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Board Biographies
Harriet Applegate
Harriet Applegate is the first woman to serve as Executive Secretary of
the North Shore Federation of Labor, which represents the needs of
workers in Northeast Ohio. Harriet brings to her job a passion for
educating rank-and-file members on common sense economics and for
involving working people in politics and policy. She is committed to
advocating for fairer trade, a renewable jobs economy, and high standards
for Ohio's workers. She is working on strengthening the labor movement's
political infrastructure, involving union members in the policy process,
and continuing to build a vibrant, diverse labor movement.
Harriet, a graduate of the University of Rochester, has a master's degree
from the University of Cincinnati. She lives in Cleveland Heights, has
two grown sons, and is the proud grandmother of Ian Sequoia Thompson
Applegate.
David Bergholz
David Bergholz served as Executive Director of the Cleveland-based George
Gund Foundation from 1989 to 2003. During his tenure, the foundation
supported many efforts aimed at improvement of the Cleveland Public
Schools and the public schools of the inner ring suburbs. He served on
the Boards of the Independent Sector and the Council on Foundations. He
has also been actively involved in the local community, serving on the
Board of Directors of the Foundation for Appalachian Ohio, Charity
Lobbying in the Public Interest, the Greater Cleveland Roundtable, the
Cleveland Initiative for Education and the Governing Committee of the
Cleveland Teachers Academy. He is a past president of the Public
Education Fund, now based in Washington DC, a national Ford
Foundation-supported effort to build community partnerships with urban
public school districts.
David is now pursuing a career as a fine arts photographer and has had
exhibits of his work at Spaces Gallery, the Mattress Factory in
Pittsburgh and the Cleveland Botanical Garden. His work is represented by
Bonfoey Gallery. He is married to writer Eleanor Mallet and they have two
grown sons.
Michael Charney, Director, Youth Voices for Economic Justice
Michael Charney recently retired from the Cleveland public schools after
32 years of teaching. He was named the American Federation of Teachers’
“teacher of the year” in 1996. During his years as a teacher, Michael was
also a union activist and second-vice president of the Cleveland Teachers
Union, as well as an advocate for urban schools and their students. He
edited Critique, the newspaper of the Cleveland Teacher’s Union and the
Ohio Teacher, the newspaper of the Ohio Federation of Teachers. With Bob
Peterson, he edited the book Transforming Teacher Unions: Fighting for
Better Schools and Social Justice. Michael is now the Director of
Youth Voices for Economic Justice, a group that is organizing young
people to have a greater voice in the policy process. He is a founding
board member of Policy Matters Ohio and is married to former state
Senator C.J. Prentiss.
Joyce Goldstein, Attorney, Joyce Goldstein and Associates
Joyce Goldstein has been a labor and employee benefits lawyer
representing unions and employee benefit funds in Cleveland for
twenty-five years. With an undergraduate degree from Vassar College, a
law degree from West Virginia University, and a judicial clerkship for
the West Virginia Supreme Court, she was recruited by a law firm to come
to Cleveland. In 1986, Joyce started her own law firm to represent unions
and employee benefit funds. Representing a wide range of unions and
funds, her firm counts among its clients the United Auto Workers, the
International Association of Machinists, the Utility Workers Union of
America, the Service Employees International Union, the Cleveland
Building Trades Council, as well as many individual construction unions,
including the electricians, the plumbers, the bricklayers and the
roofers.
Within the legal community, Joyce is President of the William K. Thomas
Inn of Court, Vice President of the Labor and Employment Relations
Association, a life member of the Sixth Circuit Judicial Conference, a
member of the Advisory Board of the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Ohio, and a former board member of the Ohio State
Bar Association Labor and Employment Law Section and the American
Arbitration Association's Labor Advisory Board. In addition, she has been
awarded the highest rating by Martindale Hubbell and has been listed in
the Best Lawyers in America, the Ohio Super Lawyers and Northern Ohio
Live Top Lawyers for over ten years.
