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Ryan Holeywell

Contributor

Ryan Holeywell is the communications manager for the Texas Medical Center Health Policy Institute in Houston. He previously worked at Rice University's Kinder Institute for Urban Research. Holeywell is a former reporter for the Houston Chronicle as well as Governing magazine, where he covered infrastructure and federal policy from 2010 to 2014.

Holeywell earned his bachelor’s degree in political communication from George Washington University and is pursuing a master's degree in public Affairs from the University of Missouri.

Henry Cisneros discusses his new book on senior housing and what local and federal governments need to do to address the housing needs of seniors.
Atlanta-area voters rejected a one-cent tax for transit projects. But voters in three regions chose to make the investment.
Fairfax County Public Schools must pay the federal government $1 million after forging signatures on a U.S. Department of Education grant application more than a decade ago.
The White House recognized the company for its green buses that can be charged in just 10 minutes.
The state Supreme Court says Michigan residents can decide the controversial law's fate in November. What happens until then is less clear.
The group representing the country's 3,000-plus counties gets its first new boss in more than 20 years.
Voters in the Atlanta area overwhelming rejected a dedicated sales tax for transportation projects. Are there lessons to be learned from that vote?
After the company's president expressed opposition to gay marriage, two mayors said they'll try to prevent it from expanding.
The undertaking would be one of the country's most expensive transportation infrastructure projects. But at least one hurdle remains: how to pay for it.
It’s one of several bills introduced in the last year that could let states tap into a valuable revenue source.