In Memoriam:
Jane Baker – Former MTC Chair
MTC mourns the recent passing of Jane Baker, a former chair of the
Commission and one of its longest-serving commissioners. Baker died
on July 1, at the age of 88.
Jane Baker served on MTC from 1983 to 1999, representing the cities
of San Mateo County. She held numerous leadership positions during
her tenure, having at various times chaired the Grant Review and Allocations
Committee, the Work Program Committee, the Executive Committee, the
BART/SFO Study Policy Committee and the Peninsula Transit Alternatives
Committee. Baker served as chair of MTC from 1993 to 1995.
“In the tradition of MTC, Jane Baker was a true consensus-builder,” said
Jim Spering, Solano County Supervisor and a veteran MTC Commissioner
who served with Baker on the Commission in the 1990s. “Indeed,
Jane helped to establish that tradition. She tackled the region’s
transportation challenges head-on, but she always did so with civility
and respectfulness.”
Baker came to MTC from the city of San Mateo, where she served as
a member of the city council for 20 years. She was the first woman
to serve as mayor of that Peninsula city, a post she was appointed
to six times. Baker also held leadership positions in other organizations,
serving as president of the California League of Cities and the American
Association of University Women.
As a commissioner, Baker championed Caltrain, the Peninsula rail service,
and also supported plans to extend BART to the San Francisco International
Airport. Having risen to prominence as a protector of open space in
San Mateo, Jane brought this focus to her work at MTC, becoming a strong
proponent of the San Francisco Bay Trail and other regional efforts
to preserve access to open space.
When in the 1990s the Commission began to focus more intently on the
interconnectedness of transportation and land use in the region, “Jane
was an early and enthusiastic supporter of these efforts,” noted
Spering. “She clearly saw the importance of this work for the
Commission and for the Bay Area, and her support really helped move
us forward.”
“Jane Baker was a truly effective leader,” Spering said. “She
was also a very well-liked one. Jane will be remembered with great
fondness by all who worked with her at MTC – by fellow commissioners
and staff members alike.”
For more on the life of Jane Baker, see: