There are few things I want to do less than give this tribute to my father. The unflinching approach to reality he imparted had left me noticing his aging, and I was preparing to adapt, over time…. But my father never gave someone a challenge he thought them incapable of meeting.
All the wonderful things being shared about my father obviously come as no surprise to me, and I had so hoped to spend the next few years, hearing those things with him, but knowing how uncomfortable it would have made him to hear so much praise, as his own ability to act diminished, I have to appreciate that, as hard as this is on the rest of us, it was an ending with which he would have been satisfied.
I had hoped to spend the next years supporting him, as he always has supported me- my father has been at anything I asked him to be at, and volunteered for things I didn’t intend to subject him to… And The outpouring of remembrances from my friends, has reminded me, of how important it was to him, to know the people important to me. I was touched by the photos my parents saved, not only of me, but of Niki, Jeremy, Erica, Jason, Abe, and so many others. Many of my students and colleagues had stories, as they’ve driven out to Cal Poly Pomona for multiple events, marched with my students for a sustainable future, and for the rights of immigrants, and were happy to attend CPP sponsored Dodger games. Despite his years of public speaking at high-stakes events, family members have reminded me of how the event for which he showed some concern for his performance, was when called upon to officiate my wedding. He saw that a high stakes event. I think Navid would have stayed even with a minor error…. And the depth of his loss, is a testament to my father’s ability to welcome people into his family- completely. When you’re in, you’re in… That’s the for better or worse. And with my father, it was almost all better.
My father didn’t know how to be unproductive, and he will have posthumous work published (not a hint to his co-authors, or a comment on the reviewers- #2 I’m looking at you…), but the idea of slowing down, of doing less, of relaxing, was not at all appealing to him. Nor had it ever been.
Even now as he prepared to “retire” for the fourth time(?), he was finally finding the time to research our family history, finding a master’s thesis on one relative, connecting with ethnomusicologists while researching a family melody… he was organizing photos and records, and of course, gardening.
I’m not sure I ever remember my father reading a novel, though the books he gave me to read, were always meaningful. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, The Yearling, Black Boy…. Ya know light childhood reading. He never binged anything on Netflix. But he wasn’t quite as out of touch with popular culture as we used to joke. I remember him telling me these films will change how movies are made, when he took me to 2001, and Star Wars.
To vacation with my father was not per se relaxing, but it was always educational. Weren’t there museums to see, history to be learned, culture to be appreciated? I can’t imagine a trip to a beach resort without a sustainability tour. And I have been to an embarrassing number of train museums. From the family albums, apparently my mother married him despite the train museums.
My father had a quintessentially east coast Jewish sense of humor. Political, ironic, dark, but never mean. He had a good chuckle when he learned the Jewish space laser conspiracy centered on high-speed rail, and we certainly have exchanged our share of dark political humor over the years. But he also would go long game on humor, in a way I don’t think most knew…. When my brother was roughly 8- around 1982 (fine I checked the year online), he saw the old chalice comedy skit redone by HBO as a short, and thought it was hysterical, so in typical 8-year-old fashion (and I have an eight-year-old with my brother’s smile), he made a few too many jokes about the chalice, begging my father to re-enact the skit for him. My father, good-naturedly threatened to do that as the toast at my brother’s wedding, if he didn’t stop…. Over the years, once in a while he would bring that up… Fast forward to 2004- Steve and Shirley’s wedding. My father gets up to give a toast, and he opens with the exact same, largely innocuous lines of the skit…. The look on my brother’s face was priceless. Of course, my father proceeded with a lovely toast, And I know only four people there got the joke… but it was epic.
My father did love baseball. Growing up in New York in the 40s and 50s, he and his Uncle Harold’s favorite escape was in the rooting for the underdog Brooklyn Dodgers. And many of you who may have attended games could have mistaken him for teetotal, as he almost never enjoyed a beer at a game. Why? Because once, during a restroom break- he missed a triple play. Fortunately, he stayed in his seat in 1988 for Gibson’s home run, and As a Brooklyn Dodger fan, he saw most of the greats play live, including Jackie Robinson. He also took me to some pretty amazing baseball games, and thanks to his busy travel schedule, I was frequently the lucky recipient of tickets, even when he couldn’t attend. My first Dodger Game went into extra innings, and the Dodgers won on a hit by Steve Garvey. Since we never leave early, we were at the game where the Dodgers hit four home runs in the ninth, though we also suffered through a game where they blew a 13 run lead…. I was at Orel Herscheiser’s first start as a Dodger at Shea with the somewhat traitorous but still beloved Uncle Harold who had defected to Mets fandom…. We’ve seen more than one win by pitchers like Valenzuela, and Kershaw… And I got 18 innings of world series baseball- in one game. No, I did not leave early. And I rode my bike.
