Career
Moss"s wife, Bil Moss, has also served on the Tacoma City Council. He served two terms as branch president, served on Tacoma"s first Human Relations Commission (later Human Rights Commission), and in 1968, Moss helped create the Tacoma Urban League and played a key role in securing public funding for its Urban Services Center. Moss was a dental technician, and ran a business, Northwest Porcelain Studios.
He left this business in the hands of his assistants when he was hired by the Tacoma Chamber of Commerce and the Tacoma Area Coalition in the spring of 1968 to run the Central Area Employment Office, soliciting jobs for disadvantaged Tacoma-area residents, including the hardcore unemployed.
He entered electoral politics in 1969 as an unsuccessful candidate for the Tacoma City Council. A year later, five council members were recalled, and Moss was appointed to a seat, which he took on October 13, 1970.
He was elected to a full term in 1971, remaining also a full-time employee of the Urban League throughout this period. Urban League National Executive Director Vernon Jordan asked Moss to step down from his elected position in 1975 to avoid compromising the League"s non-profit status.
"My son was very high at the time," he later said.
Number charges were ever pressed, and the two later reconciled. By 1983, Moss was no longer affiliated with the Urban League. That year he ran unsuccessfully for city council.
In January 1994, Tacoma mayor Jack Hyde suffered a fatal heart attack nearly at the start of his term.
Moss, serving as deputy mayor at the time, was appointed mayor and served for two years. During his administration, Tacoma adopted a youth curfew law.
Because the mayor is considered part of the city council, term limits prevented him from running as an incumbent in the 1995 election. During this period, Moss also worked as a civil-rights manager for the Washington State Department of Transportation, handling the council and mayoralty as a part-time job.
Moss was subsequently elected to the Pierce County Council, serving January 1, 1997 – December 31, 2004, including as council chair from 2002 to 2004, at which time he announced his retirement.
He ran unsuccessfully for the Tacoma mayoralty in 2001 and came out of that retirement in 2007 to run again for the Tacoma City Council against incumbent Spiro Manthou. Manthou defeated him at the polls.