Joe Stortini Explained

Joe Stortini
Office:2nd Pierce County Executive
Term Start:January 1, 1985
Term End:January 1, 1993
Predecessor:Booth Gardner
Successor:Doug Sutherland
Office1:Member of the Pierce County Council
from the 4th District
Term Start1:May 1, 1981
Term End1:January 1, 1985
Predecessor1:Constituency established
Successor1:James Edward "Jim" Salatino
Office2:Pierce County Commissioner
Term Start2:January 1, 1977
Term End2:May 1, 1981
Predecessor2:George Sheridan
Successor2:Office abolished
State Senate3:Washington
District3:27th
Term Start3:January 13, 1969
Term End3:January 10, 1977
Predecessor3:George Kupka
Successor3:R. Lorraine Wojahn
Birth Name:Joseph Lewis Stortini
Birth Date:4 December 1932
Birth Place:Tacoma, Washington, U.S.
Party:Democratic
Occupation:Politician, Restaurant Owner/Operator, Teacher

Joseph Lewis Stortini (born December 4, 1932) is an American restauranteer, educator, and politician in the state of Washington. He served the 27th district from 1969 to 1977.

Early life

Stortini was born in Tacoma, Washington, to Giuseppe Stortini and Giuseppina Piazza, both Italian immigrants. Stortini's father immigrated from Porto Sant'Elpidio, Fermo in 1914. His mother was born in Domanico, Calabria in 1909. His parents met and eventually settled in Tacoma's 5th ward, which at the time was made up of predominately southern European immigrants. During his early years in Tacoma's hilltop neighborhoods, he developed a passion for athletics. He attended University of Puget Sound, where he played both football and baseball. After graduating with a degree in education, he went on to Oregon State University, receiving a master's degree in education.[1]

Career

Stortini started his career as a public high school teacher in the Tacoma Public School district, where he worked from 1955 to 1975.[2] In the late 1980s, he opened the Mama Stortini's restaurant, which he later sold.[3] In 1984, Stortini was elected Pierce County Executive.[4]

Stortini served two terms in the state Senate, two terms on the Pierce County Board of County Commissioners, and was elected twice as county executive.[5]

Stortini opened the Joeseppi's Italian restaurant in November 2005.

Affair and wrongful-death suit

Stortini's affair with his employee, Susan Webstad, was brought to light when he made a 911 call after she overdosed.[6] A wrongful-death suit against Stortini by her estate was dismissed, with the appeals court finding that "Washington law provides no general duty to protect others from self-inflicted harm."[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pictorial Directory, Forty-First Session, Washing State Legislature . Washington State Legislature . https://web.archive.org/web/20220125155126/https://leg.wa.gov/History/Legislative/Documents/Pictorial_Phone/41stSession1969opt.pdf . January 25, 2022 . 1969 . live.
  2. Web site: Joe Stortini . Tacoma Athletic Commission . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20180728035646/http://www.tacomaathletic.com/McArthur/joestortini.asp . July 28, 2018.
  3. News: The News Tribune (Tacoma). May 30, 2020. 3. Joeseppi's Italian thanks Tacoma with 50% off everything. Sherred. Kristine.
  4. News: The News Tribune (Tacoma). B4. Card. Skip. May 12, 2000. Memorial today for civic and business leader Ned Shera.
  5. News: Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Mooney. Joe. January 6, 1993. B1. Pierce County closes out the Stortini era.
  6. Web site: Woman's Family Asks Stortini to Avoid Funeral | the Seattle Times.
  7. News: The News Tribune (Tacoma). B2. Ruling upholds Stortini in wrongful-death suit. Gillie. John. October 25, 1996.