
Health Law Section Names Inaugural ‘Top 10 Under 40’ Award recipients
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
Celebrating BW Healthcare World 40Under40 and BW Pharma World Person of the Year Award 2024
The 3rd edition of the BW Healthcare World 40 under 40 business of Healthcare Summit and awards, was held on August 31 at The Imperial, New Delhi. The top 38 young achievers were selected by a discerning jury, recognising their outstanding contributions to healthcare and pharma industry. Krishna Prasad Chigurupati, Managing director of Granules India received the Pharma Person of the Year 2024 award. Dr Arvind Lal, Padma Shri Executive Chairman Dr Lal PathLabs shared his journey and insights on the present and future of diagnostics in India.
BW Healthcare World organised the 3rd edition of the prestigious 40 Under 40 awards, honoring outstanding healthcare professionals under 40 who have demonstrated remarkable expertise, empathy, innovation, and foresight in their fields, making significant contributions to society. The winner list highlights individuals with unique business ideas who are driving change, and each one is dedicated to serving the nation by striving to provide the gift of good health to its citizens.
Success in the BW Healthcare World 40 Under 40 is measured not just by financial metrics such as revenue, valuations, and profits, but by the innovation and impact of ideas. With India poised to be the world’s youngest nation, the 40 Under 40 list celebrates the young innovators, disruptors, founders, and CEOs shaping the future of healthcare.
The 3rd edition of the BW Healthcare World 40 under 40 business of Healthcare Summit and awards, a convergence of visionary leaders, professionals, and policymakers, was held on August 31 at The Imperial, New Delhi. After receiving numerous nominations and undergoing a rigorous yet transparent shortlisting process, the top 38 young achievers were selected by a discerning jury, recognising their outstanding contributions to healthcare and pharma industry.
To celebrate those who have made significant contributions to India’s pharmaceutical industry—leading the way with innovation and a commitment to improving the well-being of millions— BW Pharma World in association with BW Healthcare World organised Pharma Person of the Year 2024 on the same day. Krishna Prasad Chigurupati, Managing director of Granules India received the Pharma Person of the Year 2024 award.
During the summit, (Hony) Brig Dr Arvind Lal, Padma Shri Executive Chairman Dr Lal PathLabs shared his journey and insights on the present and future of diagnostics in India.
“Equitable access to high-quality diagnostics must be our guiding principle. We must continue to invest in education, training, and infrastructure to reach and serve the underserved”, Dr Lal said.
The List Of BW Healthcare World 40 Under 40 Young Achievers of 2024.
Long Island Business News
Jennifer B. Cona is the founder and managing partner of Cona Elder Law. Her practice focuses on asset protection, Medicaid planning, estate planning, probate and estate administration, estate litigation, special needs planning and guardianships. Under Cona’s guidance, the firm works to secure and ensure a payment source for long-term health care, working together with families and health care facilities to sustain quality care for older adults. She has been the recipient of numerous awards for her business acumen and commitment to the community. She is recognized by Best Lawyers in America and is rated a Super Lawyer.
JENNIFER CONA
Managing Partner
Cona Elder Law
Jennifer B. Cona is the founder and managing partner of Cona Elder Law, an award-winning firm in Melville. Cona’s practice focuses on asset protection, Medicaid planning, estate planning, probate and estate administration, estate litigation, special needs planning and guardianships. She also heads up the firm’s health care reimbursement and recovery practice group. Under Cona’s guidance, the firm works to secure and ensure a payment source for long-term health care, working together with families and health care facilities to sustain quality care for older adults.
Cona has been the recipient of numerous awards for her business acumen and commitment to the community. She is recognized by Best Lawyers in America and is rated a Super Lawyer. She was named to the 2022 Power List, Long Island’s Most Powerful Women as well as Top Lawyers on Long Island. She was named in the inaugural class of the New York Law Journal’s Top Women in Law and has received the prestigious Leadership in Law award from Long Island Business News, as well as the Power 25 in Law.
Cona has received the Top 50 Women in Business award three times and was inducted into the Hall of Fame. She was named in the inaugural class of Hofstra’s Outstanding Women in Law and was rated a Top 10 Legal Eagle on Long Island. She has received the Brava Smart CEO award and was named to the 40 Under 40 Rising Stars on Long Island list. She has received Star Network’s Power Women in Business award and the Outstanding Pro Bono Attorney award for her legal services provided to a severely disabled woman. She is regularly featured in Long Island Business News’ Who’s Who in Healthcare Law and Who’s Who in Women in Professional Services.
Under her direction, the firm has received the prestigious HIA Business Achievement Award and was recognized as Those Who Make a Difference by HIA, and was honored with the Outstanding Corporation Award from the Association of Fundraising Professionals.
Cona is the immediate past chair of the board of trustees of the Long Island Alzheimer’s and Dementia Center and serves on the board of the United Way of Long Island. She is the founder and chair of the Advanced Elder Law Focus Group, an industry think-tank.
She has been featured in many publications including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Newsday, The New York Law Journal, Long Island Business News, Kiplinger’s and Reader’s Digest. An author and lecturer, she has appeared as a guest on various TV and radio programs.
This profile is part of LIBN’s Influencers: Most Dynamic Women Leaders list. Information used in this profile was sourced from the honoree.
40 In Their 40s
Timothy Atkins is counsel and managing director of legislative affairs for Life Insurance Council of New York. Eric Blankenbaker is senior director of strategic and public affairs communications at Early Warning Services. Nate Bliss is Chief of Staff, Housing, Economic Development and Workforce, New York City Mayor’s Office. He worked on the bill that launched Uber and the ride-hailing industry in New York and is currently lobbying to increase the state’S statutory disability benefit for the first time in 30 years. He says the unique challenges of the post-pandemic moment are “p andemic” and “we’re in the midst of a structural reset,” says Bliss, 41, who grew up in suburban Washington, D.C., and moved to New York a week before 9/11, an experience that cemented his urbanist inclinations that he says helped him find his niche. and find a niche in a city that he found his niche instead of music.
Eric Blankenbaker Senior Director of Strategic and Public Affairs Communications, Early Warning Services Eric Blankenbaker / Weber Shandwick One benefit of being a communications pro like Eric Blankenbaker is that you always know what to say – even when the question is, “How do we handle the Middle East conflict?” Plenty have been stumped by that one. But when one of Blankenbaker’s corporate clients posed it recently, the 40-year-old was ready: “I said, let’s look at the last 150 statements that companies have put out – and use AI to analyze what rhetoric has been most effective.” As a crisis specialist, Blankenbaker is professionally comfortable with the uncomfortable. His team at Weber Shandwick, the public affairs firm where he previously worked, won a SABRE Award for its campaign to restore the reputation of rail company Norfolk Southern after a train derailment. Politics were “always part of my DNA,” Blankenbaker says. Thanks to his mother’s job working for Robert F. Kennedy, current affairs were breakfast table conversations at their Maryland home. Blankenbaker considered journalism before opting to work for politicians, including Rep. Tom Suozzi and former U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman. His newest challenge is the fallout of high-profile fraud affecting the Zelle payment app. As of this month, Blankenbaker is in charge of strategic and public affairs communications at Early Warning Services, the joint-venture financial services company behind Zelle. A millennial, he takes a proactive approach to confronting technology’s challenges. “Maybe I don’t know what the correct string is to input into ChatGPT,” Blankenbaker says. “But I can say, ‘This is a problem to solve – and we’re learning from one another.’”
Nate Bliss Chief of Staff, Housing, Economic Development and Workforce, New York City Mayor’s Office Nate Bliss / Michael Appleton, Mayoral Photography Office Nate Bliss spent 20 years building up the New York City economy – masterminding the Coney Island renaissance and, later, supporting the city Economic Development Corp. during a period of exceptional dynamism. He was working for Taconic Partners, a real estate developer, when the siren call of City Hall beckoned two years ago – and Bliss was soon back in government. Heading up housing, economic development and workforce for New York City Mayor Eric Adams, he says, is an irresistible “opportunity to address the unique challenges” of the post-pandemic moment. “We’re in the midst of a structural reset,” says Bliss, 41. Citing the truism that public and private sectors speak different languages, he adds, “I realized there’s a lot of value in someone who could speak both.” Bliss grew up in suburban Washington, D.C., and moved to New York a week before 9/11, an experience that cemented his urbanist inclinations. Initially drawn to the city’s music scene, he found his niche instead in urban planning, leading the Coney Island Alliance through a rezoning effort that jump-started the area’s amusement economy. At the New York City Economic Development Corp., Bliss built a team to tackle large-scale projects, like the growth of Long Island City. He learned that “getting anything big done in the city requires work with multiple stakeholders – and helping them find alignment,” Bliss says. Now Bliss brings these insights to challenges such as the housing crisis and income equality: “It’s been rewarding to work on such issues these past two years.”
Kate Blumm Senior Vice President, Rubenstein Kate Blumm / Annie Wu New York City native Kate Blumm never tires of telling the stories of the city that shaped her. Now a senior vice president at Rubenstein, the storied public relations agency, the 40-year-old has devoted her career to celebrating New York’s evolution through its institutions. After serving in a variety of city communications roles, Blumm says, “It was important to land at a place that loves New York as much as I do.” Her portfolio has included Rockefeller Center, the Penn District and One World Trade Center – properties “that have a real civic dimension and are important to all New Yorkers,” she says. Raised on the Upper West Side, Blumm earned an English degree from New York University and found PR a natural fit: “Language is how I understand the world.” In the years since, she has shaped communications around the Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s $100 million capital campaign and – with the city Economic Development Corp. – the Lower East Side’s Essex Crossing and Hunter’s Point South in Queens, projects that transformed New York neighborhoods. Crafting policy speeches for Mayor Bill de Blasio, Blumm says, was “one of the toughest and best experiences.” Most recently, she worked pro bono to secure national coverage for the Debt Gala, a social justice-minded spin on the starry Met Gala. Blumm’s career “is like getting a crash course from the best and the brightest minds in the business about any given policy space,” she says, “coming together to do a great project – and telling a great story about it.”
