San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Economist helped manage N.Y.’s pandemic response

- By Sam Roberts

Laura Anglin, an economist who during nearly two decades in New York government served as the state’s budget director and, as the city’s chief operating officer, helped manage the response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, died Thursday in a Manhattan hospital. She was 57.

The cause was lung cancer, her brother John Svitek said.

Anglin’s sweeping portfolio as a public official included administer­ing, as deputy comptrolle­r for retirement services, $6 billion in yearly pension benefits for 1 million current and former state employees.

As the state’s budget director, she drafted and enforced spending and revenue-producing tools such as taxes for a $100 billion-plus annual financial plan.

And as the city’s deputy mayor for operations, she confronted major urban challenges, such as the swift creation of prekinderg­arten programs and the shaping of pandemic strategies.

“She was one of the unsung heroes of the fight against COVID in New York City,” former Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a phone interview Monday. “She

played a profound role in testing, vaccine and recovery efforts. Anti-bureaucrat­ic, she always had an attitude that we could address any problem, and in a long career really believed in the power of government to do good.”

Anglin was budget director under Gov. Eliot Spitzer and his successor, David Paterson. She was named deputy mayor for operations by de Blasio when he restored the position at the start of his second term in January 2018. Before that, she was chief

administra­tive officer for First Deputy Mayor Anthony E. Shorris.

Andrew Rein, president of the Citizens Budget Commission, a business-supported watchdog group, said of Anglin in an email, “She well understood that effective public leadership came from both the big picture and the often-unnoticed brass tacks of on-the-ground operations.”

Laura Lee Svitek was born May 25, 1965, in the New York City borough of Queens to John and Charlotte (Ninke) Svitek. Her father was an accountant, her mother a homemaker.

She earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in economics from the State University of New York at Albany in 1987 and 1989.

Her marriage to Michael Anglin ended in divorce. Her brothers, John and Scott, are her closest survivors. She lived in Manhattan.

Making her way up from intern, Anglin played a leading policymaki­ng role in state government on the environmen­t, education, taxation, transporta­tion and public safety.

After working as an economist with the State Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on and as an econometri­cian with the Department of Taxation and Finance, she joined the staff of the State Assembly Ways and Means Committee, rising to director of budget studies and to budget director under the Democratic majority.

Anglin was deputy comptrolle­r from 2003 to 2006 and became first deputy budget director before she was named budget director by Spitzer.

When Spitzer resigned amid a prostituti­on scandal, Anglin continued to serve in the Paterson

administra­tion, where she was viewed as a force for spending restraint.

When she left his administra­tion in 2009, Paterson said that Anglin had “played a major role in stabilizin­g New York’s finances and enacting critical reforms that will eliminate waste and inefficien­cy in government.”

From 2009 to 2016, she was president of the Commission on Independen­t Colleges and Universiti­es, which represents more than 100 private institutio­ns in New York state. She was the first woman to lead it.

Dr. David J. Skorton, who was president of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, from 2006 to 2015, recalled Anglin as combining “the soul of higher education and the savvy of New York state budgeting.”

She was chief administra­tive officer for the first deputy mayor in 2017 and a deputy mayor from 2018 to 2021.

Given her experience working with men, she was asked what advice she would impart to women. “For women managers specifical­ly, I would say be assertive, but not aggressive,” she replied. “Show them that you are here and mean business.”

 ?? Andrew Henderson/New York Times 2008 ?? Laura Anglin looks on as Gov. David Paterson speaks in 2008. Anglin served in New York government for many years.
Andrew Henderson/New York Times 2008 Laura Anglin looks on as Gov. David Paterson speaks in 2008. Anglin served in New York government for many years.

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