Did you know Erin Mendenhall is a politician from the United States? This piece lets you know Erin Mendenhall’s net worth, husband, children, parents, family, age, height, salary, and other information you need.
Introduction
Erin Mendenhall is a prominent American politician and activist. She has been serving as the mayor of Salt Lake City, Utah since 2020. Upon taking office as Salt Lake City’s 36th mayor, Mendenhall became the city’s third and youngest woman in the role (after Deedee Corradini and Jackie Biskupski). Prior to assuming office, Mendenhall represented the city’s 5th district on the Salt Lake City Council.
Early life
Name | Erin Mendenhall |
Net Worth | $3 million |
Occupation | Politician |
Age | 43 years |
Height | 1.71m |
Erin Mendenhall was born on June 8, 1980 (age 43 years) in Arizona, and moved to Sandy, Utah, when she was seven. Her father, Don, died from Hodgkin lymphoma when she was 14. She graduated from the University of Utah with a Bachelor of Arts degree in gender studies and a certificate in Non-Profit Leadership and Management. In 2019, she earned a Master of Science degree in science and technology from the University of Utah.
Career
Erin Mendenhall conducted air-quality testing and internal auditing at Sterigenics after college, which sterilizes medical equipment. She first entered politics as an air-quality activist with Utah Moms for Clean Air, but in 2010 moved on to co-found the non-profit Breathe Utah because “she quickly realized she could more effectively fight for changes as someone sitting at the decision-making table rather than protesting outside the door.”
Mendenhall was elected to the Salt Lake City Council in November 2013 to represent District 5, which includes the Ballpark, Liberty Wells, Central 9th, and East Liberty Park neighborhoods. She took office in January 2014 and improving air quality became her signature issue. In May 2014, Mendenhall was appointed to the Utah Air Quality Board, which is the “primary air quality policy maker for the State of Utah.”
In 2015, Mendenhall and the City Council voted unanimously to cut campaign finance limits, reducing the maximum contribution to a mayoral election from $7,500 to $3,500, and the maximum contribution to a City Council candidate from $1,600 to $750. In July 2017, Mendenhall led the passage of an ordinance to crack down on “businesses that are hotbeds of crime.” The ordinance was designed to close a loophole that led to stopping motels and hotels on State Street allowing sex work and drug dealing without legal consequence. “We are drawing a line in the sand,” Mendenhall said.
She was re-elected to the City Council in 2017 with 84% of the vote. In November of 2017, Mendenhall led the Salt Lake City Council to unanimously approve an ordnance limiting the capacity of homeless shelters to 200. In March 2018, the Utah Legislature passed a bill that cut Salt Lake City out of the process of developing an inland port in the city’s Northwest Quadrant. The legislation also took 100% of the tax revenue generated from the Inland Port while denying the city’s mayor a seat on the Inland Port Authority and forcing the city to pay for police and fire department coverage of the area.
In July 2018, Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski withdrew from negotiations with the state government over the port project. With the state moving the Port project forward without the city’s input, Mendenhall re-opened negotiations in her capacity as chair of the City Council. Based on those negotiations, on July 18, 2018, the Legislature passed additional legislation that required 10% of tax revenue generated by the inland port to be invested in affordable housing in Salt Lake City. The bill also required the Port to pay the city for its share of taxes needed to cover the cost of city services including police and fire. In an editorial, the Salt Lake Tribune called the bill “a great improvement over what sits on the books.”
She was the last of nine candidates to declare her candidacy for mayor, doing so on March 24, 2019, citing her “hands-on” experience. She officially launched her campaign on April 14, 2019, outside an air-quality monitoring station at the Salt Lake Center for Science Education, a STEM-focused charter school in the historically underrepresented Rose Park neighborhood. “My time on the City Council shows how I get results,” Mendenhall said. “As chair of the council, I made a seat for our city at the table when there wasn’t one when the state was ready to move ahead with the inland port without Salt Lake City.”
A poll conducted in June by Dan Jones & Associates for the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce showed Mendenhall in third place with 12% support. A Salt Lake Tribune-Hinckley Institute of Politics poll conducted in late July by the Cicero Group also found Mendenhall in third place with 14% support.
Erin Mendenhall leaned on her experience on the city council and positioned herself as the candidate best able to get the most from the city government. “After 12 years of mayors with experience on Capitol Hill instead of City Hall, Salt Lake City deserves a mayor with the right experience for a change,” Mendenhall wrote in an August 7, 2019, op-ed in the Salt Lake Tribune. The nonpartisan primary election was held on August 13, 2019. Mendenhall finished in first place with 24.27%, topping State Senators Luz Escamilla and Jim Dabakis to advance to the general election.
