Boyer will head a new slate of council leaders, which includes President Wayne Miller and Secretary Treasurer Pat Eiding.
“I wholeheartedly believe that this slate, this team of leaders, they will make sure that the work that labor does, particularly in the building trades, puts people on a path to self-sufficiency. They will make sure that Philadelphians from all walks of life have access to that opportunity,” said Councilmember Cherelle Parker.
On Monday, a jury found that Henon used his seat on Council to do Doughtery’s bidding. This in exchange for a $70,000 salary from Local 98 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, the city’s most politically powerful union.
Both men face up to 20 years in prison for the most serious charges.
Dougherty, who has vowed to appeal, on Tuesday stepped down as business manager of Local 98, a post he held for three decades. Henon, who served on Council since 2011, is not legally required to resign from his 6th District seat until he is sentenced in February. And he has said he will wait until then.
Henon on Wednesday did step down from his committee chair roles, according to an internal memo obtained by WHYY. He led the Committee on Public Property and Public Works and Committee on Licenses and Inspections. He was vice-chair of the Committee on Finance and the Committee on Public Health and Human Services.
“I am sincerely grateful for the opportunity to have served in leadership roles on these committees. I am proud of the work that we have accomplished and I am confident that my colleagues in City Council will continue to advance the work that we’ve done for the past 10 years,” Henon told Clarke in a letter obtained by WHYY.