Who They Are: Profiles of Our Elected
Officials
This week: Village of Larchmont Trustee Liz
Noyer Feld Other Profiles
by Paula Eisenberg
Larchmont Trustee Liz
Noyer Feld
(December 10, 2002) Larchmont Village
Hall. The White House. Larchmont Village Hall again.
You could say Liz Noyer Feld has come full-circle. With
a Larchmont political pedigree (her father was Mayor
of Larchmont from 1976-80) and a job history full of
famous, powerful names, she's wielding some power herself
now, after being elected last March to the Larchmont
Board of Trustees.
"I always loved campaigning for my
father, unlike some of my siblings, who hid under the
couch," Feld remembered with a laugh. After graduating
from Mamaroneck High School, she went on to Georgetown,
and even there, her focus was politics. She graduated
with a degree in political theory in 1982, moving on
to an administrative job at the White House with David
Stockman, Director of the Budget. From there, she worked
with Marlin Fitzwater, press secretary to Vice President
George Bush.
What was it like to work in the White
House? "I think I was too young to be as intimidated
as I would be now," Feld said. "It was a huge
thrill, though, going through security at the South
Gate every day, and I never did get jaded about that.
And it was a little overwhelming, working with all those
incredibly committed people. I learned an awful lot
about how government works."
One thing she learned was how money wends
its way through government agencies, how it gets down
to the level of a municipality. "Now I understand
how the money gets distributed, what the people at the
receiving end of grant applications are looking for."
And once she took office in Larchmont, she started thinking
about how the budget process could be streamlined.
"In the coming budget cycle, I'd
like to re-examine how the budget is put together, from
the ground up, instead of just starting from where we
were the previous year, adding or subtracting from there,"
she said, adding that Mayor Ken Bialo and other Trustees
are also interested in this idea.
After her White House years, Feld was
deputy campaign manager for Pete Dupont's brief presidential
primary bid in 1988, and then she went to work for a
lobbying firm in Washington. While there, she helped
do crisis managment for indicted Wall Street junk bond
king Michael Milken. "I seemed to always be right
in the middle of whatever was happening. I'm lucky to
have had a career so full of exciting and colorful characters,"
Feld said, with a rueful grin.
Then, against the advice of almost everybody,
she took a job with independent candidate Ross Perot's
campaign. "At the time he was still very credible,"
she said, "And in the summer of 1992, this was
the place to be. I just took a chance." Ed Rollins,
Perot's campaign manager, offered Feld the job of assistant
press secretary. Eight days later, Perot dropped out
of the race, leaving Feld jobless and facing "I
told you so's" from most of her friends.
A job with the public relations division
of ABC News came next, and then Feld moved to the children's
cable channel Nickelodeon, rising to senior management
at a time when the network was becoming a global entertainment
company. She left Nickelodeon in 1996. Her next challenge
was as a founder of the Million Mom March for gun control,
in 1999, and she worked to get John McCain on the ballot
for the New York GOP primary in 2000.
She and her husband moved to Larchmont
in 2000, after living in Manhattan and on Long Island
for several years. "It just felt like karma,"
she said. "I felt so at home here, and it's a great
place to raise kids." She has three, ranging in
age from 15 to 6. "My kids sometimes wonder why
I work so hard at this (being a Trustee). It does take
a lot of time," she said, "But Village residents
have high expectations. We're a very responsive Board,
and there's a tremendous amount of homework. But it's
one of the most rewarding things I've ever done."
Working with Mayor Ken Bialo requires
energy, Feld says. "Ken's a hard driver,"
she said. "I like to get a lot done in a short
period of time, and Ken's the same way. He follows up
and follows through on everything, so we get things
resolved. Being mayor is a far more involved job than
it was when my father was the mayor."
What issues are at the top of her to-do
list?
"There's a perception that we have
a 'McMansion' problem here," she said. "We're
working with zoning consultants to see if this is just
a perception or a reality. We should get that nailed
down in the next four months or so." She is also
concerned about the lack of affordable senior housing
in Larchmont, wants to improve the business district,
and continues her work as liaison to the zoning, traffic,
architectural review and beautifcation committees.
She spends a lot of time these days as
liaison to the Long Island Sound Watershed Inter-municipal
Council, working on storm-water management issues.
"I'm very proud of how this Board
has been so inclusive," she said. "We've brought
in so many new people to volunteer on committees, and
we have such a wealth of expertise in this Village.
I've lived in a lot of places, and I've never seen this
level of involvement among residents anywhere else."
Even important newspaper interviews can
go on too long, and Feld's six-year-old son eventually
demanded his share of her attention. Her long experience
in both press relations and politics showing, Feld gracefully
handled both reporter and constituent. One got M&M's,
the other got a smile and a hand-shake. Both left satisfied.
We have contacted all of the elected leaders in the
Village and the Town, and the profiles will appear in
the order in which the interviews were conducted. Check
back frequently for more profiles.
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