After eight years as executive director of Boston-based Health Care for All, Amy Whitcomb Slemmer (right) is passing the baton — and as of next year her new title may be “The Rev. Amy Whitcomb Slemmer.’’
While leading the nonprofit advocacy group, Slemmer, a lawyer, has been studying to become an Episcopal priest. She is now enrolled in her final seminary class and on track to be ordained in June, contingent on the approval of the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts, Alan M. Gates.
But she is confident enough in her path to the priesthood that she has submitted her resignation from Health Care for All, effective Oct. 15, although she’s not yet sure what her new religious life will be or if she’ll remain in Massachusetts.
“I am deciding and figuring out my next professional adventure,’’ said Slemmer, noting that she does not feel drawn to parish ministry. “I know I am most excited when I get to work on issues of social justice, and I am positive that whatever my next job is will include the intersection of my faith and my pull to work on social justice.’’
Slemmer, 52, has felt the tug of the priesthood since she was a teenager, but delayed pursuing that aspiration because she was a single mother and wanted to focus on raising her daughter, who is now in her 20s.
During Slemmer’s tenure at Health Care for All, the organization helped implement Massachusetts health care reform, enrolling thousands of people in health insurance. She was previously executive officer of American Red Cross Biomedical Services in Washington, D.C.
Following Slemmer’s departure, Health Care for All’s interim executive director will be its founder, Rob Restuccia, who is now executive director of Community Catalyst, a Boston nonprofit that advocates for affordable health care. — SACHA PFEIFFER
Boston’s gender wage project makes strides
Early findings from the city of Boston’s groundbreaking gender wage project are starting to come in, as Mayor Marty Walsh and local CEOs meet on Friday to dissect the data.
The information comes from the first batch of about 70 companies that have volunteered to participate in the project so they can better understand why pay disparities exist.
Over 160 companies — including Partners Healthcare, State Street, Putnam Investments, and Vertex Pharmaceuticals — have agreed to report pay data to the city. Since the data collection is at an early stage, the numbers won’t be released publicly.
About 200 executives and managers are expected to attend the event with roundtable discussions led by 18 CEOs. Among those expected include Staples CEO Shira Goodman, Massachusetts General Physicians Organization CEO Thomas Lynch, Children’s Hospital CEO Sandra Fenwick, and Babson College president Kerry Healey.
“We are so appreciative to have the leadership of these 160 companies to engage in this very important dialogue on how we go beyond legislation and change culture to close the gender wage gap in Boston,’’ said Meg Costello, executive director of Mayor Walsh’s office of women’s advancement. — SHIRLEY LEUNG
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt’s next step
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt may have shown Linda Zecher the door, but the company isn’t eager to let her management team walk away.
Zecher resigned from her job as chief executive at the Boston-based publisher last week, following a rocky year for the company’s stock. The board appointed former Wall Street Journal publisher L. Gordon Crovitz to be interim CEO while the search for a new chief executive is underway. Crovitz has been a board member at HMH since 2012. Crovitz is currently a partner in NextNews Ventures, which invests in early-stage news startups.
Meanwhile, HMH offered cash retention bonuses to chief financial officer Joe Abbott, executive vice president Lee Ramsayer, chief content officer Mary Cullinane, and general counsel William Bayers. They’ll be payable in two installments: The execs will get one half if they stay on for a full year, and they’ll get the rest after two years. Bayers’s bonus is $250,000 while the others would get $500,000.
Larry Fish, the former Citizens Bank CEO who is now HMH’s chairman, issued a statement praising Zecher for her work. He also gave props to Zecher’s top lieutenants, calling them “world class.’’
Public praise, of course, can help employee morale, and do wonders for executive retention. But extra money doesn’t hurt, either. — JON CHESTO
Baker heading to Israel
It’s official: Governor Charlie Baker will head to Israel in December for his first overseas trade mission.
Boston business leaders have long expected Baker to participate in the upcoming trade mission, although Baker’s aides didn’t confirm it until Wednesday. The governor is scheduled to arrive in Israel on Dec. 9 and to depart on Dec. 14, returning home early on Dec. 15.
The trade mission will focus on the cybersecurity and digital health sectors. One goal: encouraging Israeli companies that are seeking their first US outpost to pick Massachusetts.
“I want Massachusetts to be a place that companies and researchers and investors in Israeli enterprises in this space choose to partner with, as opposed to going to Silicon Valley or New York,’’ Baker said.
Roughly a dozen state officials will attend the trip, including: Katie Stebbins, assistant secretary of innovation and technology; Louis Gutierrez, executive director of the Mass. Health Connector; and Mark Nunnelly, executive director of the state’s information technology office.
The administration is still lining up private-sector participants; nearly 40 are expected to attend. The New England-Israel Business Council is playing a key role.
No public funds will be used for the upcoming Israel visit. Instead, it will be funded by Combined Jewish Philanthropies, much like the June trip. (Business leaders typically pay their own way.) “They came back from that [June trip], saying there’s a tremendous opportunity,’’ Baker said. “If they came back from that trip and said, ‘There really aren’t a lot of possibilities here,’ we wouldn’t be doing this.’’ — JON CHESTO
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