{"id":16251,"date":"2024-10-01T12:01:36","date_gmt":"2024-10-01T16:01:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.wbcnet.org\/?page_id=16251"},"modified":"2025-04-03T08:37:17","modified_gmt":"2025-04-03T12:37:17","slug":"wbc-chairman-2","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.wbcnet.org\/wbc-chairman-2\/","title":{"rendered":"WBC Chairman"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Mike Holland<\/strong>‘s<\/strong> Fall Kickoff Comments<\/strong> Thank you, Greg, and thanks to everyone for your vote of confidence this evening. I am deeply honored to be elected the 87th Chairman of the Board for the Washington Building Congress.<\/p>\n\n\n\n I would like to congratulate my fellow officers and directors who were also elected this evening. In particular, I\u2019d like to welcome our 5 new board members. I look forward to your energy, your fresh perspectives and to working with you on some new initiatives in the coming year. Congratulations to all!<\/p>\n\n\n\n At this time, I would like to recognize and thank Greg Koger for his exceptional term as 2024 Chairman of the Board and for his many years of dedication and service. Greg, you have lead us with patience and wisdom. You have a gift for making us question our preconceived notions without offending anyone. It has been a pleasure working with you these years. On behalf of the WBC membership and leadership, it is my privilege to present to you with the past chairman\u2019s walnut gavel box.<\/p>\n\n\n\n We have one last bit of important business:<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n We here at WBC have been blessed to have the kind of continuity that is rare in Washington, DC. In a city defined by change, Steve Kenton, our President, has been leading the organization since 1999 and Rita Reis, our Associate Director, has been the force that keeps WBC moving since long before most of us joined. Over the past – 28 years – Rita has organized every event you\u2019ve attended, coordinated every Craftsmanship Awards program, and checked you in for every golf tournament. She does it all! As many of you know, Rita has decided to leave us this spring and return to Brazil to be with family. So tonight will be her final WBC Kickoff Ceremony. Luckily for us, Rita has agreed to stay through the Craftsmanship Banquet in the spring. So if you don\u2019t get a chance to wish her the best tonight, you\u2019ll have more opportunities in the future. But now, please join me in a round of applause to show her our gratitude for 28 years of service to this organization.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Rita, thank you for all you do. We look forward to enjoying your victor lap together.<\/p>\n\n\n\n And with every page turn, we celebrate what was\u2026 and we also welcome what will be. Stepping into Rita\u2019s very big shoes, I am pleased to introduce you to Stacy Kidwell, our incoming Associate Director.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Stacy joins our team with a strong background in DC associations and a passion for the kind of hard work our members value. You\u2019ll get to know her more over the coming year, but please take a moment tonight to introduce yourself and please take a moment now to welcome her to WBC.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Finally, I\u2019d like to thank every one of you for coming out tonight and joining us as we kick off the 87th year of WBC. You are the heart and soul of this organization, and you bring your unique talents, knowledge and personalities to bear on everything we do.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Who We Are<\/strong> I have been with Boston Properties for a quarter century and have been a WBC member for at least 20 of those years. Here is what I\u2019ve learned about our industry and about WBC in that time:<\/p>\n\n\n\n We are a tight-knit community.<\/strong> Washington DC itself is a small town and those in this room collectively know everyone in our industry. More importantly, we take care of each other. You might witness that in the network of colleagues you meet here tonight or you might see it in the way our industry comes together in difficult times. During the pandemic, when construction was deemed essential work, we persevered by sharing our lessons and our ideas not only within our own companies, but also with our competitors to make sure our people stayed safe and well.<\/p>\n\n\n\n We also reach out and take care of the greater DMV community through programs like our collaboration with the Arlington Food Assistance Center or our involvement in Rebuilding Together. Right now, WBC members have been working for months to take a house near Tysons Corner and make it safe and secure for the family who lives there. Not long ago, we gathered nearly 70 tons of food for the Capital Area Food Bank. This is what WBC members do.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Our membership is broad and diverse and, because of that, it is full of great ideas.<\/strong> One thing that really differentiates WBC from most other organizations is the breadth of our membership. We are not just an organization of owners and brokers, nor one of just masons or just electricians. We cut across all aspects of our industry. This is where all trades come together and break bread with GC\u2019s, owners, brokers, bankers, insurance agents, designers and engineers. (We even somehow let a few lawyers get in here).