AMNY
Paul Vallone, a former City Council Member who was part of a Queens
political dynasty, died suddenly this weekend. He was 56 years old.
Vallone most recently served as the city’s Deputy Commissioner of
Veterans’ Services. His brother Peter, a fellow former Council Member
who presently serves as a judge in Claims Court, confirmed Paul’s
passing.
Peter Vallone said his brother was rushed to Flushing Hospital
Saturday evening after suddenly falling ill at home, but could not be
saved. The news was first reported by the Queens Chronicle.
In addition to his brother, Vallone is survived by his wife
Anna-Marie and three children, as well as his father Peter Sr., formerly
the City Council speaker and a giant of municipal politics.
News of Paul Vallone’s death stunned Queens politicos and spurred an outpouring of grief.
“Paul didn’t just carry on his family’s immense legacy of service
— he personified and embodied it,” Queens Borough President Donovan
Richards said in a statement. “He inspired me every single day to be a
better elected official, but it’s his lessons in friendship, family, and
fatherhood that I will cherish for the rest of time. Queens is a better
borough because of Paul, and I am a better person for having had the
privilege of calling him a colleague and a friend.”
Before entering politics, Vallone was a managing partner at his family’s general practice law firm, Vallone & Vallone LLP,
founded in 1932 by his grandfather, Judge Charles Vallone. His father,
Peter Sr., was elected to the City Council in an Astoria-centered
district in 1973, and became the first Speaker of the City Council
following the reorganization of city government in 1989.
Vallone Sr. was term-limited out of the Council in 2001 and was
succeeded as Astoria’s City Council representative by Peter Jr., who
served two terms.
After running unsuccessfully in 2009, in 2013, Paul Vallone
contested the Democratic primary in northeast Queens’ 19th District,
which includes the neighborhoods College Point, Whitestone, Beechhurst,
Bayside, Bay Terrace, Auburndale, Douglaston, Little Neck, and part of
Flushing.
The district at the time was represented by Republican Daniel
Halloran, who during the 2013 campaign was arrested and charged in a
broad federal corruption probe that also ensnared Queens Senator Malcolm
Smith, Bronx Republican Chair Joseph Savino, and a slew of others.
Vallone narrowly won the Democratic primary and then prevailed in the 2013 general election. Per his City Council webpage, his mission from day one was to “put District 19 back on the map.” He won reelection in 2017, and at the end of his second term he told the Queens Chronicle
he was proud to have added school seats to his district and helped
launch a new free transit service for northeast Queens seniors. He also
got underway efforts to build a new environmental center at Alley Pond
Park and to renovate Bowne Park. He chaired the Economic Development
Committee.
The moderate Democrat represented one of the most conservative districts in the city. At the end of his two terms, in 2021, the political pendulum had swung to the right and he was succeeded by Republican Vickie Paladino, an ardent Trump supporter and arguably the most right-wing member of the current City Council.
That same year, Vallone narrowly lost a race for Queens Civil Court
to Republican Joseph Kasper, another sign of voters’ repudiation of the
Democratic Party in northeastern Queens. The defeat meant a Vallone was
not in elected office in the city for the first time in nearly 50
years.
Afterward, Vallone was appointed by Eric Adams to be the Deputy
Commissioner for External Affairs at the Veterans’ Services Department
under his new mayoral administration.
Members of New York’s political class expressed shock and dismay
at Vallone’s untimely passing. Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, who reps
southeast Queens, said she was “utterly heartbroken” by his death.
“Paul was a kind, beloved, and dedicated public servant who left an indelible mark on Queens and NYC,” said Speaker Adams. “My prayers are with his wife, children, and the entire Vallone family.”