Skip to the content
The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission
Home / News / Montgomery County Planning Board Commissioner Eugene “Gene” Lynch Dies After Illness

Montgomery County Planning Board Commissioner Eugene “Gene” Lynch Dies After Illness

SILVER
SPRING, MD –
Montgomery County Planning Board Commissioner Eugene
“Gene” Lynch, who played key roles in local and state politics for close to two
decades, died Thursday night after a battle with cancer.

“Our
thoughts and prayers are with his family as we share the loss of a wonderful
colleague and exemplary public servant,” said Planning Board Chairman Royce Hanson. “Gene’s service as a
Park and Planning commissioner was emblematic of his career – deep devotion to
the public interest, incisive analysis of issues, creative problem-solving and
extraordinary wisdom. Our lives and work
were enriched by his friendship and example.”

The Montgomery County Council had appointed Lynch, 50, to
the five-member board last June.

In
2002 and 2003, Lynch served as chief of staff for former Gov. Parris Glendening.
That followed a four-year stint as the governor’s deputy chief of staff. Glendening
now chairs the board of directors of the development company Lynch founded in
2003, Smart Growth Investments.

“Gene
was a valued friend and a great public servant for the many years that we
worked together,” said Gov. Glendening. “His contributions to the state and
Montgomery County are innumerable. His
dedication to his many pursuits was exceeded only by his love for his
family. He will be sorely missed.”

Lynch
began his career in public service when he served as chief assistant followed
by chief administrative officer for Montgomery County Executive Neal Potter in
the early and mid-1990s. He was appointed secretary of the Maryland Department of
General Services in 1996. Throughout the 1990s, Lynch served on many county and
state civic committees ranging from advocating for the blind to school
construction.

Throughout,
Lynch focused on smart growth. Bill Mooney, a colleague at Smart Growth
Investments, says Lynch was particularly proud of co-founding the Montgomery Housing Partnership and the work he performed in
the 1980s with Shelter Works, a residential construction company that built
more than 150 projects from $30,000 to $350,000. Much of that housing was in
the District of Columbia.

A
viewing has been scheduled for Monday evening, February 4, at the Collins
Funeral Home, 500 University Blvd., Silver Spring. A funeral service will be
held at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, 10103 Georgia Avenue, at 11
a.m., Tuesday, February 5. A reception following burial will be at Brookside
Gardens in Wheaton and is open to the public.