The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette April 25, 2009
http://www.journalgazette.net/article/20090426/LOCAL06/904269972
Longtime Allen County official Ed Rousseau has died
Ed Rousseau, a longtime Allen County office holder who spent the majority of his
adult life in an elected office has died. He was 76.
For years, Rousseau was considered the Allen County commissioner to be reckoned
with.
Rousseau, a Republican, played a major role in several of the county's biggest
undertakings, including establishing the income tax and bringing GM to Fort
Wayne and the renovation and expansion of Memorial Coliseum.
When the county was debating the addition of an income tax, many were fiercely
against it, but not County Councilman Rousseau. In front of a screaming mob,
Rousseau decided he was going to give his side of the story.
"Through the whole talk, they were yelling and shouting and throwing pieces of
paper," he told The Journal Gazette when he retired as county commissioner in
2004. "Anybody that stood up to that situation either was nuts or had a good
idea of what they stood for. I was armed and had all the facts. I would take on
anybody."
Working hard was Rousseau's lifelong mantra.
"I've worked at getting it right, get all the facts," he said in 2004. "Then
it's a matter of you've got to go around and convince people. You're not going
to be loved by everybody, (but) you've got to be right."
Politics was never Rousseau's ambition. His father owned a DeSoto-Plymouth
dealership in Fort Wayne that Rousseau took over after graduating from Indiana
University and serving in the Army in Germany during the Korean War. He ran the
family business until the DeSoto line ended. He then went into real estate and
was the first manager of Glenbrook Square.
Politics came to him, however, in 1963 when Rousseau noticed a former classmate
from North Side High School was running for Fort Wayne City Council. Rousseau
remembered the classmate had been kicked out of another school and transferred
to North Side, so he signed up to run against him.
During his eight years on the council, he helped launch the Public
Transportation Corp. and the Metropolitan Human Relations Commission, which
investigates discrimination complaints.
After losing his seat on city council, Rousseau ran for Allen County Council and
won. It was during his 14 years on the county council that he pushed for the
county option income tax and helped bring GM to Fort Wayne - a move that he
considers his biggest accomplishment.
"Harvester left and 26,000 people were unemployed in the county," he said in
2004. "When that was announced, everyone's heart started beating again. That
essentially revived our economy."
In 1988, Rousseau sought a new office - county commissioner.
During his 16 years in the office, he found money for the Airport Expressway and
worked to improve the Coliseum.
When he retired from elected office, he was presented with the Sagamore of the
Wabash, which was then Indiana's highest honor.
"I ain't that good," Rousseau said during his retirement party in 2004. "I've
been given credit for more than I've done."
After he retired as commissioner, he weighed in on the city's Harrison Square
project and served for a short time on the Convention and Tourism Authority. In
the time since his retirement from elected office, Rousseau has also served on
the Local Government Efficiency Study Committee and has served on the Plaza
Parking Garage Board.
Rousseau battled small-cell carcinoma, a type of incurable lung cancer, for
years, but he didn't let it get in the way of being involved in civic life.
He was also a sports fan. In high school, he played football. And as an adult,
he sponsored a Fort Wayne Senior League slow-pitch softball team named Rousseau.
Services for Rousseau are pending with D.O. McComb & Sons Funeral Home.
For more on this story see Monday's Journal Gazette or return to
www.journalgazette.net.