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President
Irving Information Group
Larry Irving is the President of the Irving
Information Group, a consulting firm providing strategic planning and
market development services to international telecommunications and
information technology companies. Prior to forming the Irving Information
Group, in October 1999, Mr. Irving served for almost seven years as
Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information, where
he was a principal advisor to the President, Vice President and Secretary
of Commerce on domestic and international communications and information
policy issues and supervised programs that award grants to extend the
reach of advanced telecommunications technologies to underserved areas.
As a member of the Clinton Administration's technology
team, Mr. Irving played an integral role in developing the
Administration's Electronic Commerce, National Information Infrastructure
and Global Information Infrastructure initiatives. He was a point person
in the Administration's successful efforts to reform the United States'
telecommunications law, which resulted in the passage of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- the most sweeping change in America's
telecommunications law in 60 years.
Mr. Irving is widely credited with coining the term
"the digital divide" and informing the American public about the
growing problem it represents. He initiated and was the principal author
of the landmark Federal survey, Falling Through the Net, which
tracks access to telecommunications and information technologies,
including telephones, computers and the Internet, across racial, economic,
and geographic lines. Mr. Irving also was a key proponent in the
Clinton-Gore Administration of policies to protect the diversity of voices
in the commercial broadcast arena and to promote increased opportunities
for minorities, women and rural Americans in the emerging digital economy.
In recognition of his work to promote policies and
develop programs to ensure equitable access to advanced telecommunication
and information technologies, Mr. Irving was named one of the fifty most
influential persons in the "Year of the Internet" by Newsweek
magazine, which described him as the "Conscience of the
Internet." Mr. Irving was proclaimed a "Technology
Champion" by the Congressional Black Caucus and received the James
Madison Award from the American Library Association and the Mickey Leland
Humanitarian Award from the National Association for Minorities in
Communications. He also was recognized for his efforts to bridge the
digital divide by, among others, the Alliance for Public Technology, the
National Association of Telecommunications Professionals and the
Indigenous Broadcast Center of Anchorage, Alaska.
Prior to joining the Clinton-Gore Administration, Mr.
Irving served ten years on Capitol Hill, most recently as Senior Counsel
to the US House of Representatives Subcommittee on Telecommunications and
Finance. He also served as Legislative Director, Counsel and Chief of
Staff (acting) to the late Congressman Mickey Leland (D-Texas). During the
previous three years, Mr. Irving was associated with the Washington, DC
law firm of Hogan and Hartson, specializing in communications law,
antitrust law, and commercial litigation. Mr. Irving received a B.A. from
Northwestern University in 1976 and a J.D. from Stanford University School
of Law, where he was President of the Class of 1979.
Mr. Irving currently serves as a cofounder of UrbanMagic
and a member of the Boards of Directors of Covad Communications, Worldgate
Communications and Anticipa LLC. He also serves on the Board of Directors
for TrustE, the Advisory Boards of Plugged In, Intel's Computer Clubhouse
and the Digital Blackboard Foundation, the Advisory Council for the Law,
Science and Technology Program at Stanford Law School and the Board of
Visitors for the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences of Northwestern
University. He is married to Leslie Annett Wiley and resides in
Washington, DC.
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