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Fernando
Torres-Gil
Fernando
Torres-Gil is the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at the
School of Public Policy and Social Research, University of
California, Los Angeles. He also serves as a Professor of
Social Welfare and Policy Studies and is Director of the School's
Center for Policy Research on Aging. Previously, he was a
Professor of Gerontology and Public Administration at the
University of Southern California and continues as an Adjunct
Professor of Gerontology at USC.
Professor
Torres-Gil is an expert in the fields of health and long-term
care, the politics of aging, social policy, ethnicity, and
disability. He is the author of four books and more than 70
articles and book chapters, including The New Aging: Politics
and Change in America (1992). In recognition of his many academic
accomplishments, he was elected a Fellow of the Gerontological
Society of America (1985) and the National Academy of Public
Administration (1995). He served as President of the American
Society on Aging (1989-1992) and is a member of the National
Academy of Social Insurance. A recipient of many awards and
honors, he is a winner of the National Council on Aging's
Ollie A. Randall Award bestowed for leadership on behalf of
older persons.
His academic
accomplishments parallel his extensive government and public
policy experience. He served as the first-ever Assistant Secretary
for Aging in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS). As the Clinton Administration's chief advocate on aging,
Torres-Gil played a key role in
promoting the importance of aging, long-term care, and disability
issues, in consolidating federal programs for elder persons,
and in helping baby boomers redefine retirement in a post-pension
era. He worked with HHS Secretary Donna Shalala in overseeing
aging policy throughout the Federal government, managed the
Administration on Aging and was responsible for organizing
the 1995 White House Conference on Aging. He also served as
a member of the President's Welfare Reform Working Group.
Previous governmental experience includes serving as Staff
Director of the House of Representatives Select Committee
on Aging (1985-1987), where he administered the legislative
and oversight activities of the largest committee in the U.S.
Congress; Special Assistant to Secretary of Health and Human
Services Patricia Roberts Harris (1979-1980); and White House
Fellow and Special Assistant to Joseph Califano, Secretary
of Health, Education and Welfare (1978-1979). President Carter
appointed Dr. Torres-Gil to the Federal Council on Aging (1978).
At the
local level, Dr. Torres-Gil was the Vice President of the
Los Angeles City Planning Commission (1989-1993), and currently
is a member of the Harbor Commission that oversees the Port
of Los Angeles. He is active in advising elected and appointed
officials at the federal, state and local level on Hispanic
politics, gerontology, welfare reform, long-term care, and
disability. He was appointed by Governor Gray Davis to the
Governors' Blue Ribbon Task Force on Veterans' Homes and is
a board member of the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas,
California. He sits on the Board of Directors of the Families
USA Foundation, the Older Women's League, and the AARP Andrus
Foundation.
Dr. Torres-Gil
was born and raised in Salinas, California, and is the son
of migrant farm workers. He earned his B.A. in Political Science
(1970), graduating with honors from San Jose State University,
an M.S.W. (1972) and a Ph.D. in Social Policy, Planning and
Research (1976) from Brandeis University.
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