Contributor

Richard Buery

Deputy Mayor For Strategic Policy Initiatives, City of New York

Born and raised in East New York, the son of a retired New York City public school teacher and a retired lab manager, Richard R. Buery, Jr. has dedicated his life to improving educational opportunity and life outcomes for young people in America’s most disadvantaged communities.

As an undergraduate student at Harvard, he co-founded the Mission Hill Summer Program, an enrichment program for children in the Mission Hill Housing Development in the Roxbury section of Boston. Buery went on to establish two other nonprofit organizations before joining The Children's Aid Society, iMentor and Groundwork, Inc. He served as executive director of iMentor, a technology education and mentoring program that each year connects New York City middle and high school students with professional mentors through online and face-to-face meetings. Highly regarded and now one of the largest youth mentoring organizations in New York City, iMentor is currently undergoing a national expansion. Replicating the same concept of the Mission Hill Summer Program in Boston, Buery also co-founded and served as executive director of Groundwork, Inc., a nonprofit organization serving the children and families of Brooklyn public housing developments.

Buery was a staff attorney at the Brennan Center for Justice. He also served as a law clerk to Judge John M. Walker, Jr. of the federal court of appeals in New York City, as a fifth grade teacher at an orphanage in Bindura, Zimbabwe, and as chief political officer and campaign manager to Kenneth Reeves, the mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts. He has also served as an adjunct lecturer at the Baruch College School of Public Affairs.

In October 2009, Buery was named the tenth President and Chief Executive Officer of The Children's Aid Society. Children's Aid is an independent, not-for-profit organization established to serve the children of New York City. Its mission is to provide comprehensive support for children in need, from birth to young adulthood, and for their families to help children succeed and thrive. Children's Aid serves New York's neediest children and their families with a network of services and programs that support children and their families from before birth through young adulthood. Buery is the first black leader of Children's Aid and the youngest since Charles Loring Brace founded the agency in 1853.

Under Buery's leadership, Children's Aid has begun a process to transform the organization to be more focused programmatically and more results-oriented. Children's Aid's new vision is to end the cycle of poverty by putting children on the path to college graduation, concentrating its efforts on the highest-need neighborhoods and making long-term investments in children—from cradle to college graduation. The organization is building systems to track children's progress along the way, both to improve its ability to give individual children the support they need and to ensure that its programs are achieving the desired outcomes in education, health and wellness, family stability, and social and emotional learning.

The recipient of many honors and awards, Buery was a 1992-1993 Michael Clark Rockefeller Fellow, in 2000 was named one of Ebony magazine's "30 Leaders of the Future Under 30," and in 2009 was named one of Crain’s New York Business's "40 Leaders of the Future Under 40" in recognition of his contributions to the life of New York City.

He received the Mary McLeod Bethune Recognition Award from the National Council of Negro Women; the Extraordinary Black Man Award for Humanitarianism from the United Negro College Fund; and the inaugural outstanding alumnus award from the Phillips Brooks House Association at Harvard University. He has also been honored by the Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation, the Brooklyn Borough President, and others.

Buery lives with his wife Deborah, a law professor, and his two sons, Ellis and Ethan.