Kristine Borok Chief Strategy and Advancement Officer, Hot Bread Kitchen Kristine Borok / Margo Sivin In culinary school, Kristine Borok mastered exotic techniques. But one of her most treasured recipes is among the simplest: her Filipino grandmother’s leche flan. “Preparing it is an extension of all the women in my family,” she says. The connections between women, cooking and community are at the heart of Borok’s work at Hot Bread Kitchen, the nonprofit that supports New Yorkers in hospitality careers. Most, like Borok, are immigrants and women of color. She was born in the Philippines and grew up in one of the few nonwhite families in the 1980s Rockaways. Those experiences, coupled with her own early restaurant career (and women’s studies degrees from the University at Albany), inform Borok’s work as chief strategy and advancement officer. “I can’t imagine a better fit,” says Borok, 46. She comes from a family of restaurateurs, but the career path was still a hard sell to her immigrant parents: “There was no Food Network yet, no culture of celebrity chefs.” Borok didn’t end up needing a TV show to make an impact. Since joining Hot Bread Kitchen in 2019, she has boosted fundraising to $8 million annually, up from $3 million. Her work marshaling partnerships during the coronavirus pandemic helped expand the organization’s capacity to 550 clients annually, up from 100 five years ago. “I love that we’re this nonprofit arm of the food industry. It feels personally and professionally satisfying,” Borok says. “And I love being part of people’s life transformations – and hearing their stories.”
Caroline Brancatella Of Counsel, Greenberg Traurig Caroline Brancatella / Greenberg Traurig, LLP Caroline Brancatella’s career in health law has been defined as much by the power of female solidarity as by her successes in handling highly regulated health care transactions as well as Medicaid and Medicare. She roomed with her close-in-age younger sister during law school at the University at Buffalo. “It was like a bad Jane Austen novel,” she recalls, laughing. Both ended up as attorneys in Albany, where the elder Brancatella has been of counsel at Greenberg Traurig for 15 years. Her arrival at the firm coincided with the dawn of the Affordable Care Act, shaping a career centered around health care and FDA practice. She’s also a litigator who specializes in mergers, acquisitions and compliance matters. “I’ve watched the evolution of Obamacare, how it has affected the market and the expansion of New York Medicaid,” says Brancatella, who represents insurance plans, providers and government-payer programs. “And essentially, the trying of new things to make our health care system work.” A Buffalo native and Bills fan, Brancatella remains “a big supporter of upstate cities.” But she stays in Albany in no small part for the female support system where, once mentored herself, she now mentors others. “I clerked for a female federal judge, which taught me a lot about being a professional,” Brancatella says. “And one reason I stay at this specific firm is because I have such tremendous colleagues – not just in their substance, but in how they negotiate and manage their lives.”
Matt Cohen President and CEO, Long Island Association Matt Cohen / Lisa Polese At the Long Island Association, Matt Cohen brings a millennial vision to a century-old organization tackling the island’s contemporary challenges. “Long Island is a fun place to live and a good place to work,” Cohen says. “We’ve got top schools and hospitals, great beaches. There’s a lot to like.” As a 42-year-old parent, though, Cohen has a firsthand view of the issues on his home turf – including the housing and child care shortages that threaten Long Island’s economic growth. With LIA, Cohen has led efforts to create more housing through legalizing accessory dwelling units. He also rallies his membership – businesses and organizations throughout Nassau and Suffolk counties – to create workforce housing through public-private partnerships, and exhorts them to prioritize child care “as a business issue,” says Cohen, who also chairs the Child Care Council of Suffolk. The Northport native’s passion for policy started early: By 14, he was interning with Rep. Gary Ackerman. Apart from four years at the University of Pennsylvania, Cohen has always lived on Long Island. He earned his law degree from Hofstra and, prior to joining LIA, headed government affairs for the Long Island Power Authority and was U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer’s Long Island director. “Long Island has come a long way, especially in terms of the mindset around housing, but our collective mentality has to keep evolving,” Cohen says. “We’re a new generation of business leaders – and it’s up to us to talk about these issues.”
Melissa D’Andrea Public Sector Account Executive, Workday Melissa D’Andrea / Village Photo LLC Seen one way, Melissa D’Andrea sells software for Workday, whose products facilitate human resources and financial management. But D’Andrea views her job as a public service calling. “There’s something very rewarding about working for the state,” says the government account executive, who specializes in selling to New York and New England state departments and agencies. “I’ve always lived here. I’m a New York taxpayer. My kids went to college here, and now they’re looking for jobs,” says D’Andrea of her commitment. “So I understand the issues the state is dealing with.” Now 44, she grew up in Saratoga Springs, where her father specialized in a very old technology – blacksmithing for the local horse tracks. After marrying, D’Andrea had three daughters and launched her career in technology sales a decade ago, specializing in state contracts. “It’s a big value I provide, knowing how to navigate the procurement process for that customer,” D’Andrea says. At Oracle, where she was an account executive handling state public sector sales, D’Andrea was the top performer on her cloud infrastructure team for 2023. As a mother, D’Andrea is conscious of being a role model – “that strong female influence, showing there’s tremendous opportunity to be successful for yourself.” And while sales is about numbers, D’Andrea knows her work – facilitating the software that powers projects like Medicaid – is ultimately about human beings. “Everything we’re doing is making a difference, making things easier for people,” she says. “Technology changes lives.”
Kristin Duffy Director of State Legislative and Regulatory Affairs, AT&T Kristin Duffy / JP Elario A self-described lifelong “news junkie,” Kristin Duffy thought she’d be a journalist – but found her narrative inclinations were best suited to government affairs. “It really is storytelling,” Duffy says of her profession. “You convey the most important parts of whatever issue you’re working on, and get that story to the decision-makers.” Duffy currently does that at AT&T, where, as director of state legislative and regulatory affairs, she communicates the value of the company’s new cell towers – a process essential to closing the rural connectivity gap. She recently convinced the state Legislature to boost funding for upstate New York’s emergency response system from $20 million to $85 million, allowing for 911 upgrades. The Brunswick native, 41, realized during a college TV news internship that she wanted to go deeper into issues – and work on solutions. After college, she worked for then-state Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno and for the New York State Nurses Association, where she championed an anti-violence bill. At AT&T, Duffy has found satisfaction in working with the company’s foundation, which has committed $2 million since 2022 toward closing the digital divide – including the ongoing rollout of AT&T’s connecting learning centers at Boys and Girls Club as well as at Girls Inc. “I figure out what the needs are in our community, make recommendations and help shepherd projects to fruition,” Duffy says. “I like being the middleman – educating lawmakers on the importance of an issue, and working with the Legislature to solve problems.”
Elliott Ehrenreich Partner, Phillips Lytle Elliott Ehrenreich / KC Kratt Photography Elliott Ehrenreich’s legal skills are highly in demand by corporate and developer clients. But while he is known as an attorney, “I also see myself as a business adviser,” he says. “I take into account not only legal matters, but also the very real soft issues that come up – clients’ image within a community or industry, for instance – and help them sort through various decisions.” Ehrenreich, 45, is a partner in the Buffalo office of Phillips Lytle, where he specializes in corporate and business law and frequently counsels real estate developers on financing and other transactions. A Duquesne Law graduate, he practices in both Pennsylvania and New York and previously spent nearly two decades at Knox McLaughlin. In particular, Ehrenreich enjoys shepherding businesses throughout the corporate life cycle. He recalls one client who started a telepsychiatry company with limited capital. Under the attorney’s guidance, the business grew over a decade of investments and sold for “millions and millions,” Ehrenreich says. “It was phenomenal to see all that hard work pay off, for what was really the capstone of these individuals’ careers.” It’s not all business for Ehrenreich, however. In addition to representing UPMC, the Western Pennsylvania health system, he also serves on its patient quality committee and other boards. “It’s not all ribbon-cuttings: We drill down into the minutiae of safety that helps every patient who goes into a hospital,” he says. “That sort of work isn’t glamorous – but it’s incredibly rewarding.”
Joseph Fontano Secretary-Treasurer, Local 338 Joseph Fontano / Local 338 RWDSU / UFCW Joseph Fontano caught the political bug long before he caught the labor bug, but at the same time he calls the transition from one to the other basically seamless. Following stints as a staffer in the state Legislature and for the New York City Council, Fontano joined Local 338 as deputy political director, before being elected secretary-treasurer in 2015. He views the move into organized labor as a way to focus more on the issues that drive him. “It gave me the ability to fight for what I grew up believing in, good wages, the ability to retire with dignity and affordable health care,” Fontano says about the move. Fontano says his work on the growth of the cannabis industry in the state has been the proudest accomplishment of his career at Local 338. Fontano started working on the issue when it was largely about the medicinal marijuana industry and growing union jobs before the legalization of recreational marijuana. Fontano says that it was largely a team effort from Local 338. “We were developing a new industry in New York and we wanted good-paying jobs,” he says. With his focus more on the bargaining table and negotiating rather than strictly on the legislative agenda, Fontano says he finds the hours of negotiating worth it for one reason. “When you have members look for you at the end of the negotiations and say, ‘it works for us,’ there is nothing better than that,” Fontano says.
