Bien Doan
Bien Doan's life story is one of the most remarkable in San José politics — an American immigrant journey that took him from a refugee childhood in rural California to homelessness as a young man, to breaking barriers as the first Vietnamese-American fire captain in San José history, and ultimately to City Hall. He assumed office on January 1, 2023, representing District 7, with his current term ending December 31, 2026.
Doan immigrated to California from Vietnam at the age of 10 with his parents, grandmother, and five siblings. He immigrated to Porterville in 1975 from Vietnam, and the family arrived with virtually nothing. "We weren't just poor, we were dirt poor. We lived in a 1,100-square-foot home with one wall heater, one bathroom, nine people," Doan has said. He learned English as a new arrival, worked as a paperboy at age 10 to help support his family, and labored on Porterville farms as a teenager.
After high school, Doan found himself in particularly dire circumstances — homeless and living out of a 1969 Volkswagen Beetle for several months, working two jobs simultaneously to save enough money to move to the Bay Area to pursue further opportunity. He briefly entered the tech world but found it unfulfilling, and turned instead to a vocation more aligned with his instinct toward service: firefighting. He joined the San José Fire Department, where he would spend 21 years. During his 27-year career as a firefighter — 21 of those with the San José Fire Department — he rose to become the first Vietnamese-American fire captain in the department's history, a milestone of deep significance for the Vietnamese-American community that calls San José home.
Throughout his fire career, Doan remained deeply engaged in civic life. He co-founded and serves as president of Vietnamese American City Employees (VACE), an organization supporting Vietnamese-American public servants. He also serves as a board member of the Asian-American Women's Alliance and volunteered at COVID vaccination clinics.
In November 2022, Doan defeated incumbent Councilmember Maya Esparza for the District 7 seat with 54% of the vote. District 7 covers portions of central and East San José, including Kelley Park and the Santa Clara County Fairgrounds — and is home to the largest Vietnamese-American population of any council district in the city. District 7 hosts roughly 30% of the city's homeless population, and small businesses there have struggled acutely since the pandemic.
In office, Doan has focused relentlessly on public safety, homelessness, neighborhood blight, and economic vitality for small businesses. He has aligned closely with Mayor Mahan on enforcement-first approaches to homelessness, including support for interim housing. He has also championed causes meaningful to his Vietnamese-American constituents — including delivering a proclamation honoring displaced Vietnamese Americans and their community contributions, and proposing a resolution to recognize the Heritage and Freedom Flag of the Republic of Vietnam as an official emoji in honor of the Vietnamese diaspora's history and identity.
Among his recent policy priorities, Doan has led a District 7 ordinance to tackle "vanlording" — the renting and leasing of RVs on public streets — and has advocated for restoring Med 30, a specialized emergency medical services unit in the San José Fire Department. His approach to governance is rooted in a deeply personal philosophy: that government exists to remove obstacles for people willing to help themselves. "The generosity of our community inspired me to dedicate my life to public service," Doan has written — a sentiment that feels hard-won given how much his community once gave to him.
news_articles and leader_news_matches has rows for this seat.)