<\/p>\n\n\n\n We welcome the decision makers, those with years of experience, as well as the next wave of leaders, those so new to the industry that their fresh ideas aren\u2019t constrained by years of doing things \u201cthe way we\u2019ve always done them\u201d. Our tent is open to all who touch the built world. When we encounter complex construction challenges, we reach out to each other to solve problems. It is this collaboration that leads us all to shared success.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Together, we create amazing places. <\/strong>The fabric of Washington DC and the rest of the DMV is literally built<\/u><\/em> by the hands of WBC members. Anyone who lives, works or plays in Washington can\u2019t help but experience your amazing work. There\u2019s a sense of pride in what we do. Each year we honor the incredible talent and dedication contractors across the DMV through our Craftsmanship Awards and the Craftsmanship Hall of Fame. If you have never attended that ceremony, I urge you to treat yourself this spring. It is truly uplifting.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The fourth thing I\u2019ll share is this – we know how to have fun.<\/strong> While many of the reasons for joining WBC are about business, when you get right down to it, the main reason we come out to events like this is because we like each other and we enjoy spending time together.<\/p>\n\n\n\n For those in other industries who have chosen to work from home full time – you\u2019re missing out. In construction, we are blessed to be in a business that requires collaboration, requires teamwork, requires us to be on site. It means we get to spend time together, sharing our experiences and our family stories. The people we work with are friends and that very much includes the people in this room. In the end, isn\u2019t that really what WBC is all about?<\/p>\n\n\n\n Challenging Times<\/strong> Our resiliency as an industry certainly comes from anchoring our decision making in our shared history and values. Last year we hosted our Industry Titans event, where we heard from some of the most established leaders in our field \u2013 some of them with their names on the cranes (Jim Davis, Mark Smoot, Bill Calhoun from Clark, Lynne Stith Bennet from Coakley and Paul Mella from Dyna). They shared stories about past challenges and down economic times. But they were unanimous in their confidence that we would come through this cycle even stronger.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In short, they were not deterred about rising to meet the current challenges our industry faces. Whether that means entering new markets or finding new ways of building better, building safer, faster, or cheaper. Because, while we are an industry with a long history and (literally)<\/em> ancient traditions, we are also one that is constantly evolving and open to change.<\/p>\n\n\n\n A Year of Change<\/strong> For WBC, in addition to losing Rita and welcoming Stacey, we will likely be changing offices this year. The nature of our meetings and events has changed, so we are currently searching for new space that will meet those evolving needs and allow us to gather in new ways. We\u2019ll be shifting some of our evening programs to the morning and exploring new venues. What works, we\u2019ll keep. What has grown old, we will change.<\/p>\n\n\n\n There is good industry change on the horizon as well \u2013 the economy has finally started to shift and interest rates are lowering, making new projects viable again. There is real activity in the marketplace \u2013 we are doing more tours and leasing more space than we have since pre-covid times. The tide has undeniably shifted.<\/p>\n\n\n\n And of course, our country\u2019s leadership is poised for change in only a few months. Regardless of what happens in November, change is a certainty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
BXP
WBC’s 87th Chairman of the Board<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n
Her institutional knowledge\u2026 and her smile, are unparalleled.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
For some of you, this is a \u201cnot-to-miss\u201d event \u2013 one filled with history and tradition (and great oysters) \u2013 an event you may have attended for decades. For others of you, this might be your first introduction to Washington Building Congress and if so, we welcome you. For all of us though, it is an important opportunity to pause and remind ourselves of what it is we value, what we have accomplished together and in what direction we are headed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
There is so much good news for our industry, but there is also little doubt that we continue to endure challenges that date back to the pandemic- the challenges of getting workers back to the office, the impact that those empty buildings have on our city, and the challenge of getting new construction projects of any type to pencil.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Tonight we find ourselves back here at Columbia Country Club, celebrating our ties to the past. And at the same time, we look ahead to what will certainly be a year of change – for WBC, for our industry, and for our country.<\/p>\n\n\n\n