Executive Spotlight – Scott Hamilton

 

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Scott grew up in Little Rock, AR and is a 1988 graduate of Hendrix College. He also has an MBA from Rock Hurst College in Kansas City Missouri and a JD from the University of Missouri School Of Law.

Scott has over 23 years in the Energy business in various capacities including several roles with investor owned gas and electric utilities, starting with ARKLA Gas Company in 1988. Scott recently served as the Energy Advisor for the City of Detroit, Michigan which included managing the operations of its municipal electric generation and distribution system guiding the City through many challenging energy issues relating to de-regulation and the 2003 Northeast Blackout. He has also managed numerous energy related projects in the K-12 and Higher Education industry in several states.

Through the Arkansas Energy Office, Scott works to achieve the best opportunities for all energy related issues for the state. The department develops, promotes and manages energy related initiatives for the state, focused on improving energy efficiency and the availability of alternative and renewable energy options. In addition, the department is responsible for the state’s American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) energy programs which exceed $50 million. Scott maintains effective relationships and operating objectives furthering the state’s energy agenda with energy utilities, cooperatives, businesses and industry, the public service commission and its citizens.

Executive Spotlight – Dr. Juliette B. Bell

Juliette Bell_UMES president

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dr. Juliette B. Bell is the University of Maryland Eastern Shore’s 15th leader and the fourth woman to hold the institution’s top administrative post since its founding in 1886. She took office July 1, 2012.

Bell is widely recognized for encouraging students to pursue careers in
science, technology, engineering and mathematics – known collectively as the STEM disciplines.

She leads an institution where roughly half its graduates are like her – the first in their immediate families to pursue a college degree.

Bell graduated as valedictorian from Talladega (Ala.) College in her hometown, earning a bachelor’s degree in chemistry. Her Ph.D. in chemistry is from Atlanta University (now Clark-Atlanta University), and she completed postdoctoral work in biochemistry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

After a stint as a researcher at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Bell accepted an appointment in 1992 as a chemistry professor and biomedical research director at Fayetteville State University. There, she established the Research Initiative for Scientific Enhancement program to prepare students for biomedical science careers and was founding dean of the College of Basic and Applied Sciences. Her work earned her a promotion to FSU’s provost / vice chancellor for academic affairs.

In August 2009, Bell became chief academic officer at Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio. At Central State, she restructured the academic colleges to create the College of Science and Engineering. Bell also developed University College, an academic unit to improve student retention, oversaw the implementation of online courses and enhanced
international education programming.

Among her honors: the 2001 National Role Model Citation from Minority Access, Inc. and the 2000 Millennium Award for Excellence in Teaching in Mathematics, Science, Engineering and Technology at Historically Black Colleges from the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

 

Mayor Alvin Brown – Jacksonville, FL

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On May 17, 2011 Jacksonville voters chose Alvin Brown to lead the city. The first Democrat in 20 years to be elected mayor of Jacksonville, Brown is also the first African American to hold the position. He assumed office July 1, 2011. Brown ran on his vision of “taking Jacksonville to the next level” through job creation, Downtown revitalization, and making education and public safety top priorities.

 

Prior to the election, Brown served as an Executive in Residence at Jacksonville University’s Davis School of Business. He is the past president and CEO of the Willie Gary Classic Foundation, an organization that helps provide scholarships for historic black colleges.

 

Brown served as the executive director of the Bush/Clinton Katrina Interfaith Fund. He was responsible for overseeing the distribution of more than $20 million to houses of worship throughout the Gulf Coast so that they could begin rebuilding after the disaster resulting from hurricane Katrina. Brown successfully set policy and procedures that enabled more than 1,100 houses of worship to apply for funding by the closing date of July 31, 2006.

 

Brown also served as chairman of the board of the National Black MBA Association. As chairman of an organization representing more than 100,000 MBA graduates, Brown encouraged young people to pursue higher education and to develop their leadership potential by greatly enhancing the scholarship program of the organization. Brown engaged in significant fundraising that positioned the organization as a premier group in the world of education and business leadership. He fostered relationships with colleges, business schools and with corporations that recognize the value of a diversified portfolio. He has been a champion of restoring public confidence in corporate America and, in the wake of numerous corporate scandals, called on business schools throughout the country to mandate ethics in their curriculum.

