Tommy works with the leadership and citizens in every corner of Ward
6--from the Southwest Waterfront to the H Street Corridor, from Penn
Quarter to Capitol Hill--to guide development that focuses on neighborhood
needs. He has championed the next generation of public transit--including
streetcar lines, expansion of the D.C. Circulator, and improvements in
overall bus service. He has brought Ward 6 residents back to their neighborhood
grade schools and is working to reinvent our middle schools and Eastern
High. And he crafted a landmark bill to charge a nominal fee on disposable
bags--prompting thousands of D.C. residents to curb the use of bags that
choke the Anacostia River, establishing a fund to clean up the river,
and creating a model for other jurisdictions nationwide.
As chairman of the Council's Committee on Public Works and Transportation
and a DC member of the Board of Directors of WMATA, Tommy is working
to improve transit connections between neighborhoods, build on alternative
transit options, and put a focus on pedestrian access.
As the former Chair of the Council's Committee on Human Service, Tommy
led housing policy reform through the innovative Housing First program,
a proven way to get homeless people back on track by providing a stable
place to live. He worked to improve services for D.C. youth in foster
care, lending focused oversight that earned the District its highest-ever
performance ranking from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
And under Tommy's oversight the Department of Youth Rehabilitation achieved
reduced recidivism among the juveniles in its custody.
But Tommy began advancing positive change in our city decades before
his election to the City Council. He started his Washington career in
1983 as a social worker in the D.C. foster care system, where he spurred
and led a successful class action lawsuit, LaShawn v. Barry, to address
the city's failure to protect children in its care. In 1991, he took
the helm of the D.C. Consortium for Child Welfare, where he was a force
for creating neighborhood based-family service collaboratives that coordinate
the delivery of city and nonprofit resources. He was the architect of
a groundbreaking program to match foster families with children affected
by HIV/AIDS and also led the drive to create the D.C. Family Court--which
produced a 300 percent increase the number of foster children adopted
into permanent homes every year.
During his 15 years with the Consortium, Tommy also served as an ANC
Commissioner from 1994 to 2000 and a member of the D.C. Board of Education,
representing Wards 5 and 6, from 2000 to 2006. In a position of notoriously
limited authority, Tommy negotiated the creation of full-day programs
for 3-year-olds in several neighborhood schools and spearheaded strict
rules for immunizing 20,000 D.C. students--resulting in one of the nation's
highest immunization rates.