Joyce, a 2006 graduate of Leadership Cleveland, is a board member of Hard
Hatted Women, a member of the Anti-Defamation League's Civil Rights
Committee and a member of both the Community and Government Relations
Committees of the Cleveland Jewish Federation. She is Chair of the
Cleveland Jewish Labor Committee, a national board member of the Jewish
Labor Committee, and a member of the Israel Bonds National Labor Advisory
Board. With her family, she coordinated the Interfaith Hospitality
Program for her synagogue, arranging for or providing meals and services
for homeless mothers and their children. Joyce is married to psychologist
David Pincus, has two children, and lives in Shaker Heights.
Blaine A. Griffin, Executive Director, Community Relations Board,
City of Cleveland
Blaine Griffin, joined the Jackson Administration in March 2006. He leads
a staff and an appointed board in improving cross-cultural relationships.
He heads efforts to improve inter-group relations, correct actions that
violate the civil rights of individuals, oversee police/community
relations and oversee youth initiatives in Cleveland.
Prior to working for the City, Blaine worked with the Cuyahoga Department
of Justice Affairs, managing community re-entry efforts and initiatives
to help transition violent offenders from correctional facilities back
into the community and provide necessary support services. Blaine also
served as a Program Director for the Hunger Network of Greater Cleveland
where he was responsible for the fiscal and operational oversight of the
largest network of emergency food distribution sites in Cuyahoga County.
Blaine has also worked with the Harvard Community Services Center and
East End Neighborhood House. He serves as President of the Buckeye/Shaker
& Woodland Hills Neighborhood assembly and as a board member for Policy
Matters Ohio, Neighborhood Leadership Institute, and the U.S. Marshall’s
Posse in Northern District of Ohio. He is a member of the Visionary
Committee for Blacks United In Local Democracy (BUILD), and he is also
active in his church and in the parents’ association for his children’s
elementary school. Griffin has a bachelor’s degree in communications from
Malone College in Canton, Ohio.
Susan Helper, Professor, Case Western Reserve University
Susan Helper is SBC Professor of Regional Economic Development at Case
Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. She is also a Research
Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and the MIT
International Motor Vehicle Program (IMVP). Her research focuses on the
impacts of collaborative relationships, between suppliers and customers
and management and labor. Currently she is studying how globalization of
supply chains affects development and innovation in the US, Mexico, and
India. She has published in journals such as American Economic Review,
Sloan Management Review, and Journal of Economics and
Management Strategy. She has a Ph.D. from Harvard University and a BA
from Oberlin College. In 2005-06 she was a visiting scholar at the
University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Oxford.
Chris Howell, Professor, Oberlin College
Chris Howell is a Professor of Politics at Oberlin College. His research
and teaching interests include the comparative politics and political
economy of advanced capitalist societies, labor unions and industrial
relations, Left parties, and British and French politics. He is currently
Chair of the Politics Department at Oberlin. Chris received his B.A. in
History from Cambridge University (Trinity College) in 1983, and an M.A.
in International Relations in 1985, and a Ph.D in Political Science in
1989, both from Yale University. His most recent book won the 2006 prize
for best book in labor history.
Bakari Kitwana, Author
Bakari Kitwana is co-founder of the first ever National Hip-Hop Political
Convention and the author of The Hip-Hop Generation: Young Blacks and
the Crisis in African American Culture (Basic Books, 2002). The
former executive editor of The Source, Kitwana’s writings have appeared
in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Savoy, The Nation, the Village
Voice, Black Book and other publications. Kitwana also writes a column on
hip-hop and youth culture called "Do the Knowledge" for the Cleveland
Plain Dealer and is a consultant on hip-hop for the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame. The author of The Rap on Gangsta Rap (Third World Press,
1994), he's been a visiting scholar in the political science department
at Kent State University and has lectured on hip-hop at colleges and
universities across the country for the last decade, including Harvard
University, New York University, Columbia University and Stanford
University. His new book Why White Kids Love Hip-Hop: Wankstas,
Wiggers, Wannabes and the New Reality of Race in America (Basic
Books, June 2005) is about race and hip-hop culture. Kitwana holds
Masters degrees in English and Education from the University of
Rochester.
David Megenhardt, Executive Director, United Labor Agency
David Megenhardt is the Executive Director of the United Labor Agency, a
Cleveland-area non-profit created by the labor movement. The ULA
specializes in workforce development, voting rights and union member
training. David holds a Master’s Degree in English from Case Western
Reserve University and a Bachelor’s Degree from Kent State University. He
has been the Executive Director of the ULA for nine years.
