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In Memoriam: Thomas J. GraffEnvironmental leader, friend of marketsPERC Executive Director Terry Anderson:
Tom worked for decades to protect California's rivers for multiple uses, creating ways to use conservation and water pricing to benefit both water users and the environment. He was a primary architect in the drafting and passage of the Central Valley Project Improvement Act, sponsored by Congressman George Miller and Senator Bill Bradley in 1991 and signed into law in 1992. This legislation authorized the use of water markets to encourage farmers to adopt conservation measures and sell the saved water to urban areas, thereby reducing the need for dams and river diversions. These water policy reforms were the most comprehensive ever passed by Congress. Tom built a staff that achieved important transformations in energy policy, rewarding utilities for improving energy efficiency, not just for building new generating capacity. In 1988, he and his colleagues built support for a revolutionary new approach to cut acid rain pollution, emissions trading, which was adopted by Congress in 1990. He also guided EDF's efforts to help pass the Pavley Clean Car law and AB 32, two of the most significant steps taken in this country to reduce global warming pollution. Tom received numerous awards for his work, including the Jean Auer Award for his lifetime devotion to restoring the Sacramento-San Joaquin Bay-Delta, and he was honored with an endowed chair in his name at the College of Natural Resources, University of California at Berkeley. Tom is survived by his loving wife, Sharona Barzilay; daughter Rebecca Graff (Cambridge, MA#; son Benjamin Graff #San Jose, CA#; daughter Samantha Graff, son-in-law Miguel Helft, and grandchildren Avi and Rafael Helft #Oakland, CA#; and sister Claudia Bial #Fort Lee, New Jersey# and her family. He grew up in Syracuse, NY, where he excelled at both academics and athletics even before attending Phillips Exeter Academy. He graduated from Harvard College and Harvard Law School, where he wrote for the Harvard Law Review. He received his LL.M. from the London School of Economics and then moved to Washington to clerk for Judge Carl McGowan in the D.C. Circuit. He subsequently served as legislative assistant to New York City Mayor John Lindsay and moved to the West Coast in 1970 to work for Howard, Prim, Smith, Rice & Downs, a San Francisco law firm. He was a Lecturer at UC Berkeley School of Law (1980) and visiting professor of law at Harvard Law School (1979). Tom served as a board member of the Oquirrh Institute; the California Foundation on the Environment and the Economy, and the National Research Council, Commission on Geosciences, Environment and Resources. He also served on the Governor's Commission on Transportation Investment; University of California President's Advisory Commission on Agriculture and Natural Resources; Bay Delta Advisory Council, and Colorado River Board of California. Praise for Tom Graff Fred Krupp, President, Environmental Defense Fund Senator Bill Bradley Senator Dianne Feinstein Senator Barbara Boxer Congressman George Miller Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom Noteworthy achievements
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" I can see several stories in the next year spinning out of some of the things I heard (at PERC)."
- Tim Egan, New York Times |