County councilman airlifted to mainland following medical emergency

Sheriff Rob Nou said that emergency medical personnel responded to Forlenza's Friday Harbor home after receiving a medical call from his First Street residence early Tuesday morning. Nou said Forlenza, elected to the council in November, was transported by ambulance to Friday Harbor Airport and then flown to a hospital on the mainland.

San Juan County Councilman Marc Forlenza was flown off-island Tuesday morning after reportedly suffering a heart attack at his home.

Sheriff Rob Nou said that emergency medical personnel responded to Forlenza’s Friday Harbor home after receiving a medical call from his First Street residence early Tuesday morning. Nou said Forlenza, elected to the council in November, was transported by ambulance to Friday Harbor Airport and then flown to a hospital on the mainland.

Nou declined to comment about what prompted the medical call from the Forlenza home, noting that neither he nor sheriff’s deputies were at the scene. However, several sources close to the County Council said Tuesday that Forlenza had suffered a heart attack.

In a first-ever bid for public office, Forlenza was elected to the soon-to-be obsolete 6-person council in November. He is part-owner and manager of the Technology Building in Friday Harbor, on Mullis Street.

Following a loss in the February primary election for the newly created 3-person council, established as part of the county’s Home Rule Charter amendments approve by voters in November, Forlenza’s term in office is slated to end in early May.

The medical emergency comes one week after Forlenza filed a criminal complaint at the sheriff’s office following a confrontation with a Friday Harbor constituent, former councilman Howie Rosenfeld, at his council office. Rosenfeld was defeated by Forlenza in his reelection bid in November.

Nou said that both Rosenfeld and Forlenza filed complaints accusing the other of making threats during that argument, and that the incident remains under investigation. Though he declined to comment on any details surrounding the run-in, because it’s under investigation, Nou said that there was no physical altercation and that both complaints would be accurately characterized as “perceived threats.”