From his downtown Minneapolis office, Randy Johnson once could see as far as Lake Minnetonka on a clear day.
Since he took office in the late 1970s, however, the skyline filled in with skyscrapers, evolving like the rest of Hennepin County over Johnson's 38 years on the County Board.
From a countywide ban on smoking to the start of light rail transit, from the building of Target Field to the consolidation of the county's library system, he was a part of it all.
Now, at age 70, the Bloomington Republican is retiring as the county's longest-serving commissioner. As he recently prepared to leave his cluttered rosewood-paneled office atop the Government Center, he said he never thought he'd be in the job for nearly 40 years.
"What we do affects every single person in the county almost every day," he said.
Over time, Johnson has helped propel Hennepin County's work and reputation nationally. He testified before Congress more often than any elected county official in history and was the first Minnesota official to lead a national county association.
He's helped lead local welfare reform, increase recycling efforts, restructure the Hennepin County Medical Center's board and consolidate the county's and Minneapolis' library systems.
"As a state and local and national leader, you're leaving some really big shoes to fill," Commissioner Linda Higgins said at Johnson's last board meeting this month.