2008 mayoral campaign director
Tim Leavitt at a meeting of the Columbia River Crossing Project In October 2007, Adams announced his intentions to run for Mayor of Portland. His main opponent was
Sho Dozono, a civic leader and businessman. In the
primary election, held May 20, 2008, Adams won 58 percent of the vote and was elected without the need for a
run-off. Dozono received 34 percent of the vote. Adams took office on January 1, 2009, becoming the first openly gay mayor of a major U.S. city. In his first State of the City address on February 27, 2009, Adams outlined his goal of making Portland "the most
sustainable city in the world." Adams emphasized reduction of
carbon dioxide emissions and investment in efficient
green energy as essential to the city's energy-environmental goals and called on the
Oregon State Legislature to provide incentives for the expansion of green energy companies, notably
Vestas Wind Systems, into the
Portland metropolitan area. In 2009, Adams established a local economic stimulus plan by fast-tracking capital improvement projects, helped secure a Major League Soccer franchise, secured $2.5 million in grants designed to help the city reduce diesel emissions, began construction of 15 miles of bike boulevards, and consolidated the city's permitting process. In September 2009, Adams opposed the $4 billion, twelve-lane replacement for the
I-5 bridge over the Columbia River, a plan he had once supported. Adams stated, "I'd rather settle for a bad bridge for another 25 years than a terrible bridge that punishes Portland for another 100 years." The twelve-lane idea was a compromise deal Adams helped write with then-Mayor
Royce Pollard of
Vancouver, Washington, in February 2009. The deal helped get the Portland City Council to agree for a bridge of up to twelve lanes, something Vancouver wanted in exchange for its support of Portland's
MAX Light Rail extension across the I-5 bridge. Adams focused on improving the local economy by attracting large, sustainable employers to Portland, including a $200-million investment by the company Vestas. , 2012 In November of that year, Adams fired the police chief and then fired a police officer who had shot and killed an unarmed citizen. He recruited a wind company to spend $66 million on development and hire 400 employees, established the city's first economic development plan, developed programs designed to reduce Portland's high school dropout rate and make the city more sustainable, and, along with the rest of the city council, adopted gun control regulations that are designed to reduce shootings. In 2011, Adams helped establish curbside composting, led a ban on single-use plastic bags, adopted a transgender-inclusive health plan for city employees, recruited a
photovoltaic company to move to and invest $340 million in infrastructure in Portland, recruited several TV and movie companies to do business and spend about $100 million on production in Portland, established a $2.1 million seed fund to help start-up businesses in Portland, and cracked down on gangs with a 14-month police undercover operation that resulted in the arrests of 31 gang members. On July 29, 2011, Adams announced on his official city blog that he would not seek a second term as Portland's mayor. He had an approval rating of 56%. ==Later career==