Montana Passenger Rail Summit 2020
On Thursday, September 17, over 300 people from around the state, region, and country gathered virtually for the inaugural Montana Passenger Rail Summit. Summit attendees included elected officials, business leaders, students, passenger rail experts, environmental organizations, public health experts, and transportation enthusiasts.
Watch: View the Summit online below.
View the Presenters' Slides
Speakers
Roger Millar
Secretary of Transportation, Washington state
As secretary of the Washington Department of Transportation, Roger Millar oversees an agency that is the steward of a complex, multimodal transportation system and is responsible for ensuring that people and goods move safely and efficiently. Millar is an experienced land use and transportation engineer, planner and program manager with an international reputation for innovative approaches to conservation and development. Throughout his career, he has planned and implemented transportation systems that are not ends unto themselves but, rather, the means toward economic vitality, environmental stewardship, social equity, public health and aesthetic quality. His work on the Portland Streetcar and the Glenwood Springs to Aspen Bus Rapid Transit system provided communities nationwide with new modal tools. His Complete Streets leadership helped create a national movement for transportation systems that are safe, convenient and pleasant for all users, regardless of how they choose to travel.
Andrea Olsen
House Representative, HD 100, Montana
Representative Andrea Olsen is serving her third term in the Montana Legislature. She serves on the House Business and Labor Committee; Federal Relations, Energy and Telecommunications Committee; Agriculture Committee (Vice-Chair); and the House Interim Committee on Transportation. A fifth-generation Montanan, Andrea was born, raised and educated in Missoula, graduating from the University of Montana School of Law in June. Her 30-year law career has been predominately advocating for human rights, which she continues to advocate for in the Montana Legislature. Olsen has served as legal counsel for the Montana Office of Consumer Protection, staff attorney representing students at UM, attorney for the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes in their Tribal Legal Services Program, and staff attorney for the State of Montana Mental Health Board of Visitors.
Beth Osborne
Director, Transportation for America
Beth Osborne is the current director of Transportation for America. She was previously at the U.S. Department of Transportation, where she served as the acting assistant secretary for transportation policy and the deputy assistant secretary for transportation policy. At DOT, Osborne managed the TIGER Discretionary Grant program, the secretary’s livability initiative, the development of the administration’s surface transportation authorization proposal and the implementation of MAP-21. Before joining DOT, Beth worked for Delaware Sen. Tom Carper as an adviser for transportation, trade and labor policy, as the policy director for Smart Growth America and as legislative director for environmental policy at the Southern Governors’ Association. She began her career in Washington, DC, in the House of Representatives working as a legislative assistant for Pennsylvania Rep. Ron Klink and as legislative director for Washington Rep. Brian Baird.
John-Robert Smith
Co-chair and senior policy adviser, Transportation for America
John-Robert Smith currently serves as chairman of Transportation for America, where he advises on strategy, capacity building and national outreach. He became chairman in 2012 after leading Reconnecting America as president and CEO. He previously served as mayor of Meridian, Mississippi, for 16 years. During his tenure, he facilitated public-private partnerships that resulted in more than $430 million in funding for infrastructure projects that bolstered the economy and residents’ quality of life. A recognized authority on public and private transportation and development funding, he guided the development and construction of the Southeast’s first multi-modal transportation center, Meridian Union Station. Smith is also a senior policy adviser to DC-based Smart Growth America and has served on the boards for Amtrak and the National Forum on the Future of Passenger Rail.
John Spain
Vice chairman, Southern Rail Commission
John Spain is the executive vice president of the Baton Rouge Area Foundation and also serves as the vice chairman of the Southern Rail Commission, where he has worked to restore passenger rail service along the Gulf Coast, including between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Spain previously was the managing director of The Powell Group, a private holding company with 13 subsidiaries, including radio stations, commercial timber, rice milling and international power plants and real-estate development. He started his professional career in the field of broadcasting and worked at WBRZ-TV, the ABC affiliate in Baton Rouge, for 23 years, where he served as its news director and station manager.
Dave Strohmaier
Commissioner, Missoula County, Montana
Dave Strohmaier was elected to the Missoula Board of County Commissioners in 2016 and currently chairs the Missoula Metropolitan Planning Organization’s Transportation Policy Coordinating Committee. From 2006 to 2013, Dave represented Ward 1 on the Missoula City Council, where he chaired both the Public Safety and Health and Conservation committees. Since his time on the City Council, Dave has been an outspoken advocate for sustainable transportation and passenger rail. In 2019, he spearheaded an effort to establish the Big Sky Passenger Rail Authority as a means by which counties in Montana could collaborate on restoration of passenger rail service across the southern tier of the state. He also has actively participated in county efforts to address climate change, promote the arts, strengthen relations with tribal government, and steward cultural resources.
Jason Stuart
Executive Director, Dawson County Economic Development Council
Jason Stuart has served as executive director of the Dawson County Economic Development Council since 2018. He also serves on the board of the Glendive Convention and Visitors Bureau and has taught at Dawson Community College as adjunct professor of history for the past five years. Prior to his work for the DCEDC, he worked for five years as a reporter for the Glendive Ranger-Review. Originally from northeast Louisiana, Jason moved to Glendive in early 2013. Before moving to Montana, he worked for three years in the Washington, D.C., office of former Louisiana U.S. Sen. David Vitter, where he served as legislative aide for NASA policy, as a legislative correspondent for a number of policy areas, including transportation, and as director of constituent communications.
Paul Tuss
Executive Director, Bear Paw Development Corporation
Paul Tuss of Havre is in his 20th year as executive director of Bear Paw Development Corporation, Montana’s longest-serving economic development district that covers 17,665 square miles, five counties and two Indian Reservations in northern Montana. He previously worked for five years as executive director of a countywide economic development organization in Glacier County. Paul has served on the boards of numerous statewide organizations, including the Montana Economic Developers Association, Montana State Employers Council, Montana Nonprofit Association, Montana Economic Development Advisory Council, Montana Cooperative Development Center and the Montana Tourism Advisory Council. He has also served on the Montana Board of Regents of Higher Education since 2011 and was recently appointed by Gov. Steve Bullock as a member of the Montana Climate Solutions Council.