Mendenhall released a series of policy proposals, including plans focusing on affordable housing, building a high-tech ecosystem in the city, and planting 1,000 new trees a year on the city’s West side. In the 2019 Salt Lake City mayoral election, Mendenhall defeated State Senator Luz Escamilla 58.17% to 41.83% to become the 36th mayor of Salt Lake City. Mendenhall became the city’s third female mayor (after Deedee Corradini and Jackie Biskupski).
In her inaugural address, Mendenhall announced that city departments would begin factoring impacts on air quality into every decision, prompting the director of the Utah Clean Air Partnership to call the move “phenomenal leadership.” In 2021, the utility that provides electricity to the city, Rocky Mountain Power, announced it would not be able to deliver renewable electricity until “closer to 2050″— 20 years later than pledged. She negotiated a first-in-the-nation partnership with more than a dozen other municipalities to create a Community Renewable Energy Agency that will deliver net 100% renewable electricity citywide by 2030.
She negotiated a separate partnership with Park City, Summit County, Utah Valley University, Deer Valley Resort, and Park City Mountain to construct an 80-megawatt solar farm in Tooele County to fulfill 80% of the city government’s power needs. Under Mendenhall’s Sustainable Development Policy, all new buildings that receive funding from the city must meet energy efficiency standards and be emission-free.
To allow more city residents to participate in the State of Utah’s lawnmower trade-in program, which provides rebates for residents wishing to trade out their gas-burning lawnmower for an electric model, Mendenhall negotiated with the state to invest city dollars in the program earmarked for city residents. A quarter of the rebates were earmarked for Westside residents. The change resulted in four times as many Salt Lake City residents participating. Additionally, the city is transitioning its gas-powered riding lawnmowers to an all-electric fleet in order to reduce pollution.
To promote the use of public transit, Mendenhall proposed and partially funded the Free Fare February program in 2022, which made the entire Utah Transit Authority system free to ride for a month. “Final data provided by UTA for ‘Free Fare February’ shows a 16% increase in weekday ridership system-wide; a 58% spike on Saturdays (with an astounding 202% increase on Fr ontrunner trains); and a nearly 33% increase on Sundays (when only buses and TRAX are available).” The success of the program led to legislators proposing eliminating UTA fares permanently. Governor Spencer Cox said he supports the idea, but the Utah Legislature has yet to embrace the measure.
In 2022, Erin Mendenhall also partnered with the Salt Lake City School District to provide free Hive Passes to city schoolchildren and teachers, encouraging their use of public transportation and reducing the burden on parents. The Mendenhall Administration has expanded public transit options by opening a new TRAX station and bus shelters. Two new bus routes have been launched, along with an on-demand service in partnership with UTA to help West side residents access the city’s public transit system.
Mendenhall has followed through on her campaign pledge to plant 1,000 new trees on Salt Lake City’s West side each year of her term. Each tree is expected to generate half a million pounds of oxygen and remove 20,000 pounds of pollution from the air each year. The program is intended to reduce a significant disparity in the urban canopy between the city’s East and West sides, the latter of which historically measures higher levels of air pollution.
In 2021, Mendenhall and the city council extended the city government’s health insurance policy to cover gender-affirming surgeries for workers and their covered family members. The decision earned praise from Equality Utah executive Director Troy Williams, who told the Salt Lake Tribune: “Mayor Mendenhall and the Salt Lake City Council have time and again demonstrated unwavering love and support to the LGBTQ community. They are sending a powerful message to their transgender employees that they are loved and accepted as their full, authentic selves.”
In 2019, Salt Lake City received a score of 66 points on the Human Rights Campaign’s annual Municipal Equality Index. In 2020, the score improved to 75. The city earned a 100-point score for the first time in 2021 and again in 2022.
She has been outspoken on behalf of the state’s LGBTQ+ residents. In March 2022, after the Utah Legislature overrode the governor’s veto of a bill banning transgender children from playing school sports, Mendenhall wrote: “Is this who we are as a state? I’m at a loss. This is decidedly not ‘The Utah Way’ and I’m ashamed at the way some of our state’s leaders are playing politics with children’s lives. To Utah’s transgender kids: I’m sorry this is happening to you and some of our leaders seem intent on going out of their way to persecute and punish you just for being who you are. They do not speak for all of us. You are perfect as you are. You are loved. I stand with you.”
On the eve of the 2023 Utah Pride Festival, the Utah Pride Center recognized Mendenhall with its inaugural Solomon Award for her allyship of the state’s LGBTQ+ residents. “It means a lot to me because I feel like there’s not enough I can do to be an ally,” Mendenhall said. “I’ve tried to show up and bring the city to show up in more ways than we have before.”
In April 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a police affidavit, Mendenhall was threatened by a man who “stated the mayor needs to open up the city. If she doesn’t, she’ll be forcibly removed from office. There’s a protest tomorrow and if things don’t change, a civil war is coming, and the police can’t stop me.” The man was arrested and booked for making a terroristic threat and electronic communication harassment.
