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Clinton Cabinet Level Official Becomes LBJ School Professor U.S. Social Security Commissioner Kenneth Apfel will join the faculty of the LBJ School in January 2001. He will hold the Sid Richardson Chair in Public Affairs. A 1978 graduate of the LBJ School, Commissioner Apfel oversees one of the world's largest organizations: the Social Security Administration has 65,000 employees and an annual budget of over $400 billion, and delivers benefits to more than 50 million people every month. Apfel's term as Commissioner ends in January 2001. Dean Ed Dorn commented that Apfel's extensive leadership experience in the forefront of federal policy development will be an important addition to the LBJ faculty. "Ken Apfel exemplifies the qualities we look for in our endowed chairholders: intellect, integrity and real world policy experience." Since becoming Commissioner in 1997, Apfel has concentrated on the long-term financial health of the Social Security program, which will be strained by the retirement of the "baby boom" generation in the next decade. Apfel is highly regarded by his peers for his ability to lead in the midst of a passionate and ongoing debate over the future of the Social Security program. Apfel has spent more than two decades in Washington. He worked for more than a decade on Capitol Hill, serving for several years as legislative director to former Senator Bill Bradley. He was Bradley's key staffer during groundbreaking 1983 Social Security reform. During the Clinton administration, Apfel served as assistant secretary for management and budget at the Department of Health and Human Services and as associate director of the Office of Management and Budget before the Senate confirmed him as Social Security Commissioner. Apfel, who last year was the first recipient of the distinguished alumnus award of the UT Austin Graduate School, has maintained a strong connection with the University. "This is a terrific opportunity for my family and me," said Apfel. "The LBJ School changed my life. Now, I have a chance to inspire another generation of public servants, just as LBJ School professors inspired me." The Richardson Chair that Apfel will occupy once belonged to the late Wilbur Cohen, an aide to President Franklin Roosevelt and co-author of the Social Security program that Apfel now oversees. "Ken will add enormous strength to our program," said Dorn. "It would be hard to find anyone who could match his knowledge about social policy." Social Security Administration Web site October 3, 2000 |
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News and Events Fall 2000 News Briefs ©2000
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs October 3 , 2000 Comments to: lbjwmast@uts.cc.utexas.edu |
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