{"id":29323,"date":"2022-01-19T16:50:56","date_gmt":"2022-01-19T21:50:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/?p=29323"},"modified":"2022-01-19T17:35:57","modified_gmt":"2022-01-19T22:35:57","slug":"indian-americans-2022","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/indian-americans-2022\/","title":{"rendered":"Indeed, Indian Americans are Taking over the US. These Indian-origin Leaders Prove it in the Beginning of 2022"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u201cAmericans of Indian descent are taking over the country,\u201d said President Joe Biden during a virtual interaction with NASA scientists, including Dr. Swati Mohan, who spearheaded the historic landing of Perseverance Rover on Mars. What he casually said continues to be true<\/strong>, as more than 50 Indian Americans have been appointed for key leadership roles related to policy-making and governance in just less than one year of the Biden-Harris administration. Also, in the very beginning of the year 2022, several Indian Americans hit headlines for making it big in various niches. Indeed, the Indian immigrants make the highly-educated and highest-earning ethnic community in America.<\/p>\n Tejal Desai, Amit Bose, Sam Joshi, Meera Joshi (from left to right)<\/p><\/div>\n Indian American Tejal Desai, an award-winning biomedical engineer, tweeted, \u201cI never imagined my career will come full circle.\u201d She is all set to lead the third oldest engineering program in the US as dean of her alma mater, Brown School of Engineering in Rhode Island, where she graduated from 3 decades long<\/strong>. Currently, she is a professor in the Department of Bioengineering and Therapeutic Sciences at the University of California, San Francisco<\/a><\/span><\/strong>. She is known for creating innovative ways to deliver medicines to targeted organs in the human body using micro and nanoscale technologies.<\/p>\n As Dean of Brown School of Engineering, Tejal Desai will be working to expand research and teaching collaborations within the school and across the campus<\/strong>, and grow the school\u2019s research enterprise with a focus on pressing societal challenges.\u201d \u201cOne of her key priorities will be to diversify the student body at all levels while recruiting and retaining more faculty from historically underrepresented groups,\u201d according to the school\u2019s press release. On completion of her PhD, she became the first faculty in the Department of Bioengineering at the University of Illinois, Chicago in 1998. She was also an academic leader at the University of Boston.<\/p>\n The year 2022 is a boon for Virginia-based Amitabha \u2018Amit\u2019 Bose who the Senate voted as the first Indian American administrator of the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). As America\u2019s top rail official, India-born Amit Bose will lead \u2018FRA\u2019s safety regulatory oversight of more than 800 passenger and freight railroads<\/strong>, national rail policy and planning, as well as FRA\u2019s financial assistance grant programs\u201d, leveraging his two decades of experience, expertise and leadership in improving the safety and sustainability of the surface transportation system.<\/p>\n America\u2019s 15th<\/sup> FRA administrator Amit Bose came with his parents to the US when he was 5.<\/strong> He played a key role in some of the high-level rail transportation projects, including California High-speed Rail, Liberty Corridor, and the Northeast Corridor Gateway Program. In the new role, he will responsible for improving and modernizing the freight and passenger rail network by overseeing the USD 66 billion investment in various projects under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.\u201d<\/p>\n Another distinguished Indian American who made it big in the beginning of 2022 is Professor Rattan Lal, an award-winning soil scientist. President Biden has appointed him as a member of the Board for International Food and Agricultural Development (BIFAD)<\/strong> that counsels the US Agency for International Development (USAID) on agricultural reforms and issues related to food insecurity in developing countries. Globally recognized as a pioneer in soil-based agricultural management, Dr. Rattan Lal has had illustrious career spanning five decades and five continents.<\/p>\n In 2020, India-born Dr Lal was felicitated by the World Food Foundation and awarded the World Food Prize for his research work on soil carbon management, climate-resilient agriculture, sustainable soil management, and food security improvement techniques. In 2007, he received a Nobel Peace Prize certificate. His breakthrough research has benefited more than 500 million small-scale farmers and increased food security for over two billion people across the globe.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n An adjunct professor of his alma mater, the Indian Agricultural Research Institute, Indian American Dr. Rattan Lal is the Goodwill Ambassador for Sustainable Development Issues at the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture. He has served as president on the board of the Soil Science Society of America, and the International Union of Soil Sciences. The 77-year-old hails from Punjab, India.<\/p>\n At the dawn of 2022, Indian American Gautam Raghavan made it big as head of the White House Office of Presidential Personnel (PPO). Actually, President Biden promoted him from the deputy director of the PPO. Prior to being inducted into the White House, he was the deputy head of Presidential appointments on the Biden-Harris Transition Team.<\/strong> The First Indian-American to lead the federal office of Presidential Personnel, Gautam Raghavan acted as the chief of staff to Republican Pramila Jayapal until the Biden-Harris\u2019 landslide victory in the US elections 2020.<\/p>\nTejal Desai, Dean of Brown School of Engineering\u00a0 \u00a0<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Amit Bose, Head of Federal Railroad Administration\u00a0<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Dr. Rattan Lal, Board of International Food and Agricultural Development<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Gautam Raghavan, Head of WH Office of Presidential Personnel <\/strong><\/h3>\n