Mayor
Donald T. Cunningham Jr.

Don Cunningham
was sworn in as the mayor of Bethlehem, the seventh largest city in
Pennsylvania, on January 5, 1998.
Cunningham has
received national recognition for his work in stabilizing Bethlehem's
municipal finances and promoting an economic renaissance in a city hard
hit by the loss of 20,000 steel industry jobs in the past two decades.
In his first 18 months in office, Cunningham cut the city's total debt
by $30 million, saved nearly $5 million by rebidding and renegotiating
city contracts, privatized the money-losing municipal landfill, reduced
the city workforce by two percent through attrition, and proposed a
balanced budget that increased total spending by less than one percent.
Cunningham has
also served as a champion of the economic redevelopment of Bethlehem,
supporting and securing projects that will bring more than 500 new jobs
to the city's business district. He has also served as a national spokesperson
and supporter of the proposed redevelopment of Bethlehem Steel land
that could bring $1 billion in investment and up to 10,000 jobs to the
city.
In concert with
these fiscally conservative, pro-growth policies, Cunningham has successfully
reinvigorated the city's provision of basic services. He started Bethlehem's
first customer service/community relations group in the mayor's office,
expanded community policing programs, reorganized the public works department
to promote efficiency, and expanded the city's street paving program.
His Strategic Neighborhood Action Plan, designed to strengthen Bethlehem's
neighborhoods, received a 1999 national "City Livability" award from
the U.S. Conference of Mayors.
Before winning
election as the youngest mayor in Bethlehem's history, Cunningham, 33,
served as a senior information specialist at Pennsylvania Power & Light
Co., a Fortune 500 utility company in Allentown, Pa. He served previously
as media relations director of Moravian College in Bethlehem and as
an award-winning newspaper writer for the Philadelphia Inquirer and
the former Bethlehem Globe-Times.
The son of a steelworker
and grandson of Bethlehem tradesmen, Cunningham graduated with honors
from Villanova University with a master's degree in political science.
He also has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Shippensburg University.
Cunningham was
a member of Bethlehem City Council from 1995 to 1997. He and his wife,
Laura, and their three children reside on Bethlehem's West Side, where
five generations of the Cunningham family have lived.
Mayor
Don Cunningham's message on economic development and "Bethlehem's Spirit of Industry".