Background
Morelle was born in Utica, New York, and grew up in the town of Irondequoit, where he attended Eastridge High School.
Morelle was born in Utica, New York, and grew up in the town of Irondequoit, where he attended Eastridge High School.
State University of New York at Geneseo.
Speaker Sheldon Silver appointed him as Majority Leader of the New York State Assembly in January 2013. As such, Morelle is Acting Speaker in the Speaker"s absence. He went on to receive a bachelor’s degree in political science from State University of New York Geneseo in 1986.
They have three children: Lauren, Joseph Junior, Nicholas.
In his early years, he was a sales manager for a drycleaning and laundry business. Morelle, a Democrat, made his first foray into politics at the age of 24 when he ran for a seat in the Monroe He failed to unseat the incumbent on the first try, but prevailed in the 1983 election.
He was re-elected once before running for the New York
Morelle was first elected to the State Assembly in 1990. During his tenure in the State Legislature, among the more than 200 laws authored by Morelle are major reforms to the workers compensation system, laws to require carbon monoxide detectors in oneand two-family homes, toughen regulations governing charitable organizations, protect the elderly and infirm who live in nursing homes or receive home based health care, and raise senior citizens" real property tax exemption.
Morelle has sponsored bills to exempt veterans from certain state licensing fees, protect their gravesites, and assist them with regard to the civil service application process.
In January 2001, Morelle was appointed the Chairman of the Assembly Standing Committee on Tourism, Arts, and Sports Development. He worked with area leaders to develop Rochester as a center for tourism and the arts in Western New New York In addition to the Tourism Committee, Morelle’s standing committee assignments have included Economic Development, Job Creation, Commerce and Industry.
Higher Education.
Local Governments. And Libraries and Education Technology. At his request, the Speaker created the Subcommittee on Manufacturing in order to give New York’s manufacturing sector a greater voice in state government.
In 2005, Morelle issued a report, “Creating a State of Innovation: Unleashing The Power of New York’s Entrepreneurial Economy,” detailing New York’s economic decline, particularly in Upstate, and offering numerous policy recommendations to reverse this years-long trend. In 2005, Morelle was elected chairman of the Monroe County Democratic Committee, and held this position until 2014.
In 1991, The Buffalo News reported Morelle was charged with 7 misdemeanor counts for violating state elections laws by improperly obtaining signatures for an election petition during his 1990 run for State Assembly.
He was offered a plea to disorderly conduct on two counts. The signatures were for an Independent Party endorsement when he ran against Republican Mark South. Ogden. Morelle has never contested that he obtained the signatures in question fraudulently.
A judge from the State Supreme Court ruled that he was in violation of election law, but he was nevertheless allowed to run on the Independence Party ballot.