Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Bruce Schaller

Jon Orcutt and Bruce Schaller Are Moving on From NYC DOT

orcutt_schaller
Jon Orcutt and Bruce Schaller.

Two key architects of change at NYC DOT are moving on after seven years with the agency. DOT Traffic and Planning Commissioner Bruce Schaller departed at the end of May, and DOT Policy Director Jon Orcutt announced on Twitter yesterday that he will be leaving next week.

Orcutt and Schaller were two of former DOT chief Janette Sadik-Khan's major hires after she took over as transportation commissioner in 2007. They each played leading roles implementing reforms that prioritized safety, efficiency, and public life on New York City streets, and both leave tremendous legacies.

Orcutt came to DOT from a career in advocacy, starting with Transportation Alternatives in its formative late 1980s period and moving on to the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, where he was a founding staffer and later executive director. He led the development of DOT's first strategic plan in 2008, which set the stage for many reforms that followed, and in the early days of the de Blasio administration he was the lead on the Vision Zero Action Plan.

Inside the agency he was known for pressing for bold changes. He had a hand in too many projects to count, but spearheading the development and launch of bike-share tops the list. Count the implementation of the Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway, the city's new pedestrian wayfinding program, and the introduction of protected bike lane designs among his other major contributions.

Schaller had stints in public service before joining DOT, but in the years leading up to his time at the agency, he was best known for a series of reports from his consulting firm, examining everything from regional driving patterns to the travel habits of neighborhood shoppers. At DOT, his data-driven brand of communications helped the agency tell the world about its work in new and rigorous ways. The reports produced by DOT clearly conveyed the safety improvements, economic impacts, and other benefits attributable to the agency's street overhauls.

The launch of Select Bus Service and the PARK Smart meter pricing program were signature Schaller initiatives. He helped deploy new public engagement methods that went beyond the simplistic "yes" or "no" format of a community board meeting, like the workshops about neighborhood parking policy DOT held in 2007 and 2008. Behind the scenes, he brought agency staff working on sustainable transportation initiatives and traffic operations under one roof, allowing for tighter integration of transit, walking, and biking improvements into more DOT projects.

Along with Andy Wiley-Schwartz, who led the DOT plaza program and left the agency at the end of January, Orcutt and Schaller comprised what Streetsblog called the "DOT Dream Team" -- new managers brought on by Sadik-Khan to help realize the PlaNYC goals related to streets and transportation. By all accounts they are parting amicably after making significant contributions to the de Blasio administration's Vision Zero initiative.

Nevertheless, this is a pivotal moment for the agency and commissioner Polly Trottenberg.

DOT has a deep roster of talent that has grown along with the agency's reputation for implementing innovative, effective street redesigns. Orcutt and Schaller didn't get stuff done by themselves. The agency has the capacity to keep up the pace of change, despite the loss of key leaders, and the de Blasio administration's transportation policy goals don't lack for ambition. But Trottenberg has yet to face a hard political test at DOT -- the agency's response when the going gets tough may determine whether its best people stay on.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Gotcha-Heimer! Anti-Congestion Pricing Jersey Rep. With a City Speeding Ticket Drove to Manhattan on Wednesday

New Jersey's most vociferous opponent of congestion pricing parked illegally and once got a speeding ticket.

April 24, 2024

Under Threat of Federal Suit (Again!), City Hall Promises Action on ‘Unacceptable’ Illegal Police Parking

A deputy mayor made a flat-out promise to eliminate illegal police parking that violates the Americans With Disabilities Act. But when? How? We don't know.

April 24, 2024

Wednesday’s Headlines: Four for Fifth Edition

The good news? There's a new operator for the Fifth Avenue open street. The bad news? It's four blocks, down from 15 last year. Plus other news.

April 24, 2024

MTA Plan to Run Brooklyn-Queens Train on City Streets a ‘Grave’ Mistake: Advocates

A 515-foot tunnel beneath All Faiths Cemetery would slightly increase the cost of the project in exchange for "enormous" service benefits, a new report argues.

April 24, 2024

Full Court Press by Mayor for Congestion Pricing Foe Randy Mastro

Pay no attention to that lawyer behind the curtain fighting for New Jersey, the mayor's team said on Tuesday, channeling the Wizard of Oz.

See all posts