Jacob Amos was appointed to the Oshkosh Common Council on Nov. 25 after the council completed a multi‑round selection process to fill the at‑large vacancy left by Chris Larson.
Amos, one of 14 applicants who presented to the council, told members he moved to Oshkosh about two and a half years ago and emphasized finance expertise, fiscal responsibility and a focus on affordable housing. He said he plans to run for the full term in the spring election regardless of tonight’s appointment.
After the presentations and a single public speaker who urged support for Amos, the council opened nominations. Four nominees were placed for the first round: Jacob Amos, Logan Youngbacher, Tim Neubauer and Meredith Shireman. The first roll‑call left Amos and Shireman as the top two vote getters and sent them to a second round. The second round produced a council selection for Amos and the mayor paused to confirm procedural steps with city legal staff; the council then moved to amend and formally appoint Amos. A roll‑call on the amendment and the final confirmation produced a recorded result in which the motion to appoint Amos passed unanimously on the amended vote (roll‑call recorded 6–0 in the formal amendment vote).
Following the vote, the council recessed briefly for a swearing‑in and GovTV notices; Amos thanked the council and said he looked forward to “rolling my sleeves up and getting to the work ahead.”
Council members praised the breadth of applicants and encouraged candidates who were not selected to continue public service and consider running in the spring election. Several council members said the wide applicant pool — and tonight’s discussion of housing, homelessness, permitting and other issues — underscores the workload and competing priorities facing council members.
Next steps: Amos will take his seat immediately for council business and may run in the spring election for the full term.