JAMES S. GILMORE III
Chair, Gilmore Commission;
Former Governor of Virginia
202-955-9660
On homeland security, former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore is determined to stay ahead of the pack. And his career path-by choice and by chance-has placed him prominently among those shaping
Former commission member Ellen Gordon said Gilmore's leadership impressed her. "There was never a time when we were meeting or working on recommendations that he didn't give each and every one of us opportunity to voice our issues," she said.
Now Gilmore is taking his government experience to the private sector as head of the homeland-security practice group at the law firm of Kelley Drye & Warren. The 54-year-old former Army counterintelligence agent counsels and represents companies seeking to engage in homeland-security business with the government and also manages USA secure, an organization he started in 2002 to "link government to the private sector in terms of [homeland-securityl policy thinking."
One area that concerns Gilmore is the health care system's ability to handle a sudden surge in patients in the event of a bioterrorist attack. He's proposed setting up an international treaty to address surge capacity here and abroad by using medical personnel from allied countries.
Born in Richmond and educated at the University of Virginia, Gilmore worries about sustaining momentum for homeland security, but he isn't pointing fingers."We do our best work for the country when we are trying to stay ahead of this discussion, not looking backwards," he said.