 

In Washington, D.C., Alvin Brown served as a senior member of the Clinton-Gore Administration beginning in 1993. As Vice President Al Gore’s senior advisor for Urban Policy and vice chair of the White House Community Empowerment Board, Brown advised both the vice president and President Clinton on a wide range of domestic issues, including community revitalization, job creation, new business development and expansion of the supply of affordable housing.

 

Brown led the Clinton-Gore Administration’s $4 billion overall community empowerment initiatives, with a special emphasis on the Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Community program which included the new market tax credit initiatives. The highly successful programs helped revitalize economically impoverished urban and rural communities and generated unprecedented levels of public-private partnerships resulting in more than $10 billion in private investments to the designated communities.

 

Brown was also co-chair of the White House Task Force on Livable Communities focusing on urban sprawl and smart growth prior to his work at the White House. He held a number of key positions within the administration, including senior advisor to the late Commerce Secretary Ron Brown and senior advisor to former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Andrew Cuomo. While at HUD, Brown was responsible for overseeing the Department’s $100 million disaster recovery initiatives, which included leading an overhaul of the Department’s disaster response effort. Brown first came to Washington, D.C. to work as an intern for U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) while Nelson was serving in the U.S. House of Representatives. He then served on the Clinton-Gore transition team.

 

While Brown has spent many years in government service, he also has an extensive background in the private and non-profit sectors.

 

Brown graduated from Jacksonville University where he earned a B.S. and an MBA. He also completed postgraduate work at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He received an honorary doctorate from Edward Waters College in Jacksonville.

 

Brown is the recipient of the Frederick Douglass Award from the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Excellence in Community Service Award from 100 Black Men of America, the distinguished Award for Government Services from the National Baptist Convention, and the Chairman’s Award from the Congressional Black Caucus. In addition, the National Black MBA Association honored Brown with the prestigious H. Naylor Fitzhugh Award.

 

Brown and his wife Santhea have two sons, Joshua and Jordan.

 

Kazell Pugh, President/CEO TLD Springwater

Kazell Pugh, President/CEO TLC Springwater
Kazell Pugh, President/CEO TLD Springwater

KAZELL PUGH WAS BORN AND RAISED IN THE WATTS-WILLOWBROOK NEIGHBORHOOD OF SOUTH CENTRAL LOS ANGELES. He attended a Catholic school through the 8th grade and then went on to Loyola High School, which is an all boys Jesuit college prep school. He won a football scholarship to the University of Colorado at Boulder to study Communications where the Philadelphia Eagles drafted him. Following a brief NFL experience, Kazell enjoyed a successful decade – long career in the Hotel/Hospitality Industry.

With the help of some of his former high school classmates, former NFL star and Amer-I-Can founder, Jim Brown and California Congresswoman, Maxine Waters, Kazell co-owned the “Playground”, a sports apparel store located in South Central Los Angeles. The store was created to help redevelop the neighborhood after the Rodney King riots ravaged the community, educate/employ gang members, and foster sports after school programs for the kids in the neighborhood. The “Playground” was featured on Good Morning America and visited by President Bill Clinton and then Commerce Secretary, Mr. Ron Brown.

In 1994 American Family Insurance hired Kazell as its first Director of Urban Marketing. His re- sponsibilities included emerging market development, Sponsorship events/activities, diversity training for the entire company, niche market advertising, and minority recruiting in all the company operating sales states. Through his efforts, many community organizations received much needed financial support to conduct youtheducation and health and wellness programs.

During his 12-year career with American Fam- ily Insurance, Kazell was promoted to a District Sales Manger and Sales State Director in two different sales states and has been honored with numerous achieve- ment awards for his tireless efforts and work in com- munity service.

Kazell started TLC Springwater in August of 2005, a bottle water company specializing in 3 & 5 gallon btls of spring, purified, and distilled water, sales & rental of water and filtration coolers, private label bottle water, TLC branded water by the case, coffee and supplies. The Company has experienced steady growth each year and plans on expansion in other markets and States. Some of TLC’s customers are the Cleveland Indians, Cuyahoga Community College, University Hospitals, Cleveland Clinic, and Case Western Reserve University. TLC Springwater prides itself on it’s robust “Sustainability” and “Value Adds” initiatives to it’s customers and the community at large.

 

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