Career
Horodny, who is of Ukrainian descent, first made her name as an activist for the Wilderness Society. She subsequently defeated liberal independent Helen Szuty, and took her place as one of two new Green members in the Assembly, alongside Kerrie Tucker. In her one term in the Legislative Assembly, she was a strong advocate for environmental causes, both inside the ACT, such as the preservation of the Black Mountain area (which had been threatened by the Gungahlin Drive Extension), and outside, such as her attempts to save Tasmania"s environmentally sensitive Tarkine wilderness area from logging and development.
She also advocated for several progressive causes, such as a bid to legalise voluntary euthanasia in the ACT (which only narrowly failed).
She also vocally opposed the demolition of the Royal Canberra Hospital, preferring that the buildings be reused, and later, once the demolition became inevitable, opposed the government"s preferred method, implosion, on environmental grounds. Horodny adopted a daughter in late 1997, and announced soon after that she would take a year off from work and step down at the coming election.
She was replaced in the Legislative Assembly by conservative independent Dave Rugendyke.