
Phoenix Mayor Thelda Williams, front right, speaks during a news conference in 2019. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
Thelda Williams, the former mayor of Phoenix and city councilwoman, died Nov. 14 of cancer. She was 82.
Williams was on the Phoenix City Council from 1989 to 1995, and then again from 2007 to 2021. She was interim mayor three times—once from March to November in 1994, again from December 2011 to January 2012, and for the last time from May 2018 to March 2019.
Flags on city buildings across Phoenix will be lowered to half-mast until sunset on Nov. 21.
Williams served various roles during her time with the city, including as the city’s vice mayor, chair of the Phoenix City Council’s Transportation Infrastructure and Planning Committee, and as chair of the Valley Metro Rail board.
“Thelda Williams’s service to our city has touched and improved the lives of everyone who lives here—from improving Sky Harbor International Airport to strengthening our transit system to making sure that we use our water wisely,” Mayor Kate Gallego said in a press release.
The City Council voted in May to name the transit center at Metrocenter after Williams. In 2019, the city, Downtown Phoenix Partnership, and PetSmart Charities built downtown Phoenix’s first dog park and named it the Thelda Williams Paw-Pup Dog Park.
“Thelda Williams leaves behind a legacy for all of Phoenix that cannot be outshined,” Councilwoman Ann O’Brien said in a press release.
Williams is survived by her son Murry, daughter Cyndi, and three grandsons.
Support Our Cause
Thank you for taking the time to read our work. Before you go, we hope you'll consider supporting our values-driven journalism, which has always strived to make clear what's really at stake for Arizonans and our future.
Since day one, our goal here at The Copper Courier has always been to empower people across the state with fact-based news and information. We believe that when people are armed with knowledge about what's happening in their local, state, and federal governments—including who is working on their behalf and who is actively trying to block efforts aimed at improving the daily lives of Arizona families—they will be inspired to become civically engaged.
Chandler eighth grader wins Arizona Spelling Bee, heads to nationals
Esha Marupudi, a 14-year-old eighth grader at BASIS Chandler, won the Arizona Spelling Bee on Saturday at Phoenix’s Madison Center for the Arts,...
Arizona Dreamers fear being abducted by ICE as Trump administration delays DACA renewals
Arizona DACA recipients sound the alarm about their fears of becoming bait for immigration authorities as USCIS fails to process work-permit...
Arizona small business owner: ‘The ACA has saved my life’
On the 16th anniversary of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), a local Arizona small business owner credits it with keeping him alive. Robert Hess III...
Why Phoenix airport security lines are so bad this spring break
Airports nationwide on Tuesday, March 10 continued to experience higher-than-normal wait times for security from a combination of spring break...