Despite his impressive personal achievements, he told me, more than once, that the real influence he had and what he was most proud of, -were the people he had the privilege of working with, educating and developing. He told me, “Not very many people read academic papers, but the influence we have, is in not only the scholars we train, but the many students who don’t become scholars, but go into the world, carrying what we teach them, the messages, values, ideas, and ways of thinking that we impart.” He saw himself fundamentally as an educator, and that approach, allowed him to remain true to himself, his ideals, and his values. Because what he valued most -were people. And being an educator wasn’t a one-way street. He valued what students brought and he integrated it into his thinking and as a result he never stopped growing- challenging his own thinking. That this was the real value of being an educator, the opportunity to expand people’s minds, and in turn, have your own expanded. Recently I had the wonderful privilege of two of my own former students returning to guest lecture for our annual professor for a day campus event. I had them speak about research, about data. And they blew me away. They had this deeply compassionate, humane view of policy, of research, of data. I was shocked at how much of my father’s voice was in their words. When they ended with, and this is what you taught us Dr. Wachs…. It wanted to tell them it wasn’t really me. I was just passing on what I had lived.
One of my friends jokes that when you bring sociology (and my father was undecided between sociology and civil planning) to other disciplines, everyone thinks your brilliant, but one is just asking for people-centered, critically evaluated, long-term planning. And that was effectively the mantra of my life. My father imparted that fundamentally research is about people, and people’s lives. My father lived his life never forgetting that every equation, every budgetary decision, every funding priority, wasn’t a number on the page, it was people’s lives. And those lives were precious, valuable, worthy things. For my father, every person mattered and should be treated with dignity and respect.
And seeing the many wonderful students he taught, and the people they have become, and who my brother is, and who we chose to marry (Shirley and Navid), and who Leia and Ziya are, he will never be gone, and the world is better because he was in it.
I think the many tributes and accolades that continue to pour in would have overwhelmed my father. He was a practical person at his core. But that’s not his legacy. The legacy he leaves is a cadre of people committed to social justice and equity, and human-centered policy. And I am confident that the scholars, practitioners, and activists, he mentored can and will achieve this. And that will be his legacy.
If one threw a pail of positive adjectives at Marty, they would all stick. Fortunately there is a large volume of contributions that can carry forward his positive contributions.
I met Marty when I was a master’s student at UCLA in 1999. Later, I was honored to have him on my dissertation committee while he was still at UC Berkeley, I was thrilled when he came to UCLA, and he continued to be a trusted mentor, a good friend, and an intellectual hero to me. He opened so many doors for me, by both pushing me and encouraging me to stay true to the value of planning practice and research. I know he did this for so many in the transportation field, and he leaves a significant legacy through all those he has mentored. A brilliant and kind man, and I will miss him deeply. My deepest condolences to Helen and his family.
A fantastic colleague with infinite kindness, open arms and amazing patience. A world class scholar with a reputation beyond borders, organizations, groups and institutions. An academic who led the Institute of Transportation Studies at UC Berkeley for many years as part of his tenure in the CEE Department. An eternal presence at TRB, and in the transportation community, that was always there, marked his time, and inprinted his vision in many of the leading transportation institutions to this day. A mentor for junior colleagues who would welcome them at ITS and help them with their first babysteps in the field of transportation. Our friend Marty will be deeply missed.
I knew Marty professionally, never as a student or formal mentor, but only through conversations that happened here and there, at conferences or the occasional social gathering, through mutual connections at UCLA and UC Berkeley. When applying for doctoral programs more than 20 years ago I somehow ended up speaking to him about my application process despite the fact that, since he was at Berkeley at the time and I was restricted to the Los Angeles metropolitan area, UC Berkeley was off my list. He was generous with his time, talking with me on the phone despite my having literally no connection to him. Later we worked together on a project studying multi-species habitat conservation plans. I don’t know why I got involved except that I guess he asked me — totally outside my area, but it was Marty. He was a model of careful scholarship and solicitude towards the master’s students working on the project. Seeing him at close quarters reinforced everything I had ever heard about him. He was a giant in our field, a true mensch, and a model academic in every aspect of the job. His influences upon scholarship and practice are so far-flung they are impossible to fathom. Somehow I thought he would live forever. He was taken from us too soon. He will be missed by so many. Rest in peace Marty.
It was with ineffable sadness that I learned of Marty’s passing. His mild frame contained a force of nature and yet he always remained one of nature’s gentlemen. A valuable and generous colleague, a wise and patient teacher, and a trustworthy and understanding friend. It was my pleasure to experience all of these aspects in my years of acquaintance with Marty. He and Helen were always the best of companions to my wife and me. Yet, only Marty could fully comprehend and respond to the weltschmerz that I bear as a fan of the Minnesotq Twins. I will miss much and the world will appear a duller place without Marty in it. Most of all I will miss our communication in later years regarding Dodgers triumphs and woes and the prospects for Minnesota pitching that year.
It is traditional to wish that all of Marty’s family and friends be comforted among the mourners of Zion. Never was this more true in the largest sense: Marty Wachs brought and created community wherever he went.
I just learned late last night that Marty had died and have been in shock since then.
My heartfelt condolences to Helen, and Fay and Steven, and their families.
I’m so grateful for the folks who organized the zooming of the memorial serice this morning. So many of us are grieving this tremendous loss and it helps to be able to take part, even virtually, from Canada, in the collective expressions of appreciation for his life and his extraordinary contributions to our field.
