Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indian-American Lawyer Neomi Rao To Head White House Regulatory Affairs Office

IANS, 11 Jul, 2017 12:18 PM
    The US Senate has voted to confirm Indian American lawyer Neomi Rao as the head of Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) at the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
     
     
    The 44-year-old Rao was confirmed by a vote of 54-41 on Monday and she would lead the White House office overseeing regulation, according to Senate's official website.
     
     
    "In selecting Professor Neomi Rao... the President has made an inspired choice. Since first working on my staff many years ago, Director Rao has proven herself to be a sharp and principled public servant," said Senator Orrin Hatch, senior member and former Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
     
     
    "She possesses a keen sense for our duty in Washington to help small businesses grow and make lives of Americans easier," he said.
     
     
    Senator John Hoeven also appreciated Rao for her commitment to work and said that he secured a commitment from her to address benefit and cost analysis for Army corps projects and to ensure fair treatment of public-private partnerships, the American Bazaar online reported.
     
     
    Rao serves as an associate professor of law and the founding director of the Center for the Study of the Administrative State at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School. 
     
     
    She graduated from Yale University and later attended University of Chicago Law School. Rao clerked for US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III of the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
     
     
    She is also a member of the Administrative Conference of the US and the governing council of the American Bar Association's Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Well-Known Punjabi Journalist Sukhminder Singh Cheema Passes Away In Surrey

    Well-Known Punjabi Journalist Sukhminder Singh Cheema Passes Away In Surrey
    Mr Cheema worked as an editor of several newspapers including Ajit Jalandhar, Jagran, Jagbani, Hamdard (Toronto), Chardi Kala and Punjabi Tribune.

    Well-Known Punjabi Journalist Sukhminder Singh Cheema Passes Away In Surrey

    Ontario Mom Who Smuggled Guns From U.S. Sentenced To Nearly Two Years In Jail

    Ontario Mom Who Smuggled Guns From U.S. Sentenced To Nearly Two Years In Jail
    Michelle Downey, 38, had tearfully pleaded to be allowed to serve her sentence at home in Lasalle, Ont., with her children, but Justice Scott Campbell feels a term of house arrest is not appropriate.

    Ontario Mom Who Smuggled Guns From U.S. Sentenced To Nearly Two Years In Jail

    Quebec Motorist Gets 14-year Prison Sentence In Death Of Family Of Three

    Quebec Motorist Gets 14-year Prison Sentence In Death Of Family Of Three
      A jury convicted Yves Martin last December in the August 2015 deaths of Mathieu Perron, Vanessa Tremblay-Viger and their son Patrick, 4.

    Quebec Motorist Gets 14-year Prison Sentence In Death Of Family Of Three

    Toronto Pot Shop Owners Want Police, Stores To Co-operate

    TORONTO — A group of Toronto pot shop owners is calling for greater co-operation and understanding between police and their fellow dispensary owners.

    Toronto Pot Shop Owners Want Police, Stores To Co-operate

    British Columbia To Create 5,200 Additional Seats In Surrey Schools

    British Columbia To Create 5,200 Additional Seats In Surrey Schools
    Education Minister Mike Bernier says $217 million has been set aside for capital projects to add the spaces in the Surrey School District.

    British Columbia To Create 5,200 Additional Seats In Surrey Schools

    Vancouver Approves $2 Million To Help Frontline Workers Address Overdose Crisis

    Vancouver Approves $2 Million To Help Frontline Workers Address Overdose Crisis
    VANCOUVER — Councillors in Vancouver have approved more than $2 million in measures aimed at addressing the ongoing illicit drug overdose crisis.

    Vancouver Approves $2 Million To Help Frontline Workers Address Overdose Crisis