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.
I’m still reeling from the news of Marty’s passing. He had the most brilliant mind and biggest heart of anyone I think I’ve ever known, a rare combo indeed. I was so fortunate to be one of his PhD students at UCLA and have always felt like I won the lottery to be able to learn from him and watch him in action, and be a beneficiary of his wisdom, guidance, and care. Marty was a giant among giants, a wonderful scholar, researcher, advocate, teacher, mentor, friend. He set the gold standard for professionalism. He cared so much about his students and taught by example. I remember, after finishing my comps I was preparing to leave UCLA to go to Indonesia to do my dissertation research, Marty called me into his office to let me know that he would be leaving UCLA for Berkeley. He was excited for the opportunity, but said his biggest concern was the impact his move might have on his students, and he assured me he would do everything in his power to make sure that his leaving UCLA would not derail my ability to graduate. Of course, he kept his promise, and somehow arranged to keep his UCLA appointment on the books until I finished so he could continue to be the chair of my dissertation committee even though he was not actually at UCLA. He saw me through my dissertation from afar, reading and marking up my chapter drafts and Fedexing hardcopies back to me in Indonesia. I came to treasure Marty’s recognizable, hand-written notes in the margins of my papers–sometimes that spread onto the backside of the page, always encouraging, but pointing out where my arguments fell short or another way to look at the issue. He nominated me for awards, fellowships, and jobs without even telling me, and even contacted the newspaper in my hometown when I finished my PhD. I couldn’t have asked for a kinder, wiser, more supportive mentor. Marty also taught me to love the beautiful game of baseball, and I remember going with him as he drove a UCLA-owned van full of students to Dodgers Stadium. The last time I saw Marty was in Washington, D.C. at a Dodgers vs Nationals game. At the end of the game (a Dodgers win), as fans were filing out, I spotted Marty in the next section. I couldn’t believe my good fortune. He was in town for a TRB meeting when his Dodgers happened to be in town too, and of course he took the chance to catch a game. I’m so glad he got to see the Dodgers finally win the World Series–I’m sure it was one of his biggest thrills. I will always be grateful for Marty and his influence in my life. He made the world a better place for everybody. I’ll miss you, Marty.
As Mae West said, you only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough. Marty did it right. I am more grateful than I can say that he came into and will always remain a part of my life.
My condolences to the Wachs family and to the urban planning community. Marty was a true gentleman and a scholar. I only had the pleasure of taking one class with him, Transportation and the Environment. Nonetheless he was always kind and so generous in our interactions, and always seemed to have time for students, even well into his “retirement.”
In 2015, I joined a group of MURPs for a spring break study tour to Vancouver, and Marty and Helen happened to be visiting the same week. We invited them over to our AirBnB for dinner one evening– and to my surprise they joined us! Marty seemed so genuinely happy to spend an evening getting to know us better, hearing what we had learned on our fact-finding trip, and discussing our post-graduate careers.
Just last month, Marty met with me and a couple colleagues to discuss policy innovations related to transportation and public finance. He humbly schooled us on innovative (and some widely understood) policies and seemed genuinely delighted at the prospects of good scholarship finding a new application at City Hall. I feel very lucky to have had that reminder of his character, wisdom, and commitment to equitable public policymaking.
It’s been a pleasure to be Marty’s colleague for even a short time. A couple of years ago he invited me to his and Helen’s house for a small gathering with Dolores Hayden, knowing that I would love to meet her. I was so moved that Marty would think of me to be there, alongside friends and colleagues who’d known him and Dolores for decades. Marty gave me a plant that day, something I now know he’s done a lot! I would like to be a person who gives people plants. Thank you, Marty.
Marty was an incredibly generous and knowledgeable colleague, and the news of his passing is a very sad shock. I will remember fondly our many conversations, and his kindness and helpful spirit. Many times I passed his office and pestered him about random planning and research topics, he always had a wise thought. A real guiding soul and role model. My deep condolences to Helen and the Wachs family. His memory will be a blessing.
The transportation community has lost a giant. A great mind and fantastic expert, and a true gentleman.
Marty has been a model for all of us. Last Friday, I was a shocked to hear of the sudden hospitalization of Marty. That day I was supposed to meet with Marty and our colleague Anastasia to discuss of our new project on high-speed rail, one of Marty’s passions and a field in which he was a top expert. Unfortunately, Marty’s wife informed Anastasia he had been hospitalized and could not be with us but he looked forward to be with us soon again. Always positive and polite, even in the tough circumstances. Two days later, we were brokenhearted to hear the sad news that he had passed away.
I grew up looking at Marty Wachs as a model in life and science. I am lucky I could at least cooperate a little bit with him and absorb some of his wisdom and enjoy his wonderful personality (even if I wish we could work more together).
We will deeply miss you, Marty.
Like those who have already shared their memories, I was heartbroken to learn of Marty’s passing. In 2017 I had the privilege of sharing the stage with Marty on a panel at the International Congress on High Speed Rail in Madrid. As a result I was able to have my very own masterclass with Marty who was incredibly generous with his time in helping to craft our respective presentations and ensuring that we provided a clear understanding of the state of High Speed Rail in the U.S. He was a joy to work with and it was an honor to present with him. And while our presentation was a success, the best part of that trip for me was the last days of our visit when Marty and Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris and I got the chance to be tourists together, sharing tapas, taking a memorable tour bus ride around Madrid, highlighted by an evening of seeing Flamenco. A memory I will cherish forever. I was so lucky to have gotten a chance to know Dr. Wachs, the world was made better because of him. My deepest condolences to his family. He will be missed by us all.
My interactions with Marty at conferences, on technical committees, and projects had always been something to look forward to or relieve as the highlight of a trip or meeting. He was kind and generous with his time. He always had amazing insights or could offer a different perspective that not only made me think but made me feel valued. I loved these interactions but I also appreciate that many of the positive interactions in the professional community, and the positive influence of my mentors also link back to Marty. He will be missed but never forgotten.
I am really sad to hear the news of Marty’s passing. I was in Caltrans transportation planning and research programs and worked with Marty to develop studies that have had enormous influence in transportation policy and planning practice in California. Marty helped us formulate the most important transportation questions of the day and he gathered the academic teams to work with us. This work we did together guides a full range transportation decisions. Marty also taught us professional planners in so many forums, courses, seminars and conferences. He was always able to inspire us and make connections that enlightened our profession. He was such a nice person to talk with. He was such an outstanding person all around. I send my deepest sympathies to his family. And I know he will be missed very much by all of us who had the privilege to know him.
Knowing Marty deeply enriched my professional and personal lives. I recall the many group research meetings with graduate students that Marty organized when I was a fresh assistant professor at UCLA, the sense of a shared purpose and comradery. It was a wonderfully intellectually productive and individually fulfilling. Marty had the humanity to treat everyone with respect and kindness.