Thank you so much Fay and Steven, and Don and Brian, for your beautifully chosen words that captured the essence of the wonderful human being Marty was. When I moved to LA in 1986 to join my future husband, John Friedmann, Helen and Marty were the most welcoming, the most accepting of this stranger from Australia, and we became very dear friends, as well as colleagues, enjoying many a dinner party at each other’s homes, before we each headed away from LA.
My esteem for Marty as a professional planner, educator, and researcher is boundless and I was delighted to be asked by Brian Taylor to write a letter of support for Marty’s (successful) nomination for the Distinguished Planning Educator award. He was without doubt the most dedicated and generous teacher I have ever encountered, and a giant and a pathbreaker in the field of transportation planning research and practice.
But as the wise Maya Angelou once said (and I hope I’m attributing that correctly), ultimately we’re remembered less for what we did than for how we made people feel. Marty was the living embodiment of an ethical planner, and also of someone who lived according to an ethic of care.
He and Helen were such a compassionate team, always the first to show up in times of sickness, accidents, emergencies. As many people have already noted, Marty was a true mensch. When I think of that expressive word, it’s Marty whom I think of. He made me feel welcome and valued. He inspired hope, in his non-ideological, non-sloganeering way. He was a builder of the human community. Thankyou Marty for showing us all how soul can meet role, and how to walk honorably through life and treat everybody with the dignity they deserve. You may be gone, but your life example lives on.
Marty and I were both at UC Berkeley at the same time, him a professor recently moved from UCLA, and me a planning PhD student. I was certainly self-consciously green and nervous in his presence. That didn’t seem to faze him, since as so many others have pointed out, when you spoke to him, he was always there for you, not for himself. That being said, even with that kind countenance of his, it will always be with no small portion of regret that I say that I never took a class from or worked with him. The reasons for this are almost entirely my own because the only cause for my choice that was remotely related to him was that he was constantly surrounded by a horde of adoring and whip-smart students, and this was only his fault because he was so very successful at being “Marty”. I, on the other hand, simply made a rude calculation that it would be hard to stand out in that crowd and preferred to keep my distance. What a waste. Chalk that up in the regrets column of life, indeed.
In the years since I graduated, I had not seen him much, but a few years ago he was speaking at the Mineta Transportation Institute at SJSU and I decided to attend. After finishing, I hung around to see if I could talk to him. As you might expect from my story above, I waited some more for the adoring crowd to leave, and once almost everyone had left the room, I approached and started to introduce myself to him and Helen. I figured: it’s been 15 years or more since I’d last seen him, I’d never been close to him, so better to assume that I was at best, a distant memory. What a surprise at the time (but knowing Marty, it really shouldn’t have been) that he instantly recognized me and was eager to talk and catch up. What a thrilled feeling I had when I left 20 minutes later. Even though I had tried to fly under his RADAR for some self-protective and misguided reason, he had SEEN me as a student, and had seen me now. I will always be grateful for this small but very real gift from him. My sincerest condolences to Helen and their family.
The warmth and the kindness. Marty was a giant in his field and in every lecture and even informal conversation I learned so much from him. He often made something that was very complex, simpler and more human for this non-engineer. But what stands out even more is how approachable he was. After a lecture or later even running into him in the neighborhood on walks. He was a joy to speak with. I often heard that the longer the time from graduation from the Urban Planning program, the more one appreciates it. That is absolutely true. And in the case of UCLA, I appreciate not only the subject matter and thought process I learned but also the caring and unpretentiousness of the department. The aim to do good. We have many faculty that exemplify and live that, which I think we all appreciate and for which we are grateful. But I’ve always thought that much of that goodness came from Marty’s leading the way in so many things, how he taught and interacted with students and faculty alike. How he lived. To his family I offer my deepest condolences. To Marty I say thank you. HIs memory, work and caring will always be a blessing.
Marty Wachs has had an immense influence on my career in transportation planning. When I first started studying city and regional planning at UC Berkeley, I was immediately aware of his tremendous gravity in the discipline (indicated in part by the pages and pages of assigned reading of seminal works authored by one Martin Wachs). Never would I have guessed that I’d have the pleasure of having one-on-one conversations with the esteemed man himself years later! I’ve taken at least four classes with Marty at UCLA (on topics ranging from urban form to transportation and aging) and I cherish how generous he was with his time to connect with students. While Marty has extensively covered large, critical issues in transportation like ethics and finance, I will never forget our simple afternoon walk audit of Hilgard Avenue alongside the campus and sharing some LA sunshine together. Thank you for everything!
I came to the UCLA Planning program with a desire to study energy policy. After meeting Marty and sensing his passion and depth of knowledge, I quickly changed my emphasis to transportation planning. It was a decision I never regretted. Beyond his exceptional teaching and mentoring abilities, and as others have noted, Marty was also a very caring person. When, during preparation of my masters thesis, I encountered personal problem. Marty relaxed the rules, supported (really pushed) me to finish and obtain my degree which I treasure to this day.
Rest well my old friend….