Thomas Howard Dyer, 72, passed away on May 5, 2021, in Nassau, Bahamas. Tom was born on February 28, 1949, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, a son of the late Eugene Walker Dyer and Ruth Beach Dyer Porter. He moved to Florida as a young child in 1955 and graduated in 1967 from Northeast High School in […]
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Columbus CEO
In the aftermath of the racial justice protests of 2020, companies and organizations have stepped up their diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. Many have added new DEI roles and made commitments to diversify their boards, staff, suppliers and charitable efforts.
Here are nine DEI professionals to know in Columbus.
Rhonda Talford Knight, CEO and founder, Knight Consulting Group
“I can have a seat at the table, but is my voice being heard? We are not doing the real work of DEI if we’re not landing in the space of belonging. You can measure engagement and you can measure retention. Research shows that when there s a sense of belonging, people are engaged and they stay. Guess who has the greater sense of belonging? White males. Why? There s white males across the cascade of leadership positions. You have to talk about behavioral change, but you also have to talk about systems, policies and procedures that ensure that belonging.”
28 minutes after the hour. the top story, allegations that deputy attorney general rod rosenstein discussed wearing a wire it secretly record wire to secretly record conversations with the president and talked about invoking the 25th amendment to remove president trump from office. according to sources familiar with memos written by former deputy director andrew mccabe documenting those discussions, this allegedly happened in the days immediately after fbi director james comey was fired. now rosenstein swiftly and forcefully denied the claims in two separate statements, calling the report inaccurate and factually incorrect. two sources familiar with the matter spotted rosenstein at the white house last night consulting with top aides about the report. now all of this, of course, raises questions rosenstein s future at the justice department.