Vermont Business MagazineThe Vermont Community Foundation and the organizing committee for the Con Hogan Award for Creative, Entrepreneurial, Community Leadership are pleased to announce that James Baker will be honored with this year’s award. Baker is the former police chief in Rutland and the current leader of a community revitalization effort in Arlington, where he lives. The $15,000 award, to be used however the recipient chooses, will be presented at a reception onOctober 3at the Vermont College of Fine Arts in Montpelier.
The award is especially poignant this year because of Con’s death on August 26. Established by a group of his colleagues in 2015, the annual award recognizes Con’s life work by rewarding each year a community leader who shares his vision of a better Vermont and who seizes the responsibility for making that vision a reality. The award is given to a leader who shows deep community involvement, generosity, enthusiasm, a collaborative approach, and a focus on data and outcomes in his or her work.
Baker has spent much of his career tackling difficult challenges head on. After retiring as a colonel from the Vermont State Police and serving as its director from 2006-2009, Baker was named interim director of the Vermont Police Academy and successfully worked to restore stability and respect to the struggling organization. He then served as police chief in Rutland, cleaning up a department dealing with scandals and accusations of racism. He worked openly and collaboratively with other community leaders on Project VISION, Rutland’s grassroots effort to address the opiate epidemic, empower the community, strengthen neighborhoods, and reduce crime. Other communities in Vermont are now looking to learn from Rutland’s successes, and Baker is working to bring those lessons to his hometown of Arlington.
Baker was nominated by Green Mountain Power CEO Mary Powell. In her nomination, Powell noted, “James Baker is a fierce and inspirational leader who combines compassion, transparency, data, and just-the-facts frankness to build community pride and get results.”
The committee recognized that, like Hogan, Baker is effective at making a difference bybuilding coalitions, being unafraid to have the tough conversations, being transparent, and understanding and applying data to achieve targeted results. Baker has a vision and the compassion and charisma as a leader to inspire others to work together to achieve that vision.
For more information about the award and to register for the upcoming public reception on October 3rdfrom 4:30 – 6:30 p.m. at the Vermont College of Fine Arts in Montpelier, please visitvermontcf.org/ConHoganOct3
Members of the Con Hogan Award organizing committee are Alissa Auerbach, Paul Cillo, Steve Dale, Scott Johnson, Cheryl Mitchell, Felipe Rivera, Heidi Tringe, Diana Wahle, Will Belongia, and Linda Wheatley.
The Vermont Community Foundation inspires giving and brings people and resources together to make a difference in Vermont. A family of hundreds of funds and foundations, we provide the advice, investment vehicles, and back-office expertise that make it easy for the people who care about Vermont to find and fund the causes they love.
The heart of the Community Foundation’s work is closing the opportunity gap—the divide that leaves too many Vermonters struggling to get ahead, no matter how hard they work. We are aligning our time, energy, and discretionary resources on efforts that provide access to early care and learning, pathways to college and career training, support for youth and families, and community and economic vitality. We envision Vermont at its best—where everyone has the opportunity to build a bright, secure future.
Source: Vermont Community Foundationvermontcf.org