Elizabeth H. Roberts Explained

Elizabeth Roberts
Office:Secretary of Health and Human Services of Rhode Island
Governor:Gina Raimondo
Term Start:January 6, 2015
Term End:February 14, 2017
Predecessor:Steven M. Costantino
Successor:Eric Beane
Office1:68th Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island
Governor1:Donald Carcieri
Lincoln Chafee
Term Start1:January 2, 2007
Term End1:January 6, 2015
Predecessor1:Charles Fogarty
State Senate2:Rhode Island
District2:28th
Term Start2:January 7, 2003
Term End2:January 2, 2007
Successor2:Joshua Miller
State Senate3:Rhode Island
District3:11th
Term Start3:January 7, 1997
Term End3:January 7, 2003
Predecessor3:William P. Fitzpatrick
Successor3:Mary A. Parella
Birth Date:17 April 1957
Birth Place:District of Columbia, U.S.
Residence:Providence, Rhode Island, U.S.
Party:Democratic
Children:Kathleen
Mark
Alma Mater:Brown University (BA)
Boston University (MBA)

Elizabeth H. Roberts (born April 17, 1957) is an American politician who served as the 68th Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island from 2007 to 2015. A member of the Democratic Party, she served in that position during the administrations of Republican Governor Donald Carcieri and Independent-turned Democrat Lincoln Chafee. She was elected in 2006, becoming the state's first female Lieutenant Governor and was succeeded by Daniel McKee on January 6, 2015. She later served as Secretary of Health and Human Services during the administration of Governor Gina Raimondo, but subsequently resigned due to a widely criticized statewide computer system rollout.

Personal life

Roberts graduated from Brown University in 1978 and earned an MBA in Health Care Management from Boston University in 1984.[1] Prior to entering politics, Roberts has worked as a business strategy consultant, policy analyst, and health care manager. She resides in Providence, Rhode Island.[1]

Early political career

Rhode Island State Senate

Roberts served five two-year terms in the Rhode Island Senate from 1996 until 2006.[1] During her tenure in the state Senate, she was an activist for health and medical issues. Roberts also focused on economic development and job growth, and pushed for cleaner air and water, stronger schools, and increased attention to disaster preparedness.

During her tenure in the state Senate she served as the Chairwoman of the Senate Health and Human Services Committee. Later, she served as a co-chair of Permanent Joint Committee on Healthcare Oversight, which she used as a vehicle to push for reform for Blue Cross and Blue Shield, the largest provider of health insurance in Rhode Island.

Roberts also helped expand the state's prescription drug program for seniors (RIPAE) and helped expand coverage to more families through Rite Care, the state's public health system. The reform organization Common Cause named Roberts one of the top two senators in Rhode Island in 2006, giving her the second highest rating in the General Assembly at 91% and an “A” for her reform efforts during the legislative session.

Lieutenant governor

Roberts was elected the state's first female Lieutenant Governor on November 7, 2006. She was inaugurated as the 68th Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island on January 2, 2007. She toyed with the idea of running for Governor in the 2010 election, but instead decided to run for re-election as Lieutenant Governor.

Secretary of Health and Human Services

After the 2014 election in which Roberts did not stand for election, Governor-elect Gina Raimondo announced Roberts as her nominee for the office of Secretary of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services.[2]

Computer system failure and resignation

In February 2017, Roberts resigned from her post in the Raimondo administration.[3] She left the cabinet-level post for a variety of reasons, but the roll-out of the botched Unified Health Infrastructure Project (a new statewide computer network) overshadowed her tenure.[3] The disastrous UHIP computer network launch in September 2016 saw scores of people without access government to programs such as food stamps and child care due to glitches in the software, designed[4] by Deloitte. This crash created a backlog of over 20,000 cases.[5]

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: About Elizabeth Roberts. https://web.archive.org/web/20100204015147/http://www.ltgov.ri.gov/about/. dead. February 4, 2010. Rhode Island Office of the Lt. Governor. November 26, 2019.
  2. News: Raimondo taps Roberts '78 for cabinet position. Blum. Alexander. 8 December 2014. Daily Herald. 26 November 2019.
  3. News: Health Secretary Elizabeth Roberts Resigns. Nesi. Ted. 14 February 2017. CBS 12. 26 November 2019.
  4. News: R.I. Gov. Raimondo, Deloitte CEO discuss state computer woes at Calif. conference. Pina. Alisha. 17 February 2017. The Providence Journal. 26 November 2019.
  5. News: NBC 10 I-Team: RI's Health Secretary Elizabeth Roberts resigns. Davis. Katie. 14 November 2019. NBC News. 26 November 2019.