Joseph H. Boardman was appointed president and chief executive officer by
Amtrak’s Board of Directors, effective November 26, 2008.
A native of Taberg, New York, Boardman was raised, the second of eight children, on a dairy farm in Oneida County.
Upon receiving an honorable discharge from the Air Force, he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in agriculture economics from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and a Master of Science degree in management science from the State University of New York at Binghamton.
In a sense, Boardman’s career in transportation began when he worked part-time as a bus driver while he was a student at Cornell. Eventually, he would spend more than 30 years either in city, county, state or federal government, or owning his own transportation management company.
He went to work for the city of Rome, New York, in 1975, and in 1980 he managed the Rome and Utica transit authorities. Boardman served as commissioner of public transportation in Broome County, New York, and then, in 1995, he founded Progressive Transportation Services, Inc. in Elmira, New York.
Boardman was later appointed to the Amtrak board of directors, and in April 2005, became the administrator of U.S.
Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) for the
U.S. Department of Transportation. As administrator, Boardman was responsible for overseeing all aspects of operations for the organization. This included managing safety programs and regulatory initiatives; enforcement of FRA safety regulations; development and implementation of national freight and passenger rail policy; and oversight of research and development activities in support of railroad safety. Boardman implemented an emergency ban on unauthorized use of cell phones in locomotive cabs.
Boardman and his wife, Joanne, have three children, Joe Jr., Emily, and Philip.
FRA’s Boardman to Head Amtrak
(by Rick Johnson, United Transportation Union