Michael Frame Executive Vice President, MACNY Michael Frame / Syracuse Regional Airport Authority After two decades advocating for higher education, Michael Frame now represents the renascent industry of his upstate youth. Joining the Manufacturers Association of Central New York two years ago as operations chief was less a pivot than an evolution of his core mission – to provide people with opportunities “at the intersection of policy and talent development,” says Frame, now MACNY’s executive vice president. “I’m growing New York state talent from a different angle, focused on nontraditional pathways.” These include technical apprenticeships and other initiatives aimed at training young people for in-demand jobs across a 26-county region. Frame grew up near Syracuse and “fell in love with advocacy” on a Cornell University trip to lobby Congress for federal financial aid. He graduated into lobbying roles with Florida State University, setting up its first Washington, D.C., office, and the State University of New York, where Frame coordinated a presidential visit and, for Binghamton University, helped increase research funding by $10 million. “Policy teaches you how to be strategic in your thinking,” Frame says. He is gratified to apply that strategy to his home region, where he “grew up in the shadow” of shuttered factories. Smaller manufacturers remain the lifeblood of the industry, he notes, and the Biden administration’s CHIPS Act is like a transfusion, which Frame leverages to jump-start the supply chain through semiconductor production. “We’re part of helping them be successful,” the Mohawk Valley resident says of MACNY’s 330 member companies. “To be part of this renaissance is really exciting.”
Nickesha Francis Policy and Advocacy Manager, Good Shepherd Services Nickesha Francis / Provided Nickesha Francis’ advocacy started early – on the playground in her native Jamaica. “I was always fighting injustice,” recalls the 44-year-old. “I was raised with a sense of community and taking care of each other, and that has carried through in every aspect of my work and my life.” It certainly informs Francis’ work as a policy and advocacy manager at Good Shepherd Services, the New York City child welfare agency where she has logged nearly a decade. Last fall, she successfully rallied with a coalition to restore city funding for educational and restorative justice programs. New York, where Francis came to study psychology at Mercy College, was initially a culture shock after Jamaica, “a little island where everybody knows everybody.” But she found satisfaction in case management and advocacy roles on behalf of families at The Children’s Village, a social services organization, and opted for a policy track at the Columbia University School of Social Work. Her perspective as an immigrant of color makes Francis especially effective in representing New York’s marginalized populations. One of her proudest achievements came during a graduate school internship with the Correctional Association of New York, when she campaigned to make New York among the final states to raise the age threshold for juvenile justice. “There was a lot of ignorance and discrimination that I experienced as an immigrant,” Francis says. “That really shaped my advocacy against injustice and bias.” Whether seeing patients or fighting for them, she adds, “I always come from a social work lens.”
Josh Gold Senior Director, Public Policy and Communications, Uber Josh Gold / Yuval Grill An influential health care union and a ride-hailing startup may appear to have little in common. But for political strategist Josh Gold, 1199SEIU’s large-scale campaigns provided the ideal training ground for working at Uber – where, in less than a decade, his policy efforts helped establish New York’s ride-hailing industry. “1199 was a great place to learn politics,” says Gold, an attorney who is now Uber’s senior director for public policy and communications. Working on Medicaid funding, “I learned relationship building and delved deep into issues.” Those lessons helped him to mount the multiyear campaign that finally changed state law, allowing Uber to operate legally. Such an outcome was hardly a given when Gold joined the startup in 2016 – nor was a smooth relationship with the New York City taxi industry, which staunchly opposed its startup rival. Gold achieved the détente by positioning Uber as an ally in the taxi industry’s recovery; 10% of taxi rides are now referred to Uber drivers. Raised in White Plains, Gold followed his mother into the law and found his niche in politics early, working for the city comptroller and leading public affairs for the New York Hotel and Motel Trades Council. Apart from Uber, he is proudest of managing the external campaign for then-Mayor Bill de Blasio’s groundbreaking pre-K funding initiative. “As a parent now, I think it’s one of the most impactful parts of his legacy,” Gold says. “And I was a part of that.”
Eldad Gothelf Senior Vice President, Real Estate, Kasirer Eldad Gothelf / Provided Eldad Gothelf’s childhood dream was playing shortstop for the New York Mets. After college, however, he realized urban planning “is the umbrella for everything that is interesting to me,” he says. “Politics, development, infrastructure, everything you see when you walk out of your house.” Now 47, Gothelf brings those interests together at Kasirer, where he is senior vice president for real estate. Since his first post-graduate school job – working on South Williamsburg’s redevelopment – he has helped shape the city’s evolution in a series of land use, zoning and government relations roles. “Nearly 20 years later, I’m working on multiple developments up and down the Greenpoint-Williamsburg waterfront,” Gothelf says. “I went out to dinner there not long ago, took a walk in Domino Park. That’s a gratifying feeling – to point things out to my two boys and say, ‘I was involved in that.’” Along with cultivating New York’s built infrastructure, Gothelf has long nurtured its human ecosystem. He is a longtime teacher of urban planning at Columbia University, his graduate alma mater, and mentors younger members of the Kasirer team. “Working in a defined geographic area and the same industry over time, you see the evolution of the work of the city,” he says. “In New York, you never run out of questions and things to learn.” But if he ever does, Gothelf wants the Mets to know he’s still available. “If they sign me now, at age 47,” he says, “it wouldn’t be the worst move they make all year.”
Kenya Handy-Hilliard U.S. Government Relations Manager, McDonald’s Kenya Handy-Hilliard / McDonald’s USA Steeped in public service from the time she was little, Kenya Handy-Hilliard recently took a novel step: She joined the private sector. Now a government relations manager for McDonald’s, Handy-Hilliard seeks “to make the most change with less politics,” she says. “I use my government experience to direct dollars to where the need is.” At the fast food behemoth, Handy-Hilliard cultivates partnerships with local police departments and youth sports leagues. A highlight was delivering Happy Meals and other aid to upstate communities of color traumatized by the deadly Buffalo supermarket shooting in 2022. Raised by city government veterans, Handy-Hilliard was initiated into New York politics working for Rep. Yvette Clarke. Diving into major issues like immigration reform made her realize that “I wanted to be the one taking it myself to the endzone,” she says. While her 2021 New York City Council candidacy was unsuccessful, “as a woman of color, it gave me a voice and a platform,” Handy-Hilliard says. It also convinced her she’d rather work behind the scenes. At 41, the lifelong New Yorker now draws on experience heading intergovernmental and community affairs for multiple city offices, as well as working under three administrations in the state attorney general’s downstate office – “a lesson in crisis management,” she says. In the public or private sector, Handy-Hilliard knows she has earned her authority. “That meek voice I grew up with? I got rid of it,” she says. “I walk into rooms confident in my ability. I know what I’m talking about.”
Laura Kavanagh Commissioner, Fire Department of the City of New York Laura Kavanagh / Lev Radin, Pacific Press, LightRocket via Getty Image Being the first woman to serve as New York City’s fire commissioner – and a young woman at that – is an experience Laura Kavanagh likens to hiking, her weekend passion. “A trail on the map is still long and hard, but you know where you’re going,” says the 42-year-old, who was appointed in 2022 and recently announced her resignation from the post. “If you decide on a different trail, you’ll have to clear the brush, and it takes twice as long to get anywhere. You may have to turn around and start a new path.” Kavanagh’s own new path has yielded greater diversity in FDNY recruitment, including a historically large cohort of women graduates. Since joining the department a decade ago, she has held a series of external affairs and deputy roles and is proud of helping secure firefighters’ largest-ever raise in a recent contract. Her effectiveness quieted some doubters, and she challenged the status quo during her time leading the department. Born in San Francisco, Kavanagh “moved to New York City the moment that I could, and never looked back,” she says. As a community and campaign organizer – including for Barack Obama’s reelection as president – Kavanagh has lived in all five boroughs. That experience gave her valuable grassroots perspective and a crucial familiarity with diverse neighborhoods, “which is important for anyone who runs things in this city.” Still, many who knew Kavanagh thought the FDNY “was a strange choice,” she acknowledges. “It was a risk and a change, of course. But I knew in my gut it would be the right thing.”
Amy Kellogg Partner, Harter Secrest & Emery Amy Kellogg / Super Source Media LLC Amy Kellogg’s passion for the law started at age 7, when she’d tell anyone who would listen in her rural upstate town that someday she’d be a lawyer. “I must have seen a movie,” she says, “because of course, at that age, I had no idea what lawyers do.” She does now – and teaches the next generation at her alma mater, Albany Law School. Since graduating, she has also specialized in lobbying as an attorney with Harter Secrest & Emery, using the legislative knowledge she gained during an internship with the Assembly. As partner-in-charge of the firm’s Albany office, Kellogg recently guided its expansion into new practice areas, adding attorneys in health care and tax law. Health is a current focus for her own work, which includes representing the American Nurses Association – including efforts to make New York the final state to recognize nurse anesthetists – and the state Clinical Laboratory Association, for whom she recently secured modifications to the licensing law. “There’s a shortage of health care providers in New York, which affects patient access,” Kellogg says. Her work is gratifying, she adds, “because I’m helping make sure every day New Yorkers get the services they need.” For years, Kellogg also has represented a New York City transit union – background that recently helped her negotiate the city’s congestion pricing plan. “These long-term relationships give you the ability to really dig into issues,” says the 46-year-old, “in a way that you couldn’t otherwise.”
Rochelle Kelly-Apson Senior Vice President, McBride Consulting & Business Development Group Rochelle Kelly-Apson / Jennifer Vacca For Rochelle Kelly-Apson, the line from hospitality to lobbying runs through politics – and the power of a single voice to effect change. The 44-year-old New Yorker found her own political voice in her hotel trades union. “Many members were immigrants, and they weren’t used to standing up for themselves to the big bosses,” Kelly-Apson says. Supporting her colleagues, and the candidates who best represented them, felt natural. “I’ve always been focused on service,” she says. After numerous campaigns and more than a half-dozen years working at the state level, Kelly-Apson is now a senior vice president at McBride Consulting & Business Development Group on Long Island. She is also involved with Black political and civic organizations, including the NAACP’s Hempstead chapter and Black Voters of Long Island. Over five years with the state attorney general’s office, Kelly-Apson saw the fruits of advocacy firsthand. Among her projects were a measure to curb medication overprescribing and funding for housing legal services to help homeowners. She also headed intergovernmental affairs for then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo, supporting efforts to raise the juvenile age for criminal responsibility. “What I loved most was seeing how the laws and budget were impacting people’s lives,” she says. “Policy has a real, life-changing impact.” She currently leads the board of New Hour For Women and Children, a provider of reentry services for Long Island women and families. In the private sector, “I still work on really positive projects,” Kelly-Apson says. “I’m still working for the people.”
