Officers

Chair - George Clark
Vice-Chair - Nancy MacWood
Secretary - Kevin Locke
Treasurer - John W. Yago

Trustees

Reyn Anderson
Bill Crews
Monte Edwards
Alma Gates
Erik Hein
Meg Maguire
Hon. James E. Nathanson
Loretta Neumann

Laura M. Richards, Esq.
Charles J. Robertson
Lance Salonia
Marilyn J. Simon
Richard Westbrook
Dr. Beverley Wheeler
Evelyn Wrin

Members
Bruce Adams
Reyn Anderson
Suzan Aramaki
Amy Ballard
Shari Barton
Joseph R. Bender
Sally Berk
Michael Berman
Bill Brown
Ward Bucher, AIA
Richard T. Busch
Carol Aten
Sylvia Cabrera
Sarah Campbell
John Capozzi Jr., CPC
Charles I. Cassell, FAIA
George R. Clark, Esq.
Francis M. (Buck) Clarke, III
Stephen W. Coleman
W. Kent Cooper, FAIA
Charles E. Cotten
Bill Crews
Jill Diskan
Arrington Dixon
Rosalyn P. Doggett
Dorothy Douglas
Jenny Sue Dunner
Kathryn A. Eckles
Monte Edwards
Emily Hotaling Eig
Wolcott B. Etienne,
AIA, LEED AP, AICP
Norma D. Evenson
Barbara G. Fant
Judy Scott Feldman, Ph.D.
John Fondersmith, AICP
John Forrer
Alma Gates
Stuart D. Gosswein
Eric S. Graye
Carroll Green
William Hershey Greer, Jr.
David Grinnell
Newman T. Halvorson, Jr.
Ann Hughes Hargrove
Suzette Hemberger
Erik Hein
Robert Hershey
Ann F. Heuer
Karin H. Hillhouse
Cornish Hitchcock
Alison K. Hoagland
Richard Houghton
George Idelson
Elizabeth (Penny) F. Jones
Fred H. Jordan
Justine Kingham
Marilyn (Mickey) W. Klein
Hazel F. Kreinheder
Charlotte A. Kroll
Antoinette J. Lee
Jeff S. Lee, FASLA
Anne McCutcheon Lewis, FAIA
Kevin R. Locke
Richard Longstreth
Edward W. Lyle
Nancy MacWood
Meg Maguire
Adam E. Maier
Dorn C. McGrath, Jr., FAICP
Hon. Phil Mendelson
Arthur Cotton Moore, FAIA
Lucinda F. Murphy
Hon. James E. Nathanson
Darwina L. Neal
Richard B. Nettler
Loretta Neumann
Patricia Nicoson
George H. F. Oberlander, AICP
Cheryl Ann Opacinch
Merlin W. Packard
Caroline Petti
Elizabeth H. Phillips
Bill Rice
Laura Marie Richards, Esq.
Roger S. Rihm
Charles J. Robertson
Judith Helm Robinson
Harry G. Robinson III
Gail C. Rothrock
Mary Pat Rowan
Richard S. Rybeck
Lance Salonia
Elsa M. Santoya
Ann Satterthwaite
William Scheirer
Rick Harlan Schneider,
AIA, APA, LEED
Anne R. Sellin
Donald H. Shannon
Rebecca A. Shiffer
Marilyn J. Simon
W. Kent Slowinski
Alice Fales Stewart
Joel E. Truitt
Amy Weinstein
Richard Westbrook
Dr. Beverley Wheeler
Richard Wolf
William M. Wright
Evelyn Wrin
John W. Yago
David N. Yerkes, FAIA
Christian Zapatka

The Committee of 100 on the Federal City is a nonprofit organization dedicated to safeguarding and advancing Washington's historic distinction, natural beauty and overall livability. The Committee's officers, trustees and volunteer members contribute expertise and civic action in the service of responsible planning in Washington. For information and further details about the Committee, please contact the administrator.

Subcommittees

Advocacy

Mission

The Committee of 100 advocates responsible planning and land use in Washington, D.C. Our work is guided by the values inherited from the L’Enfant Plan and McMillan Commission, which give Washington its historic distinction and natural beauty, while responding to the special challenges of 21st century development. We pursue these goals through public education, research and civic action, and we celebrate the city’s unique role as both the home of the District’s citizens and the capital of our nation.

Testimony

The Committee of 100 provides expert testimony to councils, boards, committees and agencies concerned with preservation and development in the DC region. Representing extensive accumulated experience and careful deliberation, the Committee’s positions have an important influence on local land use decisionmaking.

Much of the Committee’s testimony, letters, endorsements and articles from the past several years can be found on the testimony and letters page.

Education

The Committee of 100 regularly reviews the work and proposals of public agencies in the DC area. The Committee takes on review and advisory roles for a number of projects and functions, such as advising on changes and corrections to the DC Zoning Code. In addition, the Committee holds periodically scheduled lectures and tours in order to better understand current issues and situations in DC’s planning and development arena.

Updates about the Committee’s activities can be found in recent issues of Committee of 100 newsletters.

Civic Action

The Committee of 100 serves local communities, nonprofit groups and other organizations in DC by offering pro bono consultation on historic preservation, land planning and architectural design issues. Recent work with communities includes technical advice on historic property designation, assisting the formation of citizens’ groups, and support of citizens’ groups and initiatives through awards, recognition and public testimony.

More information about the Committee’s civic actions can be found in recent newsletters. Information about the Committee’s accomplished record of past campaigns throughout the 20th century can be found on the history page.

Research

The Committee of 100 was formed to sustain and to safeguard the fundamental values derived from the tradition of the L’Enfant Plan and the McMillan Commission. The work of the Committee is therefore founded on a deep and wide-ranging understanding of the historical actions and trends that have shaped our region. Many of the Committee’s members engage in historical research about the DC region, in forums both formal and colloquial.