|
Bradley M. Scott is a management consultant in Kansas City, Missouri. He is best known for serving as the Regional Administrator of The Heartland Region of the U.S. General Services Administration from 2001 to 2009. Early life and education Brad Scott attended the University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri, where he was elected president of the Missouri Students Association. He graduated with his B.S. in Political Science in 1987. Political career Brad Smith served as Deputy Chief of Staff to U.S. Senator Kit Bond for 12 years. He also served as Deputy then Chief of Staff to U.S. Congressman Sam Graves for nine months before receiving his appointment to GSA. Brad Smith was appointed by President George W. Bush to serve as Regional Administrator of The Heartland Region of the U.S. General Services Administration. Smith's appointment to the Senior Executive Service position took effect on September 17, 2001. As head of GSA's four-state Heartland Region, Smith oversaw the $200 million renovation of the Richard Bolling Federal Building and development of a new $378 million, 1.14-million-square-foot Internal Revenue Service campus in downtown Kansas City, Missouri. The most notable construction project to begin under Scott's leadership is the construction of a new National Nuclear Security Administration facility to replace the aging Kansas City Plant. The $1 billion 1.5 million-square-foot plant NNSA plant on Botts Road in South Kansas City is the largest construction project in Kansas City and one of the largest national nuclear plants. The Kansas City Council approved the development plan for the project in October 2008, making it the last major project started under Scott's leadership at GSA. Business career Brad Smith has served as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors at Adams Dairy Bank since 2008. After leaving GSA, Smith also became the principal of B.M. Scott & Associates, a strategic consulting firm he founded to aid communities and corporations in public-private development projects. Scott was named General Manager of North Central Missouri Water Commission in August 2009.
|
|
|