Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Mel Martinez
http://www.whitehouse.gov/goodbye/7275bb52afbca920399bf80a915132766478eecb.html
Mel Martinez is the nation's 12th
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. He was unanimously
confirmed by the United States Senate, and took his oath of office
on January 24, 2001.
In nominating Martinez, President George W. Bush said: "Since
leaving his Cuban homeland as a boy, Mel Martinez has been the
embodiment of the American dream and has had great success in
helping the people of his community obtain affordable housing and
urban services." Martinez's work in the public and private sectors,
his active involvement in community activities, and his
understanding of the work of faith-based social service agencies
make him particularly well suited to serve as leader of the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Under the leadership of Secretary Martinez, HUD is expanding
homeownership opportunities to more Americans, particularly minority
and low-income families, through innovative budget initiatives and
partnerships with community-based housing providers. Martinez has
undertaken a comprehensive process to empower and protect
homebuyers, and is actively working to reform and simplify the
homebuying process and make it less expensive for consumers.
Secretary Martinez is ensuring that HUD - as the federal agency
that oversees the nation's affordable housing and provides housing
assistance for low-income persons - improves the quality and
availability of public housing. The plan by Martinez to stimulate
affordable housing production by increasing FHA multifamily loan
limits represents the first such increase in nearly a decade.
By reactivating the Interagency Council on the Homeless and the
joint homeless task force, Secretary Martinez has brought a new
commitment within HUD to those who have no home to call their own.
Martinez is ensuring that the resources of the federal government
work efficiently together to provide better services to the
homeless, and ultimately, end chronic homelessness.
Martinez brings with him to HUD a new sense of ethics and a focus
on streamlined management. In keeping with the President's
management and performance agenda, Martinez is enhancing the
organizational structure of HUD, strengthening HUD leadership, and
improving communication and coordination - with a focus on results.
As a leader in implementing President Bush's faith-based
initiatives, Secretary Martinez launched HUD's Center for
Faith-Based and Community Services. The Center is working to expand
partnerships with local faith-based service providers who assist the
homeless, elderly, and disabled, and those living with HIV/AIDS.
HUD works with local communities to help them meet their
development needs, and Secretary Martinez has taken a leadership
role in the national dialogue on growth management issues.
Before he came to the Department, Secretary Martinez was the
elected Chairman of Orange County, Florida, in Orlando, and served
on the Governor's Growth Management Study Commission. He previously
served as President of the Orlando Utilities Commission, on the
board of directors of a community bank, and as Chairman of the
Orlando Housing Authority. Born October 23, 1946, in Sagua La
Grande, Cuba, Martinez fled to America in 1962 as part of a Catholic
humanitarian effort called Operation Pedro Pan that eventually
brought 14,000 children to this country. Catholic charitable groups
provided Martinez, who was alone and spoke virtually no English, a
temporary home at two youth facilities. He subsequently lived with
two foster families, with whom he remains close. He was reunited
with his family in Orlando in 1966.
Martinez graduated from Florida State University College of Law
in 1973. During his 25 years of law practice in Orlando, he was
actively involved in community activities. He served as Vice
President of the Board of Catholic Charities of the Orlando Diocese,
and has a deep appreciation for the work of faith-based social
service agencies going back to his arrival in America almost 40
years ago.
Secretary Martinez and his wife have three children and recently
welcomed a new granddaughter.