Jason Laidley Founder and CEO, London House Jason Laidley / Dominique Maddox When Jason Laidley established his own strategic consultancy a few years ago, he knew his focus would be the borough he has called home since age 7. “I’m from the Bronx, and now we’re bringing resources back to the Bronx,” says Laidley, the founder and CEO of London House. “It makes sense to take my networks and resources and my understanding of government to help nonprofits – and represent them to the city and state.” Raised in a Jamaican immigrant family, Laidley studied computer science – but, like many Gen Xers, struggled to find a job, until he tried government. He landed the role of Bronx borough director for the New York City comptroller’s office and remained there for 15 years under three administrations, supervising constituent services like housing and nutrition programs. Now 45, Laidley has also worked on campaigns for notable city politicians, including Letitia James and Jamaal Bailey, who hired him as chief of staff in the state Senate. With experience in both New York and Albany, Laidley now advocates for clients like the New York Botanical Garden and the Bronx Community Foundation, increasing the borough’s share of the government funding pie. He’s also an executive at Moonshot Strategies. “Sometimes the Bronx gets the short end of the stick,” Laidley says. “We have a lot out here that people don’t know about. Sure, there’s Yankee Stadium, but also we’ve got Wave Hill and the botanical gardens and the most parkland in New York City – and great people doing great things.”
Wayne Lair Jr. Partner, Statewide Public Affairs Wayne Lair Jr. / Celeste Sloman Albany lobbyist Wayne Lair Jr. looks back with satisfaction over a record of policy wins in areas ranging from charter schools and health care to legalizing e-bikes. But as a partner at Statewide Public Affairs, he’s especially proud of helping build a powerhouse government relations outfit from the ground up. Lair, 41, joined Statewide at its founding, and his efforts have helped grow the firm from 12 clients to roughly 60, adding New York City and Buffalo offices along the way. “We really are like a family,” he says. Lair grew up in Johnstown, where his fascination with America’s past led to degrees in history and political science from the nearby University at Albany. Politics was a natural segue. His education in the workings of the state Senate and Assembly came as a legislative coordinator for New York StateWatch. Much of Lair’s recent work has involved lobbying for measures ensuring patient access to groundbreaking medicines – like a bill requiring insurance coverage for biomarker testing. “As health care advances, we’re trying to help government keep up with that progress,” he says. Lair has also represented the New York State Restaurant Association, helping small-to-medium-sized businesses navigate government policy. But persuading lawmakers to legalize e-scooters and e-bikes was among his most entertaining assignments as a lobbyist. “It was a lot of fun,” he recalls of the Bronx pilot program he helped organize on behalf of Lime, an e-scooter company. “We still have a couple of bikes lying around the office.”
Ya-Ting Liu Chief Public Realm Officer, New York City Mayor’s Office Ya-Ting Liu / Via Transportation To the chagrin of her immigrant parents, Ya-Ting Liu was born to pursue public service. “They wanted me to be a lawyer or doctor, of course,” says the Taiwan-born Liu, who grew up in New Jersey. “But I’ve always been passionate about causes bigger than ourselves – and how decisions impact the lives of so many people.” Today, Liu makes some of those decisions as New York City’s first chief public realm officer. After working on built environments as Mayor Eric Adams’ strategy chief, she was chosen to establish a new role aimed at improving quotidian public spaces. “It’s channeling the everyday New Yorker getting from Point A to Point B,” says Liu, a longtime urban planner, “and making that experience as nice as possible.” Drawing on experience with various conservation and infrastructure organizations, Liu has tackled everything from a network of public restrooms – she’s working on a Google Maps feature – to public space (adding 40 football fields’ worth across five boroughs) and the nation’s largest outdoor dining program. Her team is currently collaborating with the City Council to reform standards for those pandemic-era sidewalk sheds. While tackling the day-to-day streetscape, Liu also is also aware of her role as a precedent and a model – even though, “if I’m totally honest, my parents are still not 100% clear on what I do,” she says. “But they’re really proud. I’m paving the way to what I hope will be a successful legacy not just in New York City, but throughout the country.”
Terrance Miller Regional Sales Manager, New York City, CDW Terrance Miller / Crystal Razor-Miller Over nearly two decades, Terrance Miller has championed diversity at the software and information technology company CDW – with notable results. Dozens of minority- and women-owned businesses now partner with CDW as suppliers, and Miller’s work with Black fraternities and sororities has fortified a pipeline of underrepresented candidates – as has a paid internship program for New York City youths. “Inclusivity is important for me because I feel everybody deserves opportunity and a fair shot,” says Miller, 43. He feels that way in large part due to his own childhood in New Haven’s poverty-plagued core, “where I saw so many individuals with talent that went unrealized,” he says. By age 13, Miller was a peer mentor – a role he would play, in various ways, throughout his professional career, incorporating the skills he added as a college social services major. His impact at CDW is considerable, since the company is an official software provider for New York City and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Miller has used those relationships to partner on workforce development programs, and he also co-chairs CDW’s East Coast chapter of Black Excellence Unlimited. Recently, Miller was back in New Haven, talking to teens about technical careers. “What made me fall in love with this job is the gratification that I’ve gotten from giving back and working with youth,” he says. Whether selling technology or spearheading inclusion, he says, “It’s about managing relationships, understanding the client’s needs – and connecting people with the right resources.”
Bennet Moskowitz Partner, Troutman Pepper Bennet Moskowitz / Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP High-profile, controversial clients like Ivanka Trump or the estate of Jeffrey Epstein might intimidate some – but not Bennet Moskowitz, who has represented both. “I was born for this,” says the litigator, a partner in the Manhattan office of Troutman Pepper. “I’m not afraid to speak up for my decisions. I have no stage fright. I’m a bipartisan lawyer who fights hard for everyone I represent – and I believe everyone deserves the best defense possible. That’s how the system works best.” Raised in South Florida, Moskowitz studied journalism and sociology at New York University before deciding to try law, enrolling at Columbia. It turned out to suit his Type A personality perfectly. Now 41, Moskowitz has earned a reputation for the kinds of clients and cases that turn heads. He was in the middle of the battle over New York’s congressional redistricting, which has national political implications, and recently secured one of the year’s largest jury awards in North Carolina, for a book publisher. “As a litigator, you live for that kind of result,” he says. Weekends in his Connecticut suburb while cheering on his children at School of Rock and Little League keep Moskowitz grounded. Boldface names or otherwise, “You have to tune out all the noise you hear, whether it’s from media or other people, and focus on doing the best job you can for your client,” he says. “I’m available 24/7 to all my clients – famous or not. I really live their cases.”
Adebayo Oyeniya Director, Infrastructure and Capital Projects, KPMG Adebayo Oyeniya / Tiem Okori An “accidental public servant,” as he calls himself, Adebayo Oyeniya came from Nigeria to Manhattan in 2011 – and was bowled over “by the magnitude of the environment, the high rises, the underground trains,” he says. While studying architecture at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, he was compelled by both the region’s physical complexity and the challenge of modernizing its century-old infrastructure. Today, as a Manhattan-based director at KPMG, he tackles those issues directly with a portfolio of infrastructure and capital projects, roughly 70% of which involve New York City government and other public clients. In addition to architecture training on two continents, Oyeniya draws on nearly a decade of experience with both the city Department of Design and Construction and its Economic Development Corp. Memorably, he worked on the reconstruction of more than 100 homes demolished by Superstorm Sandy. He was also integral to the construction of Coney Island’s new Ruth Bader Ginsburg Hospital – part of a $1.7 billion post-Sandy Federal Emergency Management Agency grant. In Nigeria, the young Oyeniya latched onto architecture because he loved the interplay of human environments and nature, and he was good at sketching. Here in New York, he draws continual inspiration from the city itself, “the way it pushes you to your limit,” says Oyeniya, 41. “There’s so much potential in New York City, so much resiliency,” he says. “You want to take advantage of that – and see New York be more vibrant, socially conscious, diverse and improved for the next generation.”
Ed Ra Assembly Member Ed Ra / NYS Assembly Minority Member Services In 2010, at just 28, Ed Ra was then the youngest person elected to the Assembly. “People would think I was an intern and ask me for ID,” recalls the Nassau County Republican, now 42. Ra was the youngest member of that year’s youth wave, a millennial influence that continues to reverberate. He recently co-founded the Future Caucus, for state legislators under 45, with Manhattan Democrat Alex Bores. Together, they bring a generational affinity for technology – Ra has a computer science degree – to contemporary issues like AI. (Constituents are thrilled “to see something bipartisan, given where we are right now politically,” he says.) For his part, Ra grew up immersed in “the positive side of government,” as the son of a Hempstead council member. Watching his father earn neighbors’ respect by working on their problems, “I knew from high school that I wanted to run for office myself,” says Ra, a former deputy attorney for Hempstead. In the Assembly, Ra is proud of modernizing funding to expand education for children with disabilities, and of his budget work with the Ways and Means Committee. He lives a few miles from where he grew up in Franklin Square, and like a lot of 40-somethings, can often be found working out at Orangetheory Fitness. “I went to the grand opening of their local studio, and thought, ‘I might like this,’” he recalls. “It ended up becoming a five-day-a-week thing.”
