Old National promotes Kendra Vanzo to Senior Executive VP apnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from apnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Posted: Mar 11, 2021
Evansville, Ind. - Old National Chief Administrative Officer Kendra Vanzo has been promoted from Executive Vice President to Senior Executive Vice President. A member of Old National s Operating Group (the company s senior-most team of leaders), Vanzo joined Old National in 1994 and first served as Assistant Vice President, Human Resources Manager at ONB s Danville, Ill. location. During her career at ONB, Vanzo has advanced steadily in the organization while leading numerous departments, projects and initiatives. Before joining Old National, she worked for NACCO Materials Handling Group in Danville. Kendra is a passionate servant-leader who inspires and empowers others to be their very best, as well as a trusted partner and invaluable member of our leadership team who helps drive our company s operational and strategic success, said ONB Chairman and CEO Jim Ryan. Kendra has also served as a mentor to countless current and former Old Nation
Westborough s Covectra names two to board
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Covectra of Westborough, in the business of serialization and track and trace solutions, has appointed Renaat Van den Hooff and Gary Miloscia to its board of directors.
Van den Hooff brings to the Covectra board of directors more than 35 years of global operating experience in the healthcare industry, with specific expertise in consumer pharmaceuticals, medical devices and supplies/services for the pharmaceutical industry. He held various senior leadership positions, as CEO and board member of Temptime Corporation and as president and CEO of a public startup healthcare company that developed and sold wound care products. He had a 20-year career with Johnson & Johnson, serving the latter time there as president of the J&J-Merck consumer pharmaceuticals joint venture worldwide.
Research suggests the economic impact of COVID-19 could be more than two times larger for Black- and Hispanic-owned businesses than for White-owned enterprises.