[Congressional Record Volume 147, Number 163 (Thursday, November 29, 2001)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E2176]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO ROGER F. HONBERGER
______
HON. BOB FILNER
of california
in the house of representatives
Thursday, November 29, 2001
Mr. FILNER. Mr. Speaker, December 31, 2001, will mark the passing of
an era, an era of accomplishment in the field of intergovernmental
relations. On that day, a pioneer in Washington representation for
California public policy and project development will retire from
service.
Roger F. Honberger comes from a humble upbringing of enterprising
parents from the 1930s. His mother is a Native American, born into the
Pechanga Band of California Mission Indians at the turn of the century,
and is presently the oldest living Tribal member. Roger was the first
member of his family to graduate from college, the result of extensive
sacrifice by his parents. After beginning his career in the field of
Urban Planning, he returned to graduate school, where he distinguished
himself and received degrees from both the University of London,
England and Harvard University.
In his early career, he served as a professional planner with the
County of Riverside, City of San Diego, National Capital Planning
Commission, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
His federal experience in writing legislation, budget preparation, and
program management led him to the establishment of his own government
relations consulting firm in 1970, Roger Honberger Associates, Inc. He
pioneered a new industry of dedicated people working with the Congress
and Federal Administrations on behalf of the intergovernmental needs of
state and local governments. Today, this industry serves countless
public agencies from all corners of the nation.
Thirty years ago, Roger was selected from a field of 200 applicants
by the County of San Diego to be their first Washington representative.
At that time, the San Diego County Congressional Delegation consisted
of Lionel Van Deertin, Bob Wilson, and Jimmy Utt. The only other state
or local governments that had full time Washington offices when Roger
began his work for San Diego County were the State of California, the
County of Los Angeles, and the Cities of Los Angeles and San Diego.
These were the only general-purpose governments from any other part of
our great nation in those days that maintained a full time presence in
Washington, D.C.
In his thirty years of representing San Diego County, Roger directly
served 27 different elected members of the County's five person Board
of Supervisors, and 8 different Chief Administrative Officers. The
number of Congressional Districts in the County grew from 3 to 5 during
the same period, and he worked closely with all 16 different Members of
Congress elected from these districts since 1970. Five different
Presidents recognized Roger for his work on public issues. He has also
been recognized as Alumnus of the Year by the California State
Polytechnic University, as well as by his High School Alunmi
Association from Perris, California. He is the only career County
representative that the National Association of Counties has officially
honored for professional accomplishments. He has had a truly remarkable
career of public service.
A broad array of regional accomplishments in the County have
benefited from Roger's efforts in Washington, D.C. These include: the
establishment of the region's first alcohol detoxification center;
development of the first solid waste recycling program; a countywide
gasoline vapor recovery program; harbor cleanup; welfare reform; a
multitude of flood control and highway projects; San Diego Trolley
project construction; Sheriffs Department funding; lagoon preservation;
drug addiction treatment; children's disease inoculation services;
foster care program support; air quality program certification; and the
prevention of off-shore oil drilling, just to name a few. The list is
long and impressive.
Five years ago, Roger invited his long-standing associate, Thomas
Walters, to become his partner, and the firm's name was changed to
Honberger and Walters, Inc. For the past three years, Tom has been the
firm's chief executive officer and owner. The firm continues to manage
San Diego County's Washington office. Their other clients include the
San Diego Metropolitan Transit Development Board, North County Transit,
San Diego Unified Port District, the Sweetwater Authority, the Counties
of Riverside and Ventura, the Monterey-Salinas Transit District, the
Calleguas Municipal Water District, and the Pechanga Band of Luiseno
Indians.
Roger has long been recognized as one of the leaders in his field and
has lectured on intergovernmental relations and lobbying practice at
San Diego State University, U.S. International University, University
of Maryland, and the University of Arizona. He continues to be involved
in a variety of American Indian issues and was one of the founders of
the Harvard University Native American Alumni Association.
Many of us in the Congress have worked with Roger Honberger during
his distinguished career. We will miss his friendly disposition and his
dedicated hard work on behalf of his public clients. Above all, we will
miss his candor and honesty. His word has always been his bond,
something we have all appreciated and have grown to expect, regardless
of the circumstances. We are happy to see that his high professional
standards and style are being continue by Tom Walters without missing a
beat. For this we are grateful, and we are grateful for Roger's
sustained friendship and support over the years. We wish him the very
best as he moves on to other endeavors.
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