
BY BEN BRACHFELD
Mayor-elect Eric Adams on
Monday named fi ve new deputy
mayors that he will appoint
to his administration, all of
whom are women with extensive
experience in government,
including three alumnae of the
de Blasio administration.
Adams, currently in his
fi nal week-and-a-half as
Brooklyn Borough President,
presented his choices at
Brooklyn Borough Hall while
surrounded by several other
women who were the fi rst to
serve in key positions in government.
“Representation matters.
Perspective matters. My administration
will understand
the people of the city it serves
— and each of the people I am
appointing today has the experience
and skills to help us turn
this city around the right way,”
Adams said in a statement.
“I am so proud of the history
these new deputy mayors
are making today, and I hope it
sends a message that the most
qualifi ed people should not sit
on the bench when the game is
on the line just because of their
gender, their ethnicity, or any
piece of their identity.”
Deputy mayors are among
the highest-ranking members
of the administration at City
Hall, and often advice the city’s
chief executive on key issues,
oversee the operations of certain
agencies, and fi ll in if the
mayor is ever unavailable.
The position is ill-defi ned
in the City Charter, with the
mayor being provided signifi -
cant leeway in crafting the
scope of the deputy mayor’s
mission.
The top post of First Deputy
Mayor, arguably the mayor’s
most prominent appointment,
will go to Lorraine Grillo,
who has served as head of the
School Construction Authority
since 2010, and was Commissioner
COURIER LIFE, D 6 ECEMBER 24-30, 2021
of the Department of
Design and Construction from
2018 until earlier this year,
when she was appointed as de
Blasio’s COVID recovery czar.
“I am honored that Mayorelect
Adams has chosen me to
serve in this important role
in his administration,” Grillo
said in a statement. “I look
forward to working alongside
this exceptional team to implement
the Mayor-elect’s vision
to move forward and deliver a
safer, more prosperous city for
New Yorkers.”
Two of the fi ve women will
also become the fi rst deputy
mayors of Asian descent, Adams’
team said.
Meera Joshi, who currently
serves in the federal Department
of Transportation of
President Joe Biden’ administration,
and previously worked
a stint as the city’s Taxi and
Limousine Commissioner, will
become Deputy Mayor of Operations.
Maria Torres-Springer,
currently at the Ford Foundation
after a long stint in city
government, including as Commissioner
of Housing Preservation
and Development and
Small Business Services, and
Left to right: Lorraine Grillo, Meera Joshi, Eric Adams, Maria Torres-
Springer, Sheena Wright, and Anne Williams-Isom.
Evan Burr/Brooklyn Borough President’s Offi ce
as President of the Economic
Development Corporation, will
become Deputy Mayor for Economic
and Workforce Development.
Anne Williams-Isom will
become Deputy Mayor for
Health and Human Services,
which comes after serving for
13 years at the city’s Administration
for Children’s Services,
and a stint as a tenured professor
of child welfare at Fordham
University.
Sheena Wright, who has a
background as the President
of the nonprofi t United Way
of New York City, which helps
low-income New Yorkers afford
basic necessities, will be
Deputy Mayor for Strategic
Initiatives.
Also on Monday, the New
York Post reported that Adams
intends to nominate Ydanis Rodriguez,
outgoing City Council
Transportation Chair, and a
staunch Adams ally, to be the
new Commissioner of the Department
of Transportation.
Adams names 5 women
as deputy mayors