Two Candidates.
One Choice.
Frisco's next mayor will run a $400 million budget. He will lead a growing city and the biggest events we have ever had. Here is where Rod Vilhauer and Mark Hill really stand.

For Frisco Mayor
Rod Vilhauer
40 years building Frisco

For Frisco Mayor
Mark Hill
2.5 years on a school board
Mark Talks. Rod Builds.
One man spent 40 years building this city. One spent two and a half years on a board. You decide who should run it.
Look at the Resumes
| Rod Vilhauer | Mark Hill | |
|---|---|---|
| Years in Frisco | 40 years | 21 years |
| Business built | From $40K to $370M | A ~14-person law firm |
| Employees managed | 1,600 at peak | ~14 |
| Budget experience | Ran a $370M operation and met every payroll | Voted for two deficit budgets |
| Largest taxpayer in Frisco | ~10 years | — |
| Largest employer in Frisco | ~10 years | — |
| Built physical infrastructure | Roads and help with the stadium; helped plan Frisco's main roads from the start | — |
Years in Frisco
Rod
40 years
Mark
21 years
Business built
Rod
From $40K to $370M
Mark
A ~14-person law firm
Employees managed
Rod
1,600 at peak
Mark
~14
Budget experience
Rod
Ran a $370M operation and met every payroll
Mark
Voted for two deficit budgets
Largest taxpayer in Frisco
Rod
~10 years
Mark
—
Largest employer in Frisco
Rod
~10 years
Mark
—
Built physical infrastructure
Rod
Roads and help with the stadium; helped plan Frisco's main roads from the start
Mark
—
Numbers come from Rod Vilhauer's business record and from Mark Hill's public bio and campaign statements.
On the Budget
Who Knows How to Control Costs?
Rod
- Ran a $370 million business for almost 20 years and always paid his people
- Grew the business by watching the budget and cutting waste
- Will check all city spending and contracts
- No vanity projects. Every dollar works for you
Mark
- Voted to pass two school budgets that spent more than they took in
- Voted for a property tax increase to help pay for school bonds
- Voted for the $1.2 billion FISD bond — on top of $3.2 billion in existing district debt
- Spent money he did not have, then asked you to pay for it
- Now says he is the money guy
A $400 million city budget is no place to learn on the job.
A Builder or a Mediator?
Rod
Rod gives straight answers.
He tells you where he stands. He says what he will do, and he sticks to it. With Rod, you get real answers, not a runaround.
Mark
Mark builds consensus.
At the runoff debate, his answer to almost every question came back to “build consensus” and “earn their trust.” Frisco does not need another middleman. It needs a mayor who makes the call.
What Mark Hill stands for here comes from the Frisco Chamber runoff debate.
Where They Stand
On the Issues
Truth & Transparency
Rod
- Will post easy-to-read reports on how the city spends money
- Will hold town halls in every part of Frisco so every neighborhood is heard
- Will follow the ethics rules every elected official signs
- Will end backroom deals that help insiders
Mark
- Is a development lawyer. He was a partner at Scheef & Stone, a firm the City of Frisco hires
- Would have to step back from votes on zoning, permits, and building
- Took donations from companies that have done business with the city
On the Issues
Roads & Traffic
Rod
- Will build out Frisco's main roads to full size, like the city's plan calls for
- Will study traffic before saying yes to big new projects
- Will use smart tech and better road design to keep cars moving
Mark
- Calls Frisco's traffic someone else's job and leans on other cities to fix it
- Has no real plan for Frisco's own roads
- Talks about buses and rideshare for a city built around cars
On the Issues
Jobs & Growth
Rod
- Will bring big company headquarters and good-paying jobs to Frisco
- Will be picky with the last open land we have left
- Will protect small businesses while the city grows
- Deals should help residents, not insiders
Mark
- Is a development lawyer pushing a building plan
- Says jobs should come closer to home, in a city families can barely afford
- Points to World Cup, Universal, and PGA crowds as a plus
On the Issues
Public Safety
Rod
- Will fully fund police, fire, and EMS as Frisco grows
- Will pay for training, new gear, and good pay to keep the best
- Will keep response times among the fastest in Texas
- Will build trust between police and every Frisco community
Mark
- Points to school programs from his time on the school board
- Talks about safety in big words, but makes few real promises
Frisco Stands With Rod
Conservative leaders, business owners, teachers, first responders, retirees, and young families — here's why your neighbors are supporting Rod.
Runoff Election: Saturday, June 13 · Early Voting: June 1–9
He Built This City.
Now He'll Lead It.
Vote Rod Vilhauer for Mayor.









































