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For release on delivery
11:00 a.m. EDT (10:00 a.m. CDT)
October 27, 2005

Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Dedication of the Houston Branch Building of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Houston, Texas
October 27, 2005

Mayor White, President Fisher, members of the Boards of Directors, officers,
employees, and guests, thank you for inviting me. It is a pleasure to be in Houston this
morning. As we all know, this region of the country has been through some traumatic
times over the last several months and the challenges it faces are significant. Throughout
this struggle, the quick action and generosity of your city, as well as the State of Texas,
has been apparent to the rest of the country. And now you are once again in the spotlight-fortunately for a happier reason. The Astros are working to claim their first-ever World
Series title. If all goes well, I hope your generous spirit will allow you to root the
fledgling Washington Nationals to glory next year. They really could use some help.
Before I go on, I want to thank all of you who work at Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
and, in particular, here in the Houston Branch. We in, what may seem like, distant
Washington highly regard the work that goes on here. Your efforts contribute directly to
the Fed's reputation as a credible, efficient central bank that can be depended upon, not
just daily, but in times of crisis as well.
When I think of all the great Texans I have known over the years, I inevitably
recall the man you have chosen to honor with the naming of this building, my friend,
confidant and golf partner, Edward W. Kelley, Jr. I've known Mike Kelley since my first
day at the Federal Reserve Board in 1987. While Mike served on the Board, he was
keenly interested in a wide range of issues that spanned the gamut of what the Federal
Reserve does, but he also cared deeply about the people of the Federal Reserve System.
The Board and its employees could always count on him to go beyond the call of duty and
to lend a helping hand. And his perspective as a business executive was very valuable
and clearly enriched our discussion on any number of topics.

-2One of Mike's most painstaking projects at the Board was preparing the System
for Y2K. There was a strange and appreciated quietude early that New Year's Day when
the lights stayed on and the computers kept humming. The system worked. Moreover,
following September 11, 2001, we found that the Y2K preparations and fixes had fargreater reach than we realized. In retrospect, they apparently also contributed directly to
the success of the System in crisis mode following the attacks.
Additionally, during his tenure at the Board, Mike was instrumental in increasing
the efficiency of the Federal Reserve System. When he started at the Board, the Fed's
twelve regional Banks, in many ways, operated as separate institutions, each offering the
same services to the depository institutions within its District boundaries. Mike was the
driving force behind the evolution that, now more than ever before, has the twelve
regional Banks operating as a coordinated, seamless national system.
But Mike's contributions have not been confined to the Fed System; he has long
been engaged with organizations important to him: the YMCA, the Better Business
Bureau, the Harris County United Fund, and the Houston Symphony, to name only a few.
For all of these reasons and more—I haven't even gotten into stories from the golf course-it is with great pleasure that I help you dedicate this building to a man I have long
admired, Mike Kelley. I wish all of you the best with this new facility.