In addition to his Policy Matters Ohio board membership, David is a
member of the Cleveland/ Cuyahoga County Workforce Investment board and
the State of Ohio Governor’s Workforce Policy board where he confronts
issues and policies that affect workers. He is a board member of Digital
Vision Cleveland, an advocacy group that looks for innovative ways to
close the digital divide, and Independent Pictures, an Ohio film
organization striving to promote independent media. David is also
chairman of the NOAH Benefit Fund, a Taft-Hartley health insurance fund
that covers the lives of over 600 working families and a member of
Cuyahoga County United Way Campaign Committee.
Susannah Muskovitz , Attorney, Faulkner, Muskovitz and Phillips
Susannah Muskovitz is a principal with the law firm of Faulkner,
Muskovitz & Phillips, LLP. She has been a Certified Specialist in labor
and employment law since 2002. In 2005 and 2006, she was honored as a
“Super Lawyer” by Cincinnati Magazine. In 2007, she was honored as one of
the “Top 50 Women Lawyers” by Northern Ohio Live magazine. She has also
received an AV ® Peer Review Rating from Martindale-Hubbell for Very High
Ethical Standards and Very High to Preeminent Legal Ability.
Susannah has been practicing labor and employment law in Ohio since 1984.
She has extensive experience representing labor unions, primarily in the
public sector. Susannah also works as a neutral arbitrator for employment
disputes involving individuals, and is a member of both the Commercial
Arbitration Panel and the National Panel of Employment Arbitrators of the
American Arbitration Association. Susannah was an Instructor at Cleveland
State University and taught Public Sector Labor Law through the
Labor-Management Relations Center for ten years, beginning in 1987. She
is the past chair of the Labor and Employment Law Section of the
Cleveland Bar Association, the Labor Advisory Council of the American
Arbitration Association and the Public Sector Labor Relations
Association. Susannah is currently serving on the Executive Board of
Policy Matters Ohio. Susannah received an AB with honors in 1981 from
McGill University and a JD in 1984 from Case Western Reserve University.
Seth Rosen, Vice President, Communication Workers of America
District Four
Seth Rosen was unanimously elected as Vice President of the
Communications Workers of America, District 4, on August 30, 2005. As
Vice President, Rosen’s duties include coordination of all bargaining
activities within the five states, which make up District 4 of the
Communications Workers of America – Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois,
and Wisconsin, consisting of 100,000 members. As Administrative Assistant
at CWA between 1994 and 2005, Rosen had the responsibility of
coordinating the union's organizing, mobilization, and Jobs with Justice
program in the District. Over 14,000 workers in new units had been
organized during the fifteen years that Rosen coordinated the District
organizing program.
Prior to joining the International Staff in 1989, Rosen had been an
officer, chief steward, and steward in CWA Local 4309, while employed by
the Ohio Bell Telephone Company. Rosen has been involved with a variety
of innovative organizing, bargaining, and action projects including: a
national coordinated campaign at NCR, development of a regional network
of local union organizers, and creative bargaining strategies at many
companies. Rosen helped form the Cleveland Jobs with Justice Workers’
Rights Board in 1993, and the National Jobs with Justice Workers’ Rights
Board in 2004. He has been married to Kathleen T. Rosen since 1979, and
they have two grown children.
George Zeller, Economic Research Analyst
George Zeller is an independent economic research analyst based in Cleveland. He analyzes trends in employment, earnings, income, and poverty in Ohio communities and monitors the business cycle in Ohio. George, a Sociologist, did his graduate work at Ohio State University. He was a professor of Sociology at Wittenberg University and Ashland College (now Ashland University) before coming to Cleveland. He is active on several anti-poverty committees and task forces, and is President of the Citizens Advisory Board of the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority. He is among the founding board members of Policy Matters Ohio. In addition to his professional work, he writes a monthly column on unlicensed shortwave radio broadcasting in the nationally circulated
Monitoring Times magazine. George was named one of the “87 Most Interesting People in Cleveland,” by
Cleveland Magazine in 1987.
Founding Board Members
Anne Hill
The Honorable C.J. Prentiss
John W. Ryan
Alvin Schorr
Mark Cassell, Ph.D.
6/06/2007 |
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