Rachel Rea Senior Vice President of Operations, Boingo Wireless Rachel Rea / Boingo Wireless Behind Rachel Rea’s career in wireless technology is a decadeslong love affair with radio frequency engineering. “It’s like art for people who can’t draw,” says Rea, who currently leads operations for Boingo Wireless. “It’s got a very creative side to it.” It’s also essential infrastructure for modern life, as anyone who has seen the Boingo logo at a New York City airport or train station knows (the Metropolitan Transportation Authority is a client). The ubiquity of wireless makes Rea very popular – and her work deeply gratifying. “We give customers connectivity where they didn’t have service before,” she says. Rea, 49, grew up in New York loving math and science and majored in electrical engineering. She learned the wireless industry over more than a dozen years at Verizon, handling matters ranging from design and operations to management of both budgets and people. At Boingo, Rea oversees the design and deployment of large-scale networks, including for military bases and hospitals. A recent project was connecting Grand Central Madison, a new MTA rail terminal 18 stories under Manhattan’s East Side. But her longest-term project, and the one she’s most proud of, is recruiting more women into tech careers. Rea is the executive sponsor for Boingo’s women’s employee resource group and a mentor with industry groups. “The last statistic I heard is that women make up 16% of engineering and STEM fields,” she says. “While that’s a lot better than the ’90s when I was in school, we still have a long way to go.”
Jennifer Richardson Senior Vice President, Patrick B. Jenkins & Associates Jennifer Richardson / JP Elario Jennifer Richardson likes to be fast. Right now, she’s training for the New York City Marathon, with a goal of 7 minutes, 50 seconds per mile and as a fundraiser for Girls on the Run Hudson Valley. Fast is also the pace of her lobbying work at Patrick B. Jenkins & Associates, where she is senior vice president. “In the private sector, things move,” says Richardson, who joined the firm after a series of state and city roles. “The public sector is a slower process. But that background is extremely helpful. I can tell clients what to expect – that government has a hierarchy, and sometimes 30 people have to approve something.” Richardson grew up in Dutchess County, studied at Cornell and earned a law degree at Albany Law School, where she now teaches lobbying law. After stints at a union and several state offices, she found her niche in a legislative affairs role with the New York City Department of Education. “I love that there are always new things to learn,” says Richardson, who also worked in the New York City mayor’s office. “Lobbying is like putting together a series of puzzles.” At the Department of Education, she helped establish a first-of-its-kind statewide prosecutorial conduct commission. More recently, Richardson worked on legislative reform around the handling of trial evidence. These days, running between her office and meetings with lawmakers, she occasionally slows down to wave. “Sometimes I’ll see my students in the Capitol,” she says.
Shanifah Rieara Senior Adviser for Communications and Policy and Chief Customer Officer, Metropolitan Transportation Authority Shanifah Rieara / Marc Hermann Back in 2010, Shanifah Rieara was annoyed at the proliferation of poor manners during her New York City subway commute. So she posted on Facebook: “If I was to ever work at the MTA, I’m going to do a courtesy campaign.” When Facebook recently reminded her of that 14-year-old post, the longtime straphanger had a good laugh. After joining the Metropolitan Transportation Authority as head of communications and policy and chief customer officer, Rieara did indeed spearhead the “Courtesy Counts” campaign, featuring whimsical cartoons that gently reinforce politeness. Rieara also rolled out 10,000 screens to improve messaging and honored the MetroCard’s last gasp with a collectible series featuring Notorious BIG and Vampire Weekend – “taking the MetroCard strong to the finish line.” Civic engagement was a family ethos for Rieara, who was born in St. Thomas and grew up in the Bronx. By her early 20s, she was attending community board meetings, which led to full-time roles at boards in West Harlem and the Upper West Side during Columbia University’s expansion. Rieara modernized community boards as Northern Manhattan director for then-Borough President Scott Stringer, then followed Stringer to the city comptroller’s office, overseeing public affairs. Now 45, she brings a grassroots focus to her work overseeing New York’s ultimate democratic institution: public transit. “I have that 90-minute commute from the Bronx down to MTA headquarters, so I see it all firsthand,” Rieara says. “It’s easy to complain, but I am a true believer in government – and making it work.”
Gustavo Rivera State Senator Gustavo Rivera / New York State Senate Photography State Sen. Gustavo Rivera’s political career gathered steam gradually, then suddenly, in Hemingway’s immortal words. The Puerto Rico native won his Bronx state Senate seat, which he has held for 14 years, after years as a political operative – “working on elections, not becoming an election result,” he explains. He had come to New York to study political science. Recruited to help with a friend’s run for office, Rivera was drawn into campaigns, which led to a job at the state Senate. By 2009, even his Hunter College students were urging him to run himself. Rivera was determined to find the perfect candidate to help Democrats retake the chamber – until finally, he became that candidate. “Based on the privilege I’ve had, I see this work as an obligation to the community,” says Rivera, 48, whose speech is peppered with a scholar’s historical references. “And it’s an obligation to continue working for them, seeking power on their behalf, to change their lives for the better.” Motivated by his social issues, the senator counts his 2011 vote for same-sex marriage as a highlight. (He has officiated several same-sex ceremonies.) The first person of color to chair his chamber’s Health Committee, he is marshaling sponsors for a bill guaranteeing universal health care for New Yorkers. “It would fundamentally change the way we deliver health care, and potentially create a model for the country,” Rivera says. And yes, it’s an uphill battle – but “I don’t do small ball,” he adds. “I do big things.”
Daisy Rodríguez Executive Director of Government and Community Affairs, Wildlife Conservation Society Daisy Rodríguez / Marie Guardino At the intersection of New York’s premier science and arts institutions, Daisy Rodríguez’s work on accessibility is distinctly personal. Cultural destinations felt far from accessible to Rodríguez in the 1980s, when she grew up in a Manhattan family of Spanish-speaking immigrants. Today, she is devoted to a more inclusive New York as the head of government and community affairs for the Wildlife Conservation Society – where she successfully fought to restore $53 million in city funding for New York’s cultural community. “We can demonstrate the numbers and the influence,” says Rodríguez, who is also a board member of the Museum Association of New York. “You can impact a young person’s mind by providing something as simple as access to these spaces. And the support we get from government makes that possible.” Rodríguez, who holds degrees in art and urban affairs, first honed her legislative skills working for U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer. She previously led government affairs for the American Museum of Natural History, expanding outreach throughout the five boroughs. These days, in an effort to engage marginalized teens like her younger self, Rodríguez hires local youths for jobs at the five city parks run by her Bronx-based conservation organization (the Bronx Zoo is one). She also forges partnerships on career-oriented science programs, including conservation fieldwork. “People before me helped me, and I’m a big believer in paying it forward,” Rodríguez says. “You’ve got to plant those seeds – because you’ll grow a garden for sure.”
Robert Rodriguez President and CEO, Dormitory Authority of the State of New York Robert Rodriguez / Dormitory Authority of the State of New York Growing up in East Harlem, Robert Rodriguez never imagined he’d become New York’s secretary of state – or the first Hispanic person to lead the powerful Dormitory Authority of the State of New York, which finances and constructs much of the state’s health and education infrastructure. Yet Rodriguez was born into public service. His mother was a school administrator, and his father served on the New York City Council. “In true telenovela fashion, my uncle ran against my dad,” recalls Rodriguez, 48, who thought: “That drama – it’s not for me.” So after Yale University, Rodriguez took a finance job with Bloomberg LP. Ironically, it was his boss-turned-mayor, Mike Bloomberg, who inspired Rodriguez’s political change of heart: “Watching him take that leap influenced my thinking about how to make a difference.” Transitioning to a public finance career, Rodriguez then won election to the Assembly from his East Harlem district in 2010. Over a decade in that legislative role, he championed state-subsidized retirement savings and spearheaded state investments in public housing, transit and open spaces. He is especially proud of the Second Avenue subway and the East River Esplanade. The grandson of Puerto Rican transplants, Rodriguez was humbled to be part of a historically diverse state Cabinet – and to put his corporate and public finance skills to broader use. After championing the Department of State’s community development program, the new DASNY chief says he is thrilled “to continue that mission-driven work with the resources and commitment to transform the communities of New York.”
Denny Salas Senior Vice President, Gotham Government Relations Denny Salas / Rachel Charlesworth After stints in Washington, D.C., and Florida, Denny Salas – like so many ambitious, high-energy people – found his political home in New York City. “In New York, it feels easier to get into local politics,” says Salas, who is currently a senior vice president at Gotham Government Relations. “There are so many avenues to get involved and to distinguish yourself.” For Salas, those efforts included runs for New York City Council in 2021 and Assembly in 2022, both motivated in part by issues of inequity raised by the murder of George Floyd. While he didn’t win either race, Salas succeeded in cultivating the relationships that established him on New York’s political landscape. The New England-bred son of Dominican immigrants, Salas, now 42, was working in finance when Barack Obama’s presidential bid drew him into politics. After campaign and lobbying roles in the nation’s capital, Salas landed in New York a decade ago, taking positions with a charter school and the New York City Police Department. At Gotham, he recently represented public service retirees in a successful bid to preserve Medicare benefits. Salas also holds leadership roles with the United Democratic Organization, a Chinatown political club where he has spearheaded holiday food distribution, and the Manhattan Democratic Party. “When I jumped in for City Council, people were watching – union people, community leaders – and saw that I am a serious person,” Salas says. “They saw that I was, and am, actually there to help people – and that I was willing to deliver.”
