Patrick M. Gallivan Explained

Patrick M. Gallivan
Office2:52nd Sheriff of Erie County
Term Start2:1998
Term End2:2005
Preceded2:Thomas F. Higgins
Succeeded2:Timothy B. Howard
Birth Date:18 November 1960
Party:Republican
Spouse:Mary Pat Gallivan
Residence:Elma, New York
Constituency1:59th District
60th District
Termstart1:January 1, 2011
Office1:Member of the New York State Senate
Preceded1:Dale Volker

Patrick M. Gallivan (born November 18, 1960)[1] is a member of the New York State Senate and the former Sheriff of Erie County. Gallivan's district, the 59th, comprises portions of Erie County, the entirety of Wyoming County, the northern half of Livingston County and the towns of Henrietta and Wheatland in Monroe County.[2]

Biography

Gallivan was elected Sheriff of Erie County in 1998 and served through 2005.[3] Prior to being elected Sheriff, Patrick Gallivan served 15 years in the New York State Police, rising through the ranks from Trooper to Captain. Between his time as Sheriff and as a New York State Senator, Gallivan served as a commissioner on the state parole board.

After the retirement of incumbent senator Dale Volker, Gallivan defeated former Erie County Republican Party chairman James Domagalski and David DiPietro in a three-way Republican primary in September 2010, going on to defeat Democrat Cynthia Appleton and DiPietro (who continued to run on a line labeled "Tea") in the general election in November of the same year. In 2011, Gallivan voted against allowing same-sex marriage in New York during the senate roll-call vote on the Marriage Equality Act, which legally recognized same-sex marriages performed in the state, in a closely divided Senate vote of 33-29.[4]

Personal

Gallivan lives in Elma, New York, with his wife, Mary Pat, and their two children, Jenna and Conor.

Gallivan's cousin, Pete Gallivan, is a reporter and anchor for Buffalo television station WGRZ.

Education

Patrick Gallivan holds a master's degree in Criminal Justice from the State University of New York at Albany and is a graduate of Canisius College[5] in Buffalo. He is a graduate of both the FBI National Executive Institute and the FBI National Academy, and is a past member of the New York State Executive Committee on Counter-Terrorism.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New York Library Association - Sen. Patrick Gallivan (R-New York) biography . ny.ala.capwiz.com. 2016-04-03.
  2. Web site: NY Senate District 59 | NY State Senate . nysenate.gov. 2016-04-03.
  3. Web site: ECSO: About the Erie County Sheriff's Office . erie.gov. 2016-04-03.
  4. http://open.nysenate.gov/legislation/bill/a8354-2011 Marriage Equality Act roll call
  5. Web site: Canisius College - Canisius On-line Newsletter -- December 2003 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060909111123/http://www.canisius.edu/alumni/newsletter/online_newsdec03.asp . 2006-09-09 . dead . 2016-04-03.