As the nation awaits President Barack Obama's selection of a nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court, word of a presidential appointment closer to home has reached the South Shore.
Josh Reid, one of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's three sons, has been chosen to fill the presidential appointee's seat on the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency's Governing Board.
Reid, 37, is a resident of Henderson and is a partner in the Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck law firm. He works in the firm's Las Vegas-based natural resources group focusing on environmental, energy, and land use issues, according to a TRPA statement.
Reid was appointed to the 15-member board's lone non-voting seat by Obama in a letter dated April 30. The governing board sets policy for the TRPA, which regulates development in the Lake Tahoe Basin.
"I appreciate your willingness to serve in this capacity and look forward to reports on your work via the Office of Management and Budget," Obama said in his letter to Reid.
Although Reid says he still needs to educate himself on some of the issues surrounding Lake Tahoe " like clarity loss and the threat wildfire poses to the basin " he said his experience on other boards has shown him the value of transparent public processes.
"I just think it's important to let people who are affected by the decisions of the board have a good opportunity for input and that the process is open," Reid said Friday.
Reid is the seventh presidential appointee to the Governing Board since the seat was added in 1980. He replaces Stuart Yount of Incline Village, whom President George W. Bush appointed to the board in 2003.
Appointees to the Governing Board do not serve for a specified length of time, and the presidential seat has been left unfilled for more than a year at three times in its history.
A Governing Board seat reserved for an appointee from the California governor remains open, Oliver said Friday.
That seat was vacated in January by former California State Assemblyman Tim Leslie, and it's unknown when Gov. Schwarzenegger will fill the position, Oliver said.
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