Akiva Shapiro Partner, Gibson Dunn Akiva Shapiro / Allison Josephs As a regular in front of New York’s top courts and even the U.S. Supreme Court, Akiva Shapiro is not easily fazed. But he admits to being awestruck last year, when the American Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists honored him with its Pursuit of Justice Award. “Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg presented that award to Justice Elena Kagan in the Supreme Court chambers,” says Shapiro, 45. “I was incredibly wowed and inspired, as a very proud Jew and Jewish lawyer.” Shapiro, a litigation partner in the New York office of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, has earned a reputation as one of the nation’s leading defenders of religious liberties. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he made headlines by persuading the U.S. Supreme Court that then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s restrictions on religious gatherings were unconstitutional. More recently, Shapiro has represented a Queens stadium in ongoing litigation over outdoor concerts. “From my perspective, it’s a critical First Amendment issue to ensure that musicians are able to perform in venues like this in New York, a music haven,” he says. The son of Palo Alto computer specialists, Shapiro was always fascinated by American history and the U.S. Constitution. He earned a master’s degree in religious studies from Yale and a law degree from Columbia, and chose Gibson Dunn because its focus on constitutional litigation dovetailed with his self-described libertarian streak. “I felt I had the opportunity to make a difference,” he says. “In an ideal world, as a lawyer, that’s what you’re doing.”
Dawn Smalls Partner, Jenner & Block Dawn Smalls / Jenner & Block LLP Dawn Smalls went into law to make large-scale change. Indeed, from the Clinton White House to the Obama administration and now at the firm of Jenner & Block, where she is a partner, the 46-year-old has a legacy of advocacy on behalf of vulnerable Americans. Millions have used the Affordable Care Act, which Smalls implemented as the chief regulatory officer for then-President Barack Obama’s Department of Health and Human Services. More recently, Smalls led a national class-action lawsuit on behalf of underpaid au pairs – and successfully prevented New York City from evicting unhoused New Yorkers sheltering at hotels during the COVID-19 pandemic. “I’m invested in where I can be the most impactful,” she says, “whether government, nonprofit or the private sector.” As evidence, Smalls cites her 2019 run for New York City public advocate, which led to a place on the city Campaign Finance Board. And much of Smalls’ advocacy draws on her experiences marshaling civic engagement with the Ford and Open Society foundations. Smalls realized early that law and government were powerful levers of change. Her first close-up exposure came as a high school student, where the political internship program included career advice from the governor and mayor. By her 21st birthday, she was working for White House chief of staff John Podesta – and noticed how many senior figures, like Elena Kagan and Rahm Emanuel, were attorneys. “That was the example before me,” she says, “and the example I wanted to emulate: a lawyer who contributes to policy and change.”
JJ Suarez Jr. Vice President, CSA Group JJ Suarez Jr. / Provided Across New York City, JJ Suarez Jr. has overseen hundreds of upgrades to subway stations, public housing and other city-run facilities. As vice president at CSA Group, the architectural and engineering firm founded by his father three decades ago, Suarez launched the firm’s operations in New York City 15 years ago – and has since grown CSA into an indispensable resource for the city’s infrastructure. Suarez had big shoes to fill: JJ Suarez Sr., a Cuban refugee who emigrated to the U.S. from Puerto Rico, founded the nation’s largest Hispanic-owned project delivery firm. “He’s been an amazing role model and mentor,” the younger Suarez says. Raised in Cincinnati, Suarez joined the company after college, using his bilingual skills to coordinate CSA projects in Puerto Rico. He also worked with the Cincinnati public schools to rebuild all 72 of the district’s facilities. But New York is where Suarez – who holds a master’s degree in construction management from New York University – has made his mark. Under his supervision, CSA acquired and expanded a 20-person firm to 120 employees today, becoming a go-to contractor for the New York City Housing Authority as well as the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Particularly memorable was the task of rehabilitating nearly 300 public housing buildings in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy – a task Suarez calls emblematic of the firm’s mission. “It’s work that contributes to the welfare of a lot of people,” he says. “And that’s very rewarding.”
Raj Thakkar Founder and CEO, Charter School Business Management Raj Thakkar / Erik Isakson Photographics In his 30s, Raj Thakkar had what looked like a great career – working for a technology startup – but found himself disenchanted with corporate politics. “I wanted to make an impact,” says the native New Yorker, 49. “I wanted to do something good for a change.” That initial change, as chief financial officer of a Brooklyn charter school, propelled Thakkar toward his eventual niche – advising schools and nonprofits on sound financial organization. As the founder and CEO of Charter School Business Management and its affiliate, FOREsight Financial Services for Good, he now employs 70 full-time staff who assist 175 organizations in New York City as well as nationally. Thakkar learned the importance of financial management as a young child, refilling candy and soda in his father’s Queens convenience store. But when health issues forced his father to retire, the resulting sale of the business – at a loss – kindled the young man’s passion for helping worthy causes thrive. Since launching his venture, Thakkar, who holds a master’s degree in business administration from New York University, has been named New York’s Small Business Person of the Year in 2018 and has taught social enterprise at the NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. He recently published a book, “Fiscally seCURE: Prepare, Protect and Propel Your Charter School with Responsible Financial Management,” the first in a series. “My dad wasn’t ready to retire 10 years earlier than planned,” Thakkar says. “I thought, I don’t want this to happen to anyone else that I know, personally or professionally.”
Robbie Welch Co-Director, Community Outreach Unit, New York City Council Robbie Welch / Omar Balbuena Garcia, Printing Depot NYC Thanks to Robbie Welch, visitors to City Hall now admire portraits of trailblazing women, like Black Rep. Shirley Chisholm, alongside pictures of New York City’s mayors (all men). It’s one way that Welch has brought his arts background and diverse perspective to the City Council, where he is a longtime staffer. The “Women’s Voices: Shaping the City” display “marries my worlds of culture and art with government,” Welch says. Similarly, he brings his DJ talents to City Hall events and has been active in diversity recruiting efforts. A Florida native, Welch got his start in the music and entertainment business. Eventually, he made his way to New York City and worked for New Line Cinema. By his 30s, “I was feeling burned out,” he says. “I wanted to do something more fulfilling.” Drawn to advocacy, Welch took a position with the New York State Black Gay Network. He then spent a decade coordinating education and training programs for Community Resource Exchange, a management consultancy that strengthens New York City nonprofits. Along the way, his focus became “having conversations with the community, and understanding what they need,” says Welch, 48. At the City Council, he recently coordinated the first visit from a Cuban delegation of LGBTQ+ leaders. “It was really powerful, because they got a chance to see our culture in a different way, and vice versa,” Welch says. “What I enjoy about politics is that we have the ability to make change – and it has to start somewhere.”
Daniel White Senior Account Executive, Geto & de Milly Daniel White / Geto & de Milly You could say that Daniel White has a lot of balls in the air this year. The senior account executive at Geto & de Milly, a public affairs firm, has been busy organizing major New York real estate projects around professional soccer, cricket and tennis. “I love sports,” says White, 42. “So representing three of the most popular sports on the planet here in New York allows me to marry that with my experience in buildings and land use.” White recently celebrated the approval of the New York City FC’s $800 million Queens stadium – the fruition of a decadelong effort on behalf of the city’s first Major League Soccer team. His work has also paid off for the John McEnroe Tennis Academy, which will be the country’s largest indoor tennis facility when it opens this fall on Randalls Island. Also this year, White helped the International Cricket Council build a temporary stadium for the New York portion of this year’s Cricket World Cup. His own addresses changed constantly during his itinerant childhood. But New York has been home since he moved to attend Fordham University, save for a five-year post-college detour to Capitol Hill working for then-Rep. José E. Serrano. At Geto & de Milly, White has put those government relations skills to use on behalf of some of New York’s most iconic new buildings, like the Robert A.M. Stern-designed 520 Park Ave. “We get to see our work built across the city,” White says. “That’s pretty cool.”
Michael Woloz Founder and Managing Partner, CMW Strategies Michael Woloz / Lisa Berg Nearly half a lifetime ago, Michael Woloz traded a career writing for newspapers and for the New York City Council to try public affairs – and never left. “It was so fascinating, and the work was so current. And it still is,” says Woloz, 49, now the head of the firm, renamed CMW Strategies. “I love dealing with complex issues, building coalitions and trying to find solutions.” As managing partner, Woloz has cultivated a Top 10 boutique lobbying firm that specializes in culture, real estate, transportation and technology. Over the years, Woloz has secured hundreds of millions in state and city dollars for the arts institutions that, as a New York native, he grew up cherishing. He was also instrumental in lobbying the city to permit the launch of e-scooters. But as chair of the New York League of Conservation Voters, Woloz considers his work on environmentalism to be his greatest legacy. “I think climate change is one of the key challenges of our time,” says Woloz, who successfully persuaded the city to impose greener standards for home heating oil. “I have two children, and I believe we need to do what we can to make their future better.” As new issues continue to sprout, Woloz retains the enthusiasm that drew him into lobbying a quarter century ago. “You’re in the middle of it. You’re in the room where it all happens,” he says of the policy world. “That’s what’s exciting about lobbying.”
40 Under Forty
Candis Hunter is an environmental health scientist for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Zachary Suchin is the youngest CEO of a publicly traded company in the US. Qaadirah Abdur-Rahim is the CEO of the Future Foundation, a nonprofit working to help at-risk youth in Atlanta. Eden Chen is a founding partner of Fishermen Labs, a Los Angeles-based studio that designs, develops, and markets websites and apps for major brands and startups. Fatima Fatima is an obesity medicine physician at the Massachusetts General Hospital and an instructor in medicine and pediatrics at Harvard Medical School and the University of Massachusetts Medical School. The list also includes an allergist and immunologist with Allergy and Asthma Associates of Murray Hill in New York, and a former US Air Force Reservist and one of the 100 Most Most Influential Muslims in Georgia in 2014. The full list can be found at CNN.com/Heroes and CNN iReport, or click here for more information.
