The Hill
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
SEARCH
Home
HillTube
Mobile
White Papers Portal
CONVENTIONS
Democratic
Republican
BLOGS
Pundits Blog
Congress Blog
Blog Briefing Room
NEWS
Leading The News
Business & Lobbying
K Street Insiders
John Breaux
John Engler
Vin Weber
Dave Wenhold
The Executive
Campaign 2008
Endorsements '08
COLUMNISTS
Dick Morris
A.B. Stoddard
Brent Budowsky
Ben Goddard
David Hill
David Keene
Josh Marshall
Mark Mellman
Jim Mills
Markos Moulitsas (Kos)
Byron York
COMMENT
Editorial
Letters
Op-eds
Weyant's World
CAPITAL LIVING
Today's Stories
50 Most Beautiful
Other Features
In The Know
Bookshelf
Food & Drink
Onward and Upward
Hillscape
RESOURCES
Classifieds
Subscribe
Order Reprints
Last Six Issues
Useful Links
RSS


Home arrow Today's Stories arrow Softball coach, bookworm, joins Kildee’s office
Today's Stories PDF Print E-mail
Softball coach, bookworm, joins Kildee’s office
Posted: 07/24/07 07:03 PM [ET]
Alec Gerlach, 25, is a troll. That’s what Upper Peninsula Michiganders call anyone who lives south of the Mackinaw Bridge in Michigan. To be more specific, he’s from Trenton, Mich., near Detroit. But he doesn’t act like a troll one bit.

It’s been an entire week since Gerlach started work as deputy press secretary for Rep. Dale Kildee (D-Mich.). The eight-person staff in the office is tight-knit; when I met them one Wednesday afternoon, they were all sitting around a table together, eating lunch.

“His staff has been around for a while, which tells me he’s a good person to work for,” Gerlach said. “[Kildee]’ll tell stories about way back in the ’80s.”

When he moved to D.C. two and a half years ago, Gerlach thought urban housing would work the same way as it does in Detroit: cheap apartments downtown, expensive condos in the outer suburban sprawl. He was shocked to find the opposite: a vibrant and expensive downtown, and cheaper pockets in the suburbs.

“D.C. is more community-oriented, and I think there was better urban planning,” he said.

Gerlach now lives in Tenleytown, which he says may be “too suburban” for him. To counter his suburban image, he and his girlfriend go look at modern art.

Before coming to Kildee’s office, Gerlach worked as deputy press secretary for Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.) on the Energy and Commerce Committee. In Kildee’s office, he replaces Badar Tareen, who is attending law school at the University of North Carolina.

Only a few days into the job, Gerlach is still finding his bearings.

“I’m apparently intern coordinator,” he said. “One of them is actually two years older than I am.” But he tries to keep them busy.

Gerlach doesn’t come off as nerdy, but he is a bookworm. No novels, he’s quick to point out. He read Plato’s Republic after moving here and is now plowing through The Black Book of Communism (a 900-pager) and Dante’s Inferno.

Speaking of infernos, he wishes it weren’t July. In fact, he’d prefer it were December. Gerlach graduated in 2004 from Michigan State University, where he says winters are “ridiculous.” Since it is a large land-grant university, there was plenty of walking to and from class. He would trudge through two feet of snow and uphill for half an hour to get to class.

He may not have the accent, but he is a true Midwesterner and prefers winters there to the ones in D.C.

“Here you just get the cold; in Michigan you get heavy snowfall, a white Christmas,” he explained. “If you’re going to do winter, do it right.”

A Detroit Tigers fan from before they were good, Gerlach has pursued his love of the game here. He has assumed responsibility for the Michigan delegation softball team — the Great Lakers.

His primary duty isn’t coaching — it’s bringing the beer.

 
 
 
BLOGS
ADVERTISER
Home | Privacy Policy | Terms And Conditions
The Hill
1625 K Street, NW Suite 900
Washington, DC 20006
202-628-8500 tel | 202-628-8503 fax

The contents of this site are © 2008 Capitol Hill Publishing Corp., a subsidiary of News Communications, Inc.