Richfield Mayor Maria Regan Gonzalez won't seek a second term because she wants to start a family and devote more time to her new job, she announced Thursday.
"I would love to continue my work as mayor. I love it," she said. "But as a young woman who wants to have kids and is not independently wealthy or retired — with a mayor's stipend of only a few thousand dollars per year — there's only one option in my mind, and that is not running for reelection."
M Health Fairview, one of the largest employers in Minnesota, in January named Gonzalez as its new director of equity initiatives. She will address the state's significant health disparities affecting communities of color.
Gonzalez, 36, became engaged in November to Pedro Medina, a data scientist and entrepreneur. The couple are thinking about their readiness to become parents, she said.
"I just took months and thought about it, and decided that the best thing that I wanted was to be able to have the mental capacity and the emotional capacity to be a parent," she said.
The two share similar passions. Gonzalez, who is of Mexican descent, has set an example for women to serve in elected office, while Medina, a Cuban-American and founder and CEO of Haystack Data Solutions, is investing in women and people of color. Gonzalez serves as Haystack's vice president.
Gonzalez won a seat on the Richfield City Council in 2016. Two years later the mayor's job opened up and she made the leap, becoming the city's youngest mayor and Minnesota's first Latina mayor.
"When she first came in she was very green and I was apprehensive," said Edwina Garcia, a former legislator and Richfield City Council member. "I haven't worked with an awful lot of Latinos in my public life. I didn't expect for her to grab onto the information and learn it and digest it, but she did."