompetent to stand trial.[15] She supported legislation giving incarceration alternatives for women who would otherwise be separated from their children.[16]
Public Safety
Edelson supported legislation to expedite police training to address workforce shortages, and has supported various measures to address increasing car theft in the Twin Cities metropolitan area.[17][18] After a rise in antisemitic attacks, she sponsored legislation to give grants to religious groups to increase security.[19] She has spoken in support of assisted-suicide legislation.[20]
Read Act / Education
Edelson, who has dyslexia, worked on literacy policy and investments for years in the legislature and was the primary author of the Read Act in the House of Representatives (Erin Maye Quade led the bill in the Senate).
Taxes
Edelson was the only DFL representative to vote against the 2019 House tax bill.[21]
Cannabis
After concerns were raised over price and accessibility, Edelson authored a bill that would add the whole cannabis flower to the state's medical cannabis program, saying it would decrease reliance on painkillers and opioids.[22][23] She also drafted a bill that would allow medical cannabis and CBD oil in schools for students with a doctor's approval.[24][25]
In 2022, Edelson sponsored legislation to legalize food and beverages, including gummies, containing THC derived from hemp.[26][27] The legislation was enacted in part to address previously unregulated delta-8 THC products already being sold in Minnesota that were targeting youth by being packaged like candy.[28] It is unclear whether Minnesota Senate leaders understood that this legislation would legalize products with delta-9 THC.[29] Edelson said she wrote the legislation to strengthen consumer protections in an emerging market, and that she would write bills to add additional requirements and work with local governments to help them regulate THC edibles.[29][30][31]
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Hennepin County Board
Edelson won a May 14, 2024, special election for an open seat on the Hennepin County Board of Commissioners, defeating Marisa Simonetti with 54% of the approximately 11,300 votes cast.[3]
On November 5, 2024, Edelson was reelected to the Hennepin County Board of Commissioners with 67.56% of the vote in District 6. Hennepin County Commissioners serve four-year terms. District 6 contains 16 cities: Edina, Greenwood, Hopkins, Minnetonka, Eden Prairie, Orono, Excelsior, Deephaven, Long Lake, Tonka Bay, Spring Park, Minnetonka Beach, Mound, Shorewood, and Wayzata.
Electoral history
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Personal life
Edelson and her husband, Brett, live in Edina with their three children.
References
External links
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