Jan 13, 2009 12:25 PM in Society & Policy | 2 comments
Obama taps anti-tobacco advocate for Number 2 health slot, campaign tech advisor to run FCC
By Jordan Lite
President-elect Barack Obama today named a tobacco-control advocate deputy health chief and is reportedly poised to tap his campaign tech advisor to head the Federal Communications Commission.
Pending the Senate's nod, William Corr, executive director of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, will become former Sen. Tom Daschle's No. 2 at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Corr, a health adviser on the Obama transition team, was Daschle’s chief counsel and policy director from 1998 to 2000, when the South Dakota Democrat served as Senate minority leader. Corr also served as chief of staff for Clinton administration HHS secretary Donna Shalala.
“Reforming our health care system will be a top priority of my administration and key to putting our economy back on track,” Obama said today in announcing the pick “Under the leadership of Tom Daschle and Bill Corr, I am confident that my Department of Health and Human Services will bring people together to reach consensus on how to move forward with health care reform.”
An Obama transition team aide told the Associated Press that Corr wouldn’t work on tobacco-related issues if s confirmed to the post. One hot issue Congress is expected to consider this year is whether the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) should regulate tobacco. The House passed legislation last year that would give the FDA authority to do so; Sen. Edward Kennedy (D–Mass.) plans to introduce a bill in the new congressional session.
In other appointee news, Obama's top choice to head up the FCC is Julius Genachowski, the Wall Street Journal reported last night. Genachowski, 46, is a pal of Obama’s from Harvard Law School, and was chief counsel at the FCC in the 1990s.
Among other tasks, the new FCC chief will be in charge of ensuring a smooth, national transition to digital television. The switch is scheduled for Feb. 18, but Obama has said he wants to delay it because of a lack of federal funds to subsidize the $50 price tag for converter boxes. The FCC chair will also be under pressure to expand access to the Internet and improve emergency wireless communications, Bloomberg News notes. The agency regulates the country’s telephone, cable and broadcast operations.
Image of William Coor courtesy of Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
Read More About: HHS, FCC, Barack Obama, Tom DaschleYou Might Also Like
Discuss This Article
Subscription Center
Most Popular Blog Posts
9,000-year-old brew hitting the shelves this summer
New solar-cell efficiency record set
AIDS vaccine surprises scientists, proves partially successful
Is birth control the answer to environmental ills?
Editor's Pick
-
Adapting to the Freshwater CrisisForward-thinking experts are getting a better handle on the growing global water shortage and coming up with innovative approaches to ensuring the security, safety and sustainability of this resource
Society & Policy Newsletter
Get weekly coverage delivered to your inboxPodcasts
-
60-Second Earth
RSS ·
iTunes
The Jellyfish Menace
click to enable
-
60-Second Science
RSS ·
iTunes
Plants Share Light If Neighbor Is Related
click to enable
Slideshows
Researchers Try to Solve the Mystery of HIV Carriers Who Don't Contract AIDS
Skate punk'd: Taxonomic "oops" put rare fish species in danger of extinction
Embarrassing security leaks prompt bill to clamp down on government P2P use
More important than Copenhagen? U.S.-China deal on energy and climate
Putting Madness in Its Place: Can the Environment Explain Schizophrenia's Hereditary Patterns?
Fight to protect California condors from lead ammunition moves to Arizona
Circulation of LHC Beams Could Resume in Earnest over the Weekend
Measuring Up: New NIST Director, Plus Big Budget Put Measurement Science in Public Eye
How Long Can a Nuclear Reactor Last?
What to Do About Endocrine Disruptors? A Q&A with Linda Birnbaum



