|
By Colleen Lyerla
March 2, 2004
Andrew Cuomo, former Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) under President Clinton and founder of Housing
Enterprise for the Less Privileged (HELP), will deliver the George
Warren Brown School of Social Work Benjamin Youngdahl Lecture for
Washington University's Assembly Series at 11 a.m., Wednesday, March
17 in Graham Chapel. The title of his address is "Are We Our Brother's
Keeper?" The chapel is located just north of Mallinckrodt Center
(6445 Forsyth Blvd.) on the Washington University campus.
Cuomo has spent almost 20 years solving housing
problems in America. He became the second youngest cabinet member
in history as HUD Secretary from 1997-2001. He is credited with
instituting major reforms within the department, and his programs
won the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government Innovations
in American Government Award. As an Assistant Secretary at HUD in
1993, Cuomo developed the Continuum of Care Strategy to help homeless
people become self-supporting.
He received praise in 2000 for negotiating a
historic agreement with gun manufacturer Smith & Wesson requiring
changes in design, distribution, and marketing of guns to make them
safer and keep them out of the hands of children and criminals.
In 1986 he founded HELP, which has become the
nation's largest private provider of transitional housing for the
homeless. In addition, HELP provides education, job training, drug
and alcohol abuse treatment, and mental health services. Prior to
his tenure in public service, Cuomo was in private practice.
"The Youngdahl Lecture is the School of Social
Work's major offering to the University and the St. Louis community
every year. This year, as we celebrate our 150th anniversary, it
is especially significant," said Shanti Khinduka, Ph.D., dean of
the School of Social Work and George Warren Brown Distinguished
University Professor. "At a time when many other issues are threatening
to displace the social concerns of our nation from the public agenda,
we recognize our obligation to the socially marginalized."
After a 2002 gubernatorial campaign in New York,
Cuomo returned to serve as co-chair of HELP. In 2003 he edited Crossroads:
The Future of American Politics, a collection of essays on America's
21st century political landscape with contributors ranging from
former President Bill Clinton to rapper Sean (P. Diddy) Combs. Former
Vice President Al Gore called the book a "thoughtful collection
of essays" and referred to Cuomo as "one of the keenest political
analysts in our country."
Cuomo is a graduate of Fordham University and
the University of Albany, State University of New York, Law School.
Assembly Series lectures are free and open
to the public. For more information on the Assembly Series lecture,
call (314) 935-4620 or visit the Assembly Series Web page (wupa.wustl.edu/assembly).
|