Amidst an ongoing investigation into the death of Ryan Outlaw, an African-American man wounded in a stabbing denied medical aid by police officers, Mayor Mendenhall defended the two officers being investigated, stating her belief that “our officers we believe did as they were trained.” Asked if she wanted officers to be “able and willing” to provide first aid, Erin Mendenhall responded, “I want our officers to be safe, that’s their job.”
Homelessness has emerged as a major issue throughout Mendenhall’s term. Arguing that state authorities had unfairly concentrated the responsibility of dealing with the homeless population in Salt Lake City, Mayor Mendenhall reversed her prior support for an expansion of homeless shelters in September 2021 and supported the institution of a citywide ban on the construction of further shelters in October 2021, which would be extended to last until May 2023.
Erin Mendenhall has supported a policy of “abatements,” police raids to scatter encampments of the homeless. In an Instagram question session in April 2023, Mendenhall estimated the annual cost of the policy as being over four million dollars, 2.2 million of which being police overtime. 50 such abatements took place in 2021 alone. Critics, including former Mayor Rocky Anderson, have argued for a sanctioned central campground; in an interview with Fox13, Mendenhall declared her opposition to the proposal, stating “Heck no…Salt Lake City is not doing a designated camping area,” and arguing that the proposal was a “genie” that the city could not afford. In September of 2023, Mendenhall reversed her position and alongside state officials announced that they would authorize a sanctioned camp.
On April 12, 2023, Mendenhall announced her candidacy for re-election in a video to supporters, declaring “This is a special time for Salt Lake City. Like all great cities, we’re growing. We’re changing. Our culture, our nightlife, our high-tech job market. These last few years have tested us, covering the earthquakes, the inland hurricanes, but we’ve emerged stronger than ever. Salt Lakers are resilient, creative, and innovative, and we’ve worked hard to earn real results, to make real progress.”
Her announcement included a long list of endorsements, including former U.S. Representative Ben McAdams, Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson, two state senators and five state representatives, the chairs of 14 community councils, the unions representing the city’s police officers and firefighters, as well as the Utah AFL-CIO, Central Utah Federation of Labor, AFSCME Local 1004, Operating Engineers Local 3, Laborers Local 295, Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers Local 1, and the American Federation of Teachers-Utah.
She followed up the video with a kickoff event at The Neighborhood Hive in the city’s Sugar House neighborhood on April 15, 2023. “Our city isn’t perfect, but it is great,” Mendenhall told supporters. “Our growth and the relentless commitment of the people who have invested their hearts into this city are fueling truly amazing opportunities.” Mendenhall was introduced by civil rights leader Rev. France Davis of Calvary Baptist Church.
Mendenhall is running against former mayor and senator/presidential candidate Rocky Anderson and local activist and community organizer Michael (Patton) Valentine. The election will be the first in the city’s history to utilize ranked-choice voting for a mayoral election. In a campaign finance report filed on February 15, 2023 — the first since Anderson announced his candidacy, Mendenhall reported raising $200,811, spending $88,073, and having $250,972 in cash on hand. Anderson reported raising $126,461, spending $76,781, and having $49,780 in cash on hand. Michael (Patton) Valentine reported raising $110, spending $93.82, and having $16.18 on hand.
In a campaign finance report filed on July 3, 2023, Erin Mendenhall reported raising $212,195, spending $101,780, and having $360,003 in cash on hand. Her campaign reported receiving 603 total contributions during the period from 504 individual donors. Anderson reported raising $101,780 from over 400 individual donors, spending $60,927, and having $90,632 in cash on hand. Valentine reported raising $115, spending $98.65, and has $32.53 in cash on hand.
Husband
Erin Mendenhall is married to her husband Kyle LaMalfa. They had their wedding in 2015. Prior to her second marriage, she was married to her first husband Jared Erin Mendenhall until divorcing in 2014. However, it was reported in November 2014 that Erin Mendenhall and fellow council member Kyle LaMalfa were having an extramarital affair. She and LaMalfa disclosed their relationship to City Attorney Margaret Plane, who stated there were no legal or ethical problems. She and LaMalfa later married. Her husband LaMalfa is currently the director of data science for Vive Financial. She lives in the city’s East Liberty Park neighborhood with their daughter, Milå, and Mendenhall’s sons, Cash and Everett.
Erin Mendenhall Net Worth
How much is Erin Mendenhall worth? Erin Mendenhall’s net worth is estimated at around $3 million. Her main source of income is from her primary work as a politician. Erin Mendenhall’s salary per month and other career earnings are over $215,000 dollars annually. Her remarkable career achievements have earned her some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy car trips. She is one of the richest and most influential politicians in Utah. She stands at an appealing height of 1.71m and has a good body weight which suits her personality.