Albert Vann, longtime N.Y. assembly, NYC council member and mentor to Black politicians, dead at 87
Albert Vann, a Brooklyn political dynamo who served in the city council and the state assembly, and was a mentor to a generation of African-American elected officials, has died. He was 87.
His death was announced by state Attorney General Letitia James.
“After a lifetime of leadership, mentorship, and principle, the honorable Al Vann passed away peacefully last night,” James said in a statement.
“While much more will be said about the life and legacy of Al Vann, it is safe to say that Brooklyn and all of New York lost a friend, a leader, and a legend. May he rest in peace and in power.”
Former New York City Councilman Albert Vann in 2009. (Jefferson Siegel/)
A political source said Vann was in hospice care.
Mayor Adams said Vann’s death hit him hard.
He said Vann spent his life “not only impacting the city, but the country as a whole.”
“A real mentor, a giant,” Adams said of Vann at City Hall. “We’re better as a city because of him. We’re really going to miss him.”
“A mighty tree has fallen in our village,” said the Rev. Conrad Tillard, a state senate candidate in Brooklyn’s 25 Senate District.
Albert Vann in 1968. (Ed Giorandino/)
Vann was a member of the state Assembly from 1975 to 2001. When the City Council enacted term limits, Vann exchanged seats with Annette Robinson.
He was elected to the council in November 2001, and Robinson was elected to the Assembly in 2002 to fill the vacancy. Vann served on the council until 2013.
The tall, dapper goateed Vann was one of the founders of Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn and was one of the founders of the African American Teachers Association.
Former City Council member Albert Vann on the steps of City Hall in 2007. (Michael Schwartz/)
Vann is a former instructor at Vassar College’s Urban Center for Black Studies.
He was outspoken on the subject of police brutality. In a city council speech after the police shooting death of a Black, unarmed groom-to-be Sean Bell in 2006, Vann mocked the way Black men were being taught not to incur the wrath of cops.
“Make sure your pants are tight and you walk a certain way,” he said. He was tired of going to funerals for Black men killed by cops.
“How do you legislate a change of heart?” Vann said. “How do you legislate a discriminatory mind, a prejudiced mind? We have to admit what the problem is. Yes, the problem is institutional racism.”
Details of a memorial service were still pending, James said.