Silicon Valley Democratic Club (SVDC)

formerly known as the Santa Clara County Democratic Club (SCCDC)

SVDC June General Meeting

  • Mon, June 17, 2019
  • 6:45 PM - 9:00 PM
  • Campbell Community Center Orchard City Banquet Hall, 1 W Campbell Ave, Campbell, CA 95008

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June SVDC 
General Meeting:
Discussion on Housing and Transportation


Monday, June 17th, 6:45 - 8:45 PM

6:45 - 7:15 PM Reception | 7:15 - 8:45 PM Program


Campbell Community Center, Orchard City Banquet Hall
1 West Campbell Ave, Campbell (MAP)

RSVP Not Required • Free • Open to the Public


Join the Silicon Valley Democratic Club in a discussion with Rod Diridon Sr, Jason Baker, and Sandy Perry on housing and transportation.


About Rod Diridon, Sr.

From 1993 to 2014, Rod Diridon, Sr., was executive director of the Mineta Transportation Institute (MTI), a transportation policy research center created in 1991 by Congress. He is known as the father of modern transit service in Silicon Valley and has chaired more than 100 international, national, state, and local programs, most related to transit and the environment. He frequently provides legislative testimony on sustainability.


Mr. Diridon was appointed in 2001 and 2005 by Governors Davis and Schwarzenegger, respectively, to the California High Speed Rail Authority Board of which he is chair emeritus. He helped found and is chair emeritus of the American Public Transportation Association’s (APTA) High Speed Intercity Rail Committee and National High Speed Rail Corridors´ Coalition. He served as president of the national Council of University Transportation Centers (CUTC), and is the elected chair of the US High Speed Rail Association’s (US HSRA) Board. 


In 1992, he served as the chair of APTA in Washington DC and for six years as North American vice chair of the International Transit Association (UITP) in Brussels. In 1976, he chaired the state’s first successful local half-cent sales tax for transit and subsequently chaired a state-wide and four successful regional transportation financing and bond elections. 


In 1996 he founded and chaired the Transportation Research Board´s study panel, “Combating Global Warming through Sustainable Transportation Policy.” He advised the Federal Transit Administration and in 1995 chaired the National Research Council´s Transportation Research Board´s Transit Oversight and Project Selection Committee. He provided keynotes, especially for high speed rail and sustainability, in more than 50 US cities and for a dozen international conferences, and he has published numerous related articles. He has driven electric cars since 1996 and his home’s photovoltaic array is a net contributor to the grid. Since 1995 he’s chaired the region’s League of Conservation Voters Board and is a Life Member of the Sierra Club. He received lifetime achievement awards from APTA, CUTC, National Association of Counties, San Jose State’s College of Business, US HS Ground Transport Association, US HSRA, and others.


His political career began in 1971 as the youngest person ever elected to the Saratoga City Council. He retired in 1995 because of term limits after completing six terms as chair of both the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors and the Transit Board. He was the only person to chair the San Francisco Bay Area´s (119 cities, 27 transit agencies, and 9 counties) three regional governments: The Metropolitan Transportation Commission, the Air Quality Management District, and the Association of Bay Area Governments. He chaired nine successful rail system development project boards. In 1995 the region’s main train station was renamed the “San Jose Diridon Station” upon his retirement from elected office.


After receiving a BS in accounting and MSBA in statistics in 1963 from San Jose State University, he served two combat tours as a naval officer in Vietnam. In 1968 he founded the Decision Research Institute which was sold in 1977 after his election. Mr. Diridon has two successful children, Rod Jr. and Mary Margaret, and four grandchildren. He is married to Dr. Gloria Duffy, former US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense and now president and CEO of the Commonwealth Club of California. In July of 2014 he shifted to emeritus status at MTI. 


About Jason Baker

Jason Baker is the Vice-President Transportation, Housing & Community Development for the Silicon Valley Leadership Group.  In this role, he works with both public and private leaders throughout the region in order to shape decision-making related to transportation infrastructure, housing and related funding initiatives.

Prior to joining the Leadership Group, Jason served as Mayor of Campbell and on its City Council for eight years. As an elected official with a regional focus, Jason served on a dozen regional boards and commissions, including serving on the Boards of the Valley Transportation Authority, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, The Santa Clara County Housing Task Force, and as board member and President of the Cities Association of Santa Clara County. In 2016-2017, Jason served as District Director for State Assemblymember Hon. Evan Low.

Jason earned a BA in Political Science from UC Davis, and a JD Cum Laude from Santa Clara University School of Law.

Jason, his wife Mairead and their two young children live in Campbell.

About Sand Perry

Sandy Perry was raised as a Quaker in Massachusetts and attended Stanford University from 1967-70. He has been a lifelong community activist and justice advocate, especially after moving to San Jose in 1990. He has been blessed with a 44-year, loving marriage with Andrea Villaseñor Perry, and they have a daughter Christina, son in law Ben, and a 6 month-old grandson Max Perry Swanson.

In 1991, Sandy joined both the Affordable Housing Network and what is now known as CHAM Deliverance Ministry, and has been an active volunteer in both ever since.

Over the years, CHAM helped lead and organize countless rallies, marches, demonstrations, sit-ins, speak-outs, teach-ins and building takeovers to support housing for the homeless. In 1997, Sandy collaborated with CHAM and First Christian Church to open the church as a homeless family shelter. It successfully defied City efforts to shut its doors and then helped create the CHAPP and PROGRESS pilot housing programs for the homeless. 

In 2001, Sandy participated with both CHAM and Affordable Housing Network in successfully advocating for 30% of San Jose’s affordable housing funds to be allocated to previously ignored extremely low-income families. Affordable Housing Network was instrumental in the campaign to strengthen San Jose’s rent control program from 2015-18, and in 2017, it helped organize low-income tenants at Sunnyhills Apartments in Milpitas to save their homes, when the owner proposed to opt out of his HUD contract, demolish the apartments, and build million dollar townhomes instead.

Sandy was a commercial roofer for 20 years and then helped manage the CHAM-First Christian Church homeless shelter from 2000-09. Recently he was active in efforts by Serve the People San Jose to stop the ill-advised Google expansion into San Jose. He has also been a writer and distributor of the national political monthly People’s Tribune for many years.

Silicon Valley Democratic Club™
FPPC ID# 1288723  •  FEC ID# C00419028 

FPPC ID# 1288723  •  FEC ID# C00419028 

Attn: Silicon Valley Democratic Club  •  2901 Moorpark Avenue, Suite 110  •  San Jose, CA 95128

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