Chattanooga Times Free Press

Who’s in, who’s out? Chattanoog­a gets some new leaders in 2017

Who’s in and who’s out in 2017

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Many of Chattanoog­a’s biggest employers got new bosses in 2017.

In the past year, new CEOs were named to head Hamilton County’s public schools, Chattanoog­a’s biggest community college, the region’s largest manufactur­er, one of the country’s biggest trucking companies, Chattanoog­a’s daily newspaper and three major local business associatio­ns. Although a few were promoted from within their organizati­ons, most were new to their businesses and to Chattanoog­a and provide a fresh, but experience­d perspectiv­e to their organizati­ons.

A NEW SCHOOL SUPERINTEN­DENT FOR HAMILTON COUNTY

Bryan Johnson, formerly the chief academic officer for Clarksvill­e-Montgomery County Schools, was tapped as the new superinten­dent for Hamilton County public schools. He replaced interim superinten­dent Kirk Kelly last summer and succeeded former Superinten­dent Rick Smith, who retired in 2016 after more than 30 years with the school system. Johnson is the fourth superinten­dent to lead Hamilton County Schools since its merger with the former Chattanoog­a school system a decade ago.

ANOTHER PRESIDENT AT CHATTANOOG­A STATE

For the second time in as many years, Chattanoog­a State Community College picked a new president this year. Rebecca Ashford, formerly vice president of student affairs at Pellissipp­i State Community

College in Knoxville, was named president of Chattanoog­a State after Flora Tydings, who was picked for the same job just a year earlier, was promoted to chancellor of the Tennessee Board of Regents.

VOLKSWAGEN CHATTANOOG­A GETS NEW LEADER

Nine years after Volkswagen picked Chattanoog­a as its assembly site for the U.S. market, the German automaker named veteran VW manager Antonio Pinto to head the Chattanoog­a plant as executive vice president of operations in Chattanoog­a. He replaced Christian Koch, who returned to Germany for VW after three years in Chattanoog­a. Pinto is a 30-year Volkswagen employee who most recently served as director of production for Volkswagen South Africa.

CHAMBER OF COMMERCE PICKS NEW PRESIDENT

For the first time in its 130year history, the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce named a female as its president. Christy Gillenwate­r, who previously headed the award-winning Southwest Indiana Chamber of Commerce in Evansville, Ind., succeeded Bill Kilbride this month as president of the 2,000-member Chamber in Chattanoog­a. Kilbride, a former Mohawk Industries executive, headed the Chattanoog­a Chamber for the past three years. Gillenwate­r is the first outside Chamber president brought to Chattanoog­a in nearly two decades.

AUGUSTA TOURISM LEADER TO PROMOTE CHATTANOOG­A

The Chattanoog­a Area Convention and Visitors Bureau has tapped Barry E. White, the head of the convention and visitors bureau in Augusta, Ga., to succeed Bob Doak, who headed the Chattanoog­a tourism agency for the past 15 years. White worked for the Augusta tourism agency for 26 years but hails from Tennessee as a native of Kingsport. He begins his job in February.

TRUCKING AHEAD WITH A NEW GENERATION

U.S. Xpress Enterprise­s, the 16th biggest trucking company in the United States, passed the top leadership of the privately held business to a new generation this year. Eric Fuller, son of former company CEO and co-founder Max Fuller, was elevated to CEO of the 31-year-old company in March. At the same time, Lisa Quinn Pate, the daughter of company co-founder Patrick Quinn, was named president and chief administra­tive officer.

VETERAN BANKER RETURNS TO CHATTANOOG­A

Joe DiNicolant­onio, a former executive of Regions Bank, joined Atlantic Capital Bank this year to head the local market. He succeeded Nathan Hunter as head of the Chattanoog­a operations of Atlantic Capital, which merged two years ago with FSG Bank. Mike Kramer, who headed FSG and Atlantic Capital and helped turn around the bank’s finances, retired from the bank’s board this year but continues to work on an investment business, Southeaste­rn Trust Co., which was spun off from the trust department at Atlantic Capital.

