Former US Secretary of Transportation Rodney Slater helps clients integrate their interests in the overall vision for the transportation system of the 21st century – a vision he set as Transportation Secretary to promote a safer, more efficient, environmentally sound and sustainable worldwide transportation infrastructure.

Secretary Slater also helps state and local government clients address the vexing challenge of closing the gap between transportation demand and capacity by employing public-private strategies and innovative financing solutions. As an industry group leader of our Automotive & Transportation Group, Secretary Slater focuses on many of the policy and transportation objectives that were set under his leadership, including automobile use and development, aviation competition and congestion mitigation, maritime initiatives, high-speed rail corridor development, and overall transportation safety and funding. He continues to embrace the framework he established as secretary for making transportation decisions that called for more open, collaborative and flexible decision making across the transportation enterprise here and abroad.

Secretary Slater’s bipartisan and inclusive approach to problem solving has earned him tremendous respect and admiration on both sides of the aisle, enabling him to have one of the best relationships with the White House, Congress and business, labor and political leaders worldwide in the history of the US Department of Transportation (DOT). His work at DOT forever altered America’s and the world’s appreciation of transportation as more than just concrete, asphalt and steel. Secretary Slater brings the same strategic, results-oriented and collaborative approach to the practice of law to his public policy practice.

As US Secretary of Transportation under President Bill Clinton, Secretary Slater passed several historic legislative initiatives over his tenure, including the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21), which guaranteed a record US$200 billion in surface transportation investment though 2003, and the Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment Reform Act for the 21st Century (AIR-21), which provides a record US$46 billion to improve the safety and security of the nation’s aviation system. Under his leadership, the federal transportation budget doubled and in the department’s "best in government" strategic and performance plans, the scope and definition of transportation was expanded to include a focus on safety, mobility and access, economic development and trade, the environment and national security.

Prior to his tenure as Transportation Secretary, Secretary Slater served as Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration, where – as the agency’s first African-American Administrator in its century-long history – he oversaw the development of an innovative financing program that resulted in hundreds of transportation projects being completed two to three years ahead of schedule with greater cost efficiencies. Over that time, the federal transportation budget increased an unprecedented 104%.

Secretary Slater is one of the leaders of the firm’s best-in-class practice in Corporate Compliance Advice, ensuring best-business practices for various companies. Secretary Slater led Toyota’s Safety Advisory Panel, serves an Independent Monitor for Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, and was recently selected by NHTSA to serve as the Independent Monitor of FCA.

He is chairman of the Board of Directors of the Squire Patton Boggs Foundation, which promotes the role of public service and pro bono work in the practice of law and the development of public policy. Additionally, Secretary Slater is a founding partner of the Washington DC Nationals Baseball team and Chair Emeritus of the Washington DC Nationals Youth Baseball Academy. He is also an NCAA Silver Anniversary Recipient (2002) for football.

Award Mouse thought multimedia interface book medal screen monitor

Education

  • Harvard University, Advanced Leadership Initiative, 2011
  • University of Arkansas, J.D.
  • Eastern Michigan University, B.S.

Admissions

  • District of Columbia, 2006
  • Arkansas, 1980
  • Former US Secretary of Transportation
  • Former Administrator of the US Federal Highway Administration
  • Former Director of Government Relations, Arkansas State University
  • Former Special Assistant for Economic and Community Programs to then-Governor Bill Clinton
  • Former Executive Assistant for Community and Minority Affairs to then-Governor Bill Clinton
  • Former Assistant Attorney General, Litigation Division of the Arkansas State Attorney General’s Office
  • Former Secretary-Treasurer, Arkansas Bar Association
  • Former Special Liaison, Martin Luther King Jr. Federal Holiday Commission
  • Arkansas State Highway Commission, (1987-1992)
  • Former Non-executive Director, Atkins, Delta, Transurban, Kansas City Southern

{{insights.date}} {{insights.type}} {{insights.contentTypeTag}}
{{blog.displayDate}}
{{blog.title}} {{blog.source}}

  • Secretary Slater has contributed to numerous publications, including two major DOT reports on transportation challenges and accomplishments that were issued under Secretary Slater’s leadership: The Changing Face of Transportation and Transportation Decision Making: A Policy Architecture for the 21st Century.
  • Moderator, “Building Economic Diplomacy: The First 100 Days,” Meridian International Center Corporate Council Briefing with Peter Haas, Acting Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs, US Department of State, April 8, 2021.
  • Co-Author, “OP-ED: Someday Soon Billions Of Passengers Will Want To Fly Again; Is The Aviation Industry Ready?” Aviation Week, March 3, 2021.
  • Moderator, “Safely Restoring International Air Travel,” Meridian International Center, Center for Diplomatic Engagement, Diplocraft Series, November 17, 2020.
  • Panelist, “Corporate diplomacy at the intersection of the purpose-first economy,” the 3rd Annual Leaders on Purpose Leadership Summit, September 24, 2020.
  • Author, “Opinion: July Fourth: Frederick Douglass found hope in our Declaration of Independence. So can we,” USA Today, July 4, 2020.
  • Co-Author, “A brave new world,” Roads and Bridges, February 22, 2016.

Award Mouse thought multimedia interface book medal screen monitor