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Home ›› Bikes, trains, stimulus, and the Obama Cabinet's biggest surprise

Bikes, trains, stimulus, and the Obama Cabinet's biggest surprise

Bikes, trains, stimulus, and the Obama Cabinet's biggest surprise

Thursday, July 22nd 10:30 AM - 11:45 AM
Panel, Brasilia 1
Thursday, July 22nd, 10:30am - 11:45am
Brasilia 1

Despite early expectations or fears, one of the two Republicans in President Obama's cabinet and head of an often-obscure agency has become one of the administration's rock stars. Ray LaHood has elevated public transportation, biking and walking to prominence in American transportation policy just as the Recovery Act of 2009 pumped billions into new projects. How has a former Republican Congressman pushed some of Obama's most progressive policy successes, and what's needed to cement a new direction in federal policy that deeply affects where we live and how we get around?

David Alpert

David Alpert is founder and editor of Greater Greater Washington, a Web site focusing on urban planning, transportation, and other policy areas that influence the form and function of cities in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. David is also the DC Vice-Chair for the WMATA Riders' Advisory Council and a member of the DC Pedestrian Advisory Council.

A native of Massachusetts, he lived in California and New York before settling in the Dupont Circle neighborhood of DC with his wife, Stefanie. David has a B.A. in Computer Science from Harvard and worked for Tellme Networks and Google before following his passion and writing about ways to make the Washington, DC area even greater than it is.

Duncan Black

Duncan Black is known as "Atrios" on his blog, Eschaton.

Radhika Fox

Radhika K. Fox, Federal Policy Director, coordinates the organization’s federal legislative agenda. She works with Congress, the Administration, key federal agencies, and partner organizations to ensure the voices of low-income people and communities of color are central to policy debates in Washington, DC. Fox previously worked on promoting equitable affordable housing strategies and bringing shared prosperity to the nation’s older industrial cities. Fox also provides technical assistance, training, and policy development support to local and state equity coalitions. Fox has a bachelor’s degree from Columbia University and masters’ degree in city and regional planning from the University of California, Berkeley, where she was a HUD Community Development Fellow.

Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood

Ray LaHood - Secretary of Transportation

Ray LaHood became the 16th Secretary of Transportation on January 23, 2009.

In nominating him, President-elect Obama said, “Few understand our infrastructure challenge better than the outstanding public servant that I’m asking to lead the Department of Transportation.”

Secretary LaHood’s primary goals in implementing President Obama’s priorities for transportation include safety across all modes, restoring economic health and creating jobs, sustainability – shaping the economy of the coming decades by building new transportation infrastructure, and assuring that transportation policies focus on people who use the transportation system and their communities.

As Secretary of Transportation, LaHood leads an agency with more than 55,000 employees and a $70 billion budget that oversees air, maritime and surface transportation missions.

Secretary LaHood said he would bring President-elect Obama’s priorities to the Department and see them effectively implemented with a commitment to fairness across regional and party lines and between people who come to the issues with different perspectives.

Before becoming Secretary of Transportation, LaHood served for 14 years in the U.S. House of Representatives from the 18th District of Illinois (from 1995-2009). During that time he served on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and, after that, on the House Appropriations Committee. Prior to his election to the House, he served as Chief of Staff to U.S. Congressman Robert Michel, whom he succeeded in representing the 18th District, and as District Administrative Assistant to Congressman Thomas Railsback. He also served in the Illinois State Legislature.

Before his career in government, Secretary LaHood was a junior high school teacher, having received his degree from Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois. He was also director of the Rock Island County Youth Services Bureau and Chief planner for the Bi-States Metropolitan Planning Commission in Illinois.

LaHood and his wife, Kathy, have four children (Darin, Amy, Sam, and Sara) and nine grandchildren.

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