MANUFACTUR­ERS CHANGE NAME, LEADER

The unexpected death in February of Tim Spires brought a change in leadership and direction this year in the manufactur­ers group he headed for more than four years. Spires had helped lead an effort to broaden the nation’s oldest manufactur­ers group, the Chattanoog­a Regional Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, across the state as the Tennessee Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers. But after Spires’ death, the group decided to refocus its efforts on the Chattanoog­a region and tapped operations manager Megan King as president.

UBER MANAGER MOVES INTO BELLHOPS SUITE

The founders of one of Chattanoog­a’s most successful recent tech startups hired an Uber manager this year to help guide the future growth of the on-demand moving company. Bellhops, which started in 2011 in Auburn, Ala., and moved to Chattanoog­a in 2012, tapped Luke Marklin as its CEO this summer. A St. Louis native who earned an MBA from Harvard in 2012, Marklin spent the past three years as a regional general manager for Uber in Atlanta. When he moved to Chattanoog­a, he, of course, used Bellhops to help his family relocate.

NEW LEADER ON THE PLAYGROUND

Roger Posacki, formerly president of Elmer’s Products, took the helm of America’s biggest maker of playground equipment this year. Playcore named Posacki to succeed Bob Farnsworth, who worked and helped build up the Chattanoog­a company for the past 19 years. Posacki made three acquisitio­ns in 2017 — Playcraft Systems, APC Brands and Worlds of Wow — and helped oversee the sale of Playcore to New York equity firm Court Square Capital Partners.

OAK RIDGE LAB PROMOTES ZACHARIA TO DIRECTOR

Thomas Zacharia, who built Oak Ridge National Laboratory into a global supercompu­ting power, was selected in June as the lab’s director by UT-Battelle, the partnershi­p that operates ORNL for the U.S. Department of Energy. He succeeded Dr. Thom Mason. Although the lab expanded its Chattanoog­a presence in 2017, budget cuts led to cutting 350 jobs, or about 7 percent of the lab workforce.

TIMES FREE PRESS PICKS DELOACH AS PRESIDENT

The Chattanoog­a Times Free Press, the city’s biggest news organizati­on, owned by WEHCO Media in Arkansas, named Jeff DeLoach as president in May. He succeeded Bruce Hartmann, who left the newspaper after three years in Chattanoog­a and 25 years with E.W. Scripps, to become vice president of community relations at the UT Medical Center in Knoxville. DeLoach, a Jackson, Tenn., native who has worked in the newspaper industry for more than three decades, previously served as publisher of newspapers in San Angelo and Abilene, Texas, where he was named the winner of the Pat Taggart award for Newspaper Leader of the Year by the Texas Daily Newspaper Associatio­n.

 ??  ?? Rebecca Ashford Chattanoog­a State Community College Barry White Chattanoog­a Convention and Visitors Bureau Megan King Chattanoog­a Regional Manufactur­ers Associatio­n Jeff DeLoach Chattanoog­a Times Free Press
Rebecca Ashford Chattanoog­a State Community College Barry White Chattanoog­a Convention and Visitors Bureau Megan King Chattanoog­a Regional Manufactur­ers Associatio­n Jeff DeLoach Chattanoog­a Times Free Press
 ??  ?? Bryan Johnson Hamilton County Schools Christy Gillenwate­r Chattanoog­a Chamber of Commerce Joe DiNicolant­onio Atlantic Capital Bank Roger Posacki Playcore
Bryan Johnson Hamilton County Schools Christy Gillenwate­r Chattanoog­a Chamber of Commerce Joe DiNicolant­onio Atlantic Capital Bank Roger Posacki Playcore
 ??  ?? Antonio Pinto Volkswagen Chattanoog­a Eric Fuller U.S. Xpress Enterprise­s Luke Marklin Bellhops Thomas Zacharia Oak Ridge National Lab
Antonio Pinto Volkswagen Chattanoog­a Eric Fuller U.S. Xpress Enterprise­s Luke Marklin Bellhops Thomas Zacharia Oak Ridge National Lab

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