Official Title: Environmental Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Emory PhD candidate in environmental health sciences
Better Known As: An advocate for environmental justice, community-engaged research, and mentorship
Candis Hunter/Photo by Kay Hinton
As an environmental health scientist for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Candis Hunter works on a range of projects that tap into her core skills and interests—including emergency response preparedness, epidemiological research, and health education and training on adverse environmental exposures in tribal and underserved communities. Also an environmental health officer in the USPHS Commissioned Corps, Hunter has responded to public health emergencies including the 2011 earthquake in Japan, the 2015 Ebola virus disease outbreak, and the 2016 Flint, Michigan, water crisis. From 2009 to 2016, Hunter provided epidemiological support and project management for an important research study on the Navajo Nation, examining the relationship between uranium exposures and birth outcomes and early developmental delays. “One of the most meaningful aspects was working directly with our staff and other tribal partners,” Hunter says.“They are on the front lines of study participant engagement, outreach, and sample collection and processing. I’m deeply humbled to have had the opportunity to learn from and work with them.”
Zach Suchin
2. Zachary Suchin 06C is a founding partner and CEO of Brand Knew, a successful creative agency in Los Angeles. High-profile clients include E! Entertainment, President Barack Obama, Nike, AVP, Stand Up 2 Cancer, Tribune, the United Nations, and FOX. The year after Suchin graduated from Emory and founded his first media company, he was the youngest CEO of a publicly traded company in the US.
Kevin Gooch
3. Kevin Gooch 99Ox 01C is an Atlanta-based partner in the finance group of the global law firm DLA Piper, with expertise in assisting financial institutions, corporations, and private equity funds. During his career, Gooch has worked on more than $20 billion in financing and restructuring transactions. He’s also the youngest ever chair-elect of 100 Black Men of Atlanta and an adjunct professor at Emory Law.
Purvi Parikh
4. Purvi Parikh 04C is an allergist and immunologist with Allergy and Asthma Associates of Murray Hill in New York. A spokesperson for shot@life, the vaccine initiative for the UN Foundation, she founded the Share and Care Foundation’s Young Professional Committee, which raises money for women and children in India. Parikh also is a faculty member at the New York University School of Medicine and a medical news correspondent on behalf of the allergy and asthma network who has been featured on CBS, NBC, Fox, and CNN.
Eden Chen
5. Eden Chen 09B is a founding partner of Fishermen Labs, a Los Angeles-based studio that designs, develops, and markets websites and apps for major brands and startups. Their visionary digital products include virtual reality and augmented reality platforms; the client list includes Sony, HTC, Walmart, the United Nations, IAC, NBC, Fox, Qualcomm, and Lenovo. 6. Who: Qaadirah Abdur-Rahim 11MBA
Official Title: CEO of the Future Foundation, Atlanta
Better Known As: An organization builder
Qaadirah Abdur-Rahim
A first-generation college graduate and former US Air Force Reservist, Qaadirah Abdur-Rahim now leads the Future Foundation, a nonprofit working to help at-risk youth in Atlanta. She expanded the after-school program serving a dozen kids to an organization reaching more than four thousand, and grew its revenue from $230,000 to $2 million annually. But its success is not measured in dollars—100 percent of participants graduate from high school, compared to an average 70 percent for the schools where the foundation works. Abdur-Rahim holds a master’s degree from the University of California San Francisco, is one of the youngest women in the YWCA Academy of Women Achievers, was named one of the 100 Most Influential Muslims in Georgia in 2014, and has received an Air Force Meritorious Service Award. “I have always imagined myself using my career to help people,” she says. “I am happy about where I am professionally and completely excited about the position I am in to do more.”
Fatima Cody Stanford
7. Fatima Cody Stanford 00C 01MPH is an obesity medicine physician at the Massachusetts General Hospital Weight Center and an instructor in medicine and pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. She received the Massachusetts Medical Society’s 2017 Women’s Health Award for her “immense expertise on the medical and social aspects of obesity.” Other honors include the Gold Congressional Award and the Harvard Medical School Diversity Award.
Sarah Serene Arison
8. Sarah Serene Arison 07B is president of the Arison Arts Foundation, a private grant-making organization that provides support for emerging artists and the institutions that foster them. She produced her first feature film, Desert Dancer, with Relativity Media in 2015. Her second film, The First Monday in May, opened the Tribeca Film Festival in 2016.
Nate Gross/Photo by Bryan Meltz
9. Nate Gross 12M is the cofounder of Doximity, the online network used by over 70 percent of US physicians. He is also the cofounder of the venture capital fund Rock Health. In addition to his MD, Gross earned an MBA from Harvard Business School. He serves as affiliated faculty for the Clinical Informatics Fellowship at Stanford and on the advisory boards for SXSW and the Institute for Pediatric Surgical Innovation at Children’s National Medical Center.
Andrew Cooper
10. Andrew Cooper 12L is an Atlanta intellectual property litigator focusing on complex commercial disputes, patent litigation, IP portfolio management, and counseling business units. As corporate counsel for UPS, he works with senior leaders regarding commercial transactions and regulatory issues. 11. Who: William Evans 05C
Official Title: Executive Director and Founder, Deep Vellum Publishing; Cofounder, Cinestate
Better Known As: A literary visionary
Will Evans
Will Evans has been turning the Dallas, Texas, creative scene on its ear since he founded Deep Vellum Publishing in 2013—a literary arts nonprofit created to introduce foreign literature and authors to audiences hungry for original, diverse voices. “My passion for connecting the world through literature was sparked by a life-changing class I took my first semester at Emory—19th-century Russian literature in translation,” he says. “Dr. Elena Glazov-Corrigan taught all of her students that the written word has the power to bring people together and to change the world.” Evans did a stint in the music business before pursuing a master’s degree in Russian culture from Duke. Last year, he was handpicked to help cofound Cinestate, a cross-media entertainment company merging film production, book publishing, and audio experience under one roof. Evans has been named DMagazine’s Best Publisher in Dallas, one of Modern Luxury’s top eight Dallas entrepreneurs under forty, and one of the Dallas Observer’s 100 Dallas Creatives.
Munir Meghjani
12. Munir Meghjani 08Ox 10C is a commercial and investment real estate broker with Sands Investment Group in Atlanta and cofounder of Knock on Wood Creations, which makes handcrafted wood accessories. Meghjani cofounded and is executive director of the nonprofit HOPE, which connects young adults with nonprofits, and is chair of the Rialto Center for the Arts.
Melinda Maris
13. Melinda Maris 06PhD is dean of teaching and learning, director of the Center for Teaching and Learning, and associate professor of biology at Southern Vermont College in Bennington, Vermont. Previously she served in similar roles at Vesalius College in Belgium. Maris was a postdoctoral fellow in genetics and molecular biology at Johns Hopkins University, where she continues to teach.
Yoran Grant-Greene
14. Yoran Grant-Greene 00Ox 02C 06MPH is the associate director for West Africa in the CDC’s Division of Global HIV and Tuberculosis. As a leader in the agency’s PEPFAR program, her efforts contribute to improved access to lifesaving antiretroviral treatment for people living with HIV around the world.
Adrian Tonge
15. Adrian Tonge 02C 07MBA is vice president and head of enterprise data and strategic analytics at Mylan, his most recent role after heading new business evaluations in the company’s Chief Strategy Office. Prior to Mylan, he was associate partner and North America business strategy leader in IBM’s Strategy and Transformation Pharmaceuticals and Healthcare practice.
Evan Mah/Photo by Kay Hinton
16. Evan Mah 13C is the managing editor at JamesSuckling.com, the website for leading wine critic James Suckling. Mah, who was editor-in-chief of the Emory Wheel, previously served for three years as the youngest-ever food editor for Atlanta Magazine. He’s also a three-time national chess champion and one-time world chess champion.
Michael Dubin
17. Michael Dubin 01C is CEO and founder of Dollar Shave Club, the second-largest men’s razor seller in the US and pioneer of the online shaving market, distributing more than 70 million razor blades each year through monthly subscriptions. The company revolutionized the industry and was acquired by Unilever in July 2016 for $1 billion.
Anjli Hinman/Photo by Kay Hinton
18. Anjli Hinman 06N 08N is a cofounder of Atlanta Birth Center, a holistic health center providing comprehensive midwifery and integrative care. “I am so grateful to the School of Nursing for allowing me the support and space to grow as a clinician—and also as a leader who experienced there the power of working as an interdisciplinary team to make positive change,” she says. 19. Who: Meg Aronowitz 97Ox 99C
Official Title: ESPN Coordinating Producer
Better Known As: A champion for women’s sports
Meg Aronowitz/Photo by Kay Hinton
As a coordinating producer for ESPN and the SEC Network, Meg Aronowitz has played a key role in expanding access to female role models through increased broadcast coverage of NCAA women’s sports. Aronowitz played third base for the Emory Eagles women’s softball team—a program she helped to start in 1999. After graduating with a degree in history, she worked at the news desk at CNN in Atlanta before joining ESPN in 2001 as an assignment editor for Major League Baseball. In 2002, Baseball Tonight won the Emmy Award for best studio show. Sixteen years and several promotions later, Aronowitz now oversees a wide range of college sports and NCAA coverage on ESPN, and helped launch the SEC Network. A career highlight has been the increased exposure of college softball and the Women’s College World Series. “It has been an absolute privilege to help grow the game from a time when the championship was tape-delayed two weeks to producing 714 regular season games and every pitch of the postseason,” she says. “I put the same passion I had playing for the Eagles into our coverage of college softball on ESPN Networks.”
Chris Arrendale
20. Chris Arrendale 99Ox 01C is CEO and principal deliverability strategist for InboxPros, an email consulting firm that works with clients to solve deliverability and compliance challenges. A highly sought speaker at industry events, he’s recognized as a leader in best practices with expertise in technology, email marketing, deliverability, anti-spam, and marketing success.
Samuel Jackson
21. Samuel Jackson 98Ox 00C is founder of the Economic Empowerment Initiative (EEI), a nonprofit dedicated to helping students and families better manage their financial resources. He also launched EEI Fund to provide affordable financing and franchise development in underserved communities. He is currently an owner with GRUB Burger Bar.
