Morton Povman, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International, via Wikipedia commons
Morton Povman (1931-2024) was a New York City Council Member, representing District 24 in central Queens. He is the longest-serving council member in City Council history, representing his district from 1971 to 2001.
He was born in Brooklyn in 1931 to Russian Jewish parents. He attended City College and Brooklyn Law School, where he graduated first in his class and served as editor-in-chief of the Brooklyn Law Review. After graduating, he opened a law office in Forest Hills, where he practiced for over sixty years. His first entry into politics was in 1960, when he joined a Democratic club in Richmond Hill, initially with the sole intention of finding more legal clients. However, he began to get more involved in local politics, serving as legal counsel to Moses Weinstein, the majority leader of the New York State Assembly. In 1971, he was selected to replace Donald Manes on the City Council after Manes became Queens Borough President.
As a City Council Member, Povman was remembered as a principled, independent thinker. He successfully opposed measures to build high-rise apartments and a racetrack in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, in spite of the support the plans had from the mayor and borough president. He was instrumental in bringing Arthur Ashe Stadium, now the site of the US Open, to the park, though the measure was unpopular among his constituents. He also served as chair of the City Council Committee on Health, and fought to keep the Metropolitan Hospital in East Harlem open in opposition to Mayor Ed Koch.
Though he had the opportunity to pursue higher political positions, Povman chose to continue running for City Council, as it gave him enough time to continue his law practice and spend time with his family. He married Sandra Arkow in 1958 and they had two sons, both lawyers.
"Committee Report of the Infrastructure Division," The Council of the City of New York ,July 14, 2025
Daniel Massey, “Povman Looks Back on 31 Years,” QNS, January 3, 2002
Ethan Marshall and Czarinna Andres, “Morton Povman: longest serving NYC Council Member, dies at 93,” QNS, March 7, 2024
Michael Gannon, “Povman, 30-year councilman, was 93,” Queens Chronicle, March 14, 2024,
“Obituary: Morton Povman,” Dignity Memorial, accessed September 17, 2025
“Povman Elected to City Council,” The New York Times, September 24, 1971