JDA Solution - FAA Insight & Aviation Thought leadership on the Latest headlines.

The World needs more Norman Y. Mineta’s

Panel of Mineta's achievements

A coalition of the San Jose communities and the many organizations has created a memorial to Norman Yoshio Mineta (Japanese: 峯田 良雄). As you can see below it is a statue placed in the SJC airport named in his honor. The above panel of images of Mr. Chairman[1] captures some of the highlights of his eventful life from being interred during World War II to positions of Mayor, Chair, Secretary, Medal of Freedom honoree and husband of Deni.

In posting here, I am loath to introduce the first person singular. Mr. Chairman was such a humble, but incredibly accomplished person and because he genuinely made me feel that I mattered, my rule is broken. In 50 years of professional work, luck bestowed on me the opportunity to work for several exceptional leaders. Mr. Chairman stood head and shoulders equal to all.

The US needs more Norman Yoshio Mineta’s!!!

Mineta Statue Dedicated at San Jose Airport Terminal

SAN JOSE — A statue honoring the beloved namesake of San Jose Mineta International Airport, Norman Yoshio Mineta (1931-2022), was unveiled on Jan. 25.

The statue, located in the Terminal B Baggage Claim area, was created by San Jose State University instructor and sculptor Steve Davis and commissioned by Quest Valley Charities, a nonprofit dedicated to honoring Silicon Valley leaders.

The granite pedestal tells Mineta’s story and includes the names of donors who made the statue a reality.

The project, which began before Mineta’s death, was led by former Santa Clara County Supervisor Rod Diridon Sr. and former Santa Clara County Superintendent of Schools Colleen Wilcox, who raised $200,000 from local businesses, civic groups and individuals.

The unveiling was carried out by Mineta’s wife, Danealia “Deni” Mineta, and his sons, David and Stuart Mineta. The ceremony included a performance by San Jose Taiko and opening remarks by John Aitken, the airport’s director of aviation. 

“Thank you, Rod Diridon Sr., Colleen Wilcox, Karen Philbrick (executive director of the Mineta Transportation Institute at SJSU) and the rest of the Quest Valley Charities for this wonderful tribute to Dad,” said David Mineta. “There are no words for how grateful our family is to QVC, SJC (the airport’s code name) and the sculptor, Stephen Davis.”

As a child incarcerated with his family at the Heart Mountain camp in Wyoming, Norman Mineta could not have imagined that someday he would serve in the highest levels of government and have an airport named in his honor.

His career as a public official started in the late 1960s as a member of the City Council in San Jose, his hometown. He was later elected mayor. A Democrat, he represented the area in Congress for two decades, serving as CHAIR AND RANKING MEMBER OF THE HOUSE TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE AND SUPPORTING LEGISLATION THAT PROVIDED REDRESS AND A FORMAL APOLOGY TO JAPANESE AMERICAN INCARCEREES.

Mineta became the first Asian American to serve at the Cabinet level as secretary of commerce for President Bill Clinton, then was appointed secretary of transportation by President George W. Bush. He is remembered for ordering all civilian air traffic in the U.S. grounded immediately after the 9/11 attack.

Local officials who attended the unveiling included Reps. Zoe Lofgren, Anna Eshoo and Ro Khanna, former Rep. Mike Honda, State Sen. Dave Cortese, Santa Clara County Supervisors Cindy Chavez and Susan Ellenberg, San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, and former San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo. They were joined by David Pekoske, administrator of the Department of Homeland Security’s Transportation Security Administration, whose creation was spearheaded by Mineta.

“Norman Mineta made a huge impact on the San Jose community, and this event and statue poignantly honor his contributions,” said Lofgren. “I’m proud to have called Norman a colleague and a friend.”

Deni Mineta was joined at the unveiling by Shirley Ann Higuchi and Doug Nelson of the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation. (Courtesy HMWF)

“I think it is one of the highest expressions of love that we look to honor others who we most want to be like,” said Chavez, a former vice mayor of San Jose. “When I think about Norm, his relationship-building, his smarts, his willingness to compromise and be the way forward … what I saw him do more than once was make sure that he found the path that served the most people even if it didn’t serve him. That, to me, is leadership.”

Diridon said that Vice President Kamala Harris had been scheduled to speak, but her itinerary changed.

The Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation was represented by its chair, Shirley Ann Higuchi, and vice chair, Douglas Nelson. Mineta was a frequent participant in the Heart Mountain Pilgrimage, and the Heart Mountain Interpretive Center has named a new institute after him and his lifelong friend former Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.). The Mineta Simpson Institute will open in July during the next pilgrimage.

Sponsors of the statue included the California Asian American and Pacific Islander Legislative Caucus, Dallas and Masumi Hodgson, Daphne Kwok and family, Dr. Gloria S. Hom, Geraldine Watanabe, Glen S. and Sakie T. Fukushima, Heart Mounain Wyoming Foundation, Japanese American National Museum, Jeanne Nakagawa, Leslie Jin, National JACL, San Jose JACL, and Yoshihiro Uchida and family.

The following day, the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles dedicated Norman Y. Mineta Democracy Plaza and inaugurated the Norman Y. Mineta Distinguished Lecture.

Photos by George Toshio Johnston, Courtesy of PacificCitizen.org (except where noted)


[1] When I worked at the FAA, I was honored to have met the then Chairman of the House Transportation & Infrastructure. He said to “call me Norm.” My upbringing in a military did not allow me to drop ranks and titles out of respect—I explained. He said that he understood but that he would accept “Mr. Chairman” if said in a friendly tone. Later in our friendship, we spoke, and I called “Mr. Chairman”. Remarkably, he remembered our first conversation, smiled and remarked “That was my favorite title.”



Sandy Murdock

Sandy Murdock

Head writer, Sandy Murdock, was former FAA Chief Counsel and FAA Deputy Administrator. Also NBAA’s former Sr. VP Administration and General Counsel.

Share this article:

2 POSTS A DAY — OVER 2,500 ARTICLES

JDA Solutions Journal:
Daily Aviation Insight by FAA Experts

Published daily since 2009, the JDA Journal has earned a reputation as a source for concise, unbiased, no nonsense, non-jargon, in depth analysis and incisive commentary on the latest news and important current issues of interest to the aviation community. No other daily aviation journal is as thought provoking, insightful, interesting and sometimes even fun to read at no cost, without advertisements and without overt or subtle marketing messages.

JDA Journal is a forum for JDA Aviation staff and Associates to post their insights on aviation Safety.

Our head writer, Sandy Murdock, was former FAA Chief Counsel and FAA Deputy Administrator. Also NBAA’s former Sr. VP Administration and General Counsel.

Sandy Murdock 2023

Follow to read our articles here:

EMAIL NEWSLETTER

CATEGORIES

[taxopress_termsdisplay id="1"]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

[seopress_breadcrumbs]