Amanda Edwards
22. Amanda Edwards 04C is a Houston native and a member-at-large of the Houston City Council, where she strives to “be part of long-term solutions that will move all of Houston forward.” She practices law as a municipal finance attorney, solving issues related to tax-exempt bond financings, public-private partnerships, community development, and nonprofit organizations.
Hilal Koc
23. Hilal Koc 03C is product marketing manager for emerging markets at Facebook and a thought leader in the tech sector who strives to empower women to seek leadership positions across the industry. Koc has advised more than fifteen startup companies globally and has invested in two as an angel investor. Now based in London, UK, she has hosted Emory alumni events across the globe to help facilitate alumni connections and networking. A frequent speaker at industry events, Koc was recently included among the LINKEDIN UK’s Top Ten Power Profiles and is an instructor for Code First Girls and Women In Tech.
Dion Benetatos
24. Dion Benetatos 06C currently works at the World Bank, where he is a contracted communications consultant with the International Finance Corporation. Previously, he served under the Obama Administration as a senior communications specialist at the US embassy in South Africa. He also worked as a director at PR agency Weber Shandwick and managed communications for Nobel Prize–winner Desmond Tutu’s foundation. 25. Who: Kwadwo Sarpong 15C
Official Title: CEO of African Research Academies
for Women
Better Known As: A researcher and humanitarian
Kwadwo Sarpong
Kwadwo Sarpong is the cofounder and CEO of African Research Academies for Women, a nonprofit organization that seeks to create a research-intensive pipeline program for young African women interested in pursuing STEM careers. Sarpong also is a current student at Georgetown University School of Medicine and a former PREP Scholar at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. After battling a severe form of typhoid fever as a child and being affected by his brother’s paralytic polio condition, Sarpong hopes to become a physician-scientist specializing in neurodevelopmental diseases. His research focuses on evaluating the role of somatic mutations in children with autism and epilepsy. Sarpong was invited by the White House to participate in the 2014 US-Africa Leaders’ Summit, and also to the 2016 United State of Women Summit, to discuss women’s education in Africa. 26. Who: Nicholas Pyenson 00Ox 02C
Official Title: Curator of Fossil Marine Mammals, Smithsonian Institution
Better Known As: A groundbreaking paleontologist
Nicholas Pyenson
A Smithsonian curator since age twenty-nine, Nicholas Pyenson is a vertebrate paleontologist whose research on major land-to-sea ecological transitions in the past 245 million years has led to the discovery of new fossil species and a new sensory organ in rorqual whales. At the Smithsonian, he tends to the world’s largest collection of fossil marine mammals and contributes to it with field programs around the world. “Every day is different,” Pyenson says. “My job involves doing basic science, taking care of the nation’s fossil collections, and communicating our discoveries to broad audiences. Natural history museums are dynamic places, and they give you the opportunity to participate in an institution that plays the long game. If I do my job right, the results of my work will hopefully outlive me.” Pyenson was honored with the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers by the Obama White House.
Rebecca Vallas
27. Rebecca Vallas 06C is managing director of the Poverty to Prosperity Program at the Center for American Progress in Washington, D.C. A leader in the fight against poverty and a champion for workers with disabilities, Vallas broke the record for public service with more than 1,500 hours of pro bono work while at University of Virginia School of Law. She was named one of Forbes’s Thirty Under Thirty for Law and Policy in 2011 and 2014, and also in 2014 was the inaugural recipient of the National Legal Aid and Defender Association’s New Leaders in Advocacy Award. Vallas is the host of Off-Kilter, the only nationally distributed radio show and podcast devoted to covering poverty and inequality.
Gerald Griggs
28. Gerald Griggs 98Ox 00C, owner of Gerald A. Griggs law firm in Atlanta, represented eleven-year-old victim Jaheem Herrera in a 2009 case that helped launch a national anti-bullying movement and changed the law in Georgia. He has traveled the country to speak out on the issue and was featured at the second-annual National Federal Partners in Bullying Summit.
Reed Baker
29. Reed Baker 02C is the founder and CEO of Sophist, which created the Text-to-Pledge platform for nonprofits that facilitates giving to charity via SMS. The company has helped nonprofits raise more than $100 million. Baker is a fundraising strategist with an acute understanding of how organizations can employ technology to impact the bottom line.
Cassidy Logan Rist
30. Cassidy Logan Rist 14MPH, an assistant professor in the Department of Population Health Sciences at Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, developed an infectious disease prioritization tool used globally by the CDC. She also served as interim emergency coordinator for Maryland and Delaware with the US Department of Agriculture as part of the national response to the avian flu outbreak.
Jeania Ree Moore
31. Jeania Ree Moore 15T is the director of civil and human rights at the General Board of Church and Society of the United Methodist Church. She uses her passion and skills to lead in advocacy and organizational efforts on issues including immigration, gun violence prevention, abolishing the death penalty, criminal justice reform, voting rights, and religious freedom. 32. Who: Zwade Marshall 05C 11MBA 11M 12MR
Official Title: Director of Medical Outcomes, Alliance Spine and Pain
Better Known As: A pioneer in pain treatment
Zwade Marshall/Photo by Kay Hinton
Zwade Marshall is a recognized leader in achieving functional outcomes for patients experiencing chronic pain. A graduate of Emory College and both the medical and business schools, Marshall says, “I entered Emory as a college freshman and immigrant from Guyana with goals but no clear direction on how to achieve them. I left Emory as a twenty-eight-year-old hyper-specialized professional with a distinct career path and a plan for execution.” Already at the forefront of an emerging specialty, Marshall joined Alliance Spine and Pain in 2016 as an interventional pain specialist, and now studies clinical metrics to improve results for all patients. At Emory, Marshall received the Humanitarian of the Year Award for cofounding the Pipeline Program to mentor inner-city high school students. Professional honors include the American Medical Association Foundation’s Excellence in Leadership Award and Goizueta Business School’s John E. Robson Outstanding Achievement Award.
Carlyn Burton
33. Carlyn Burton 02C 02G is a partner with the Osha Liang law firm in Houston, Texas. A graduate of the University of Houston Law Center, Burton is a US patent attorney who focuses her practice on intellectual property law. She has drafted and prosecuted hundreds of patent applications in various chemical, materials, and mechanical fields.
Perry Rahbar
34. Perry Rahbar 04C is founder and CEO of dv01, a reporting and analytics platform created to bring transparency to lending markets, making them safer and more efficient for investors. The company has been spotlighted in Forbes, the New York Times, and the Wall Street Journal.
J. B. Tarter
35. J. B. Tarter 06C 06G is assistant general counsel for operations for the National Defense Intelligence Agency. A Harvard Law graduate, he second-chaired a winning US Supreme Court case as a junior associate at age twenty-five, and was featured in Forbes’s 2012 list of Thirty Under Thirty people shaping public policy and law. 36. Who: Christen Lee 00C
Official Title: Member and Co-Head Real Estate Credit at KKR, New York City
Better Known As: A driven professional and alumni advocate for Emory College
Chris Lee/Photo by Vincent Tullo
After earning degrees at Emory and Harvard Business School, Chris Lee held positions at Goldman Sachs and Apollo Management before joining KKR in 2012. “I love working with a team of smart and creative people from different backgrounds,” he says. “Finding innovative ways to create value in a competitive market is exhilarating.” On May 5, Lee rang the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange in celebration of the IPO of KKR Real Estate Finance Trust (NYSE: KREF), where he also serves as co-CEO. “My liberal arts education provided me with an excellent foundation to enter the business world,” he says. “The Emory Career Center was where I was introduced to my first internship opportunity through Sponsors for Educational Opportunity, an organization that helps talented young people and where I serve on the board today.”
Dion Short Metzger
37. Dion Short Metzger 02C 10MR is a nationally recognized board-certified psychiatrist, author, and health media expert. She has been featured on The Doctors, NBC News, CNN’s HLN network, and in the New York Times, offering her expertise on relationships, marriage, work-life balance, parenting, and other wellness topics. Metzger helps underserved individuals with mental illness in two Atlanta counties and teaches at three Georgia medical schools.
David Hwang
38. David Hwang 01C is an assistant professor of neurology at the Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, and a staff neurointensivist at Yale–New Haven Hospital. He is a faculty member for the Society for Critical Care Medicine’s Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute–ICU Collaborative promoting family-centered care in ICUs across the US.
Maria Town
39. Maria Town 10C directs the Houston Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities. Town served as senior associate director and disability community liaison in the Obama White House Office of Public Engagement where she led efforts to advance policies related to people with disabilities and seniors and organized the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, among other notable events.
Cassandra Quave/Photo by Ann Borden
Ole Miss alumni association releases inaugural “40 under 40” list
Ole Miss alumni association releases inaugural “40 under 40” list. Honorees were selected based on their professional accomplishments, as well as their dedication to “upholding the core values of the UM Creed” The honorees will be recognized in a ceremony on March 25 as part of the university’s Young Alumni Weekend.
The University of Mississippi Alumni Association named their inaugural “40 under 40” recipients Thursday, honoring 40 former Ole Miss students who are making a significant impact in their professional field.
The association accepted nominations for the list last fall, and received over 500 entries. Honorees were selected based on their professional accomplishments, as well as their dedication to “upholding the core values of the UM Creed.”
“We are thrilled to unveil this first year’s class of 40 Under 40 and welcome them back to campus to honor their accomplishments,” said Kirk Purdom, Ole Miss Alumni Association CEO. “These outstanding individuals exemplify leadership in their industries and communities, and I’m happy we were able to launch this program of recognition.”
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The honorees will be recognized in a ceremony on March 25 as part of the university’s Young Alumni Weekend.
“The Class of 2022 truly represents the young alumni from Ole Miss with careers in television, government affairs, philanthropy and even the outdoors,” said Sunny Brown, the assistant director of alumni affairs who organized the awards. “It will be so special to award them in March and allow our current students to network with all that our group has to offer.”
Here is the full class of 2022 40 Under 40 list: