Center for Labor and Employment Law Hosts Distinguished Speaker Series and Honors Alumni and Student Contributions

January 31, 2012

On January 26, 2012, the Center for Labor and Employment Law hosted its Distinguished Speaker Series featuring George J. Marlin, CEO of the Philadelphia Trust and a Director of the Nassau County Interim Finance Authority. Dean Michael A. Simons opened the program by tracing the Center’s rapid development and successful activities and initiatives. He commended Center Director David L. Gregory, St. John’s Dorothy Day Professor of Law, on his ability to bring diverse groups of people together for common purposes. He also noted the importance and timeliness of Marlin’s talk on the history, purpose, and future of state fiscal oversight boards and insight into the crippling budgetary challenges faced by state and county governments.

Professor Gregory then introduced the Labor Relations and Employment Law Society’s new Executive Board:

  • Co-Presidents Andrew Midgen ’13 and Alyssa Zuckerman ’13
  • Vice President Tom Keane ’13
  • Treasurer Ian Hayes ’13
  • Secretary Amanda Jaret ’13

After introducing the Center’s current scholarship recipients and Junior Fellows, Professor Gregory thanked the following Law School alumni who so generously support the Center and and its students:

  • Patrick Boyd ’00
  • James M. Darby ’84
  • Steve Johnson ’00
  • Robert J. Nobile ’84
  • Terrence O’Neill ’70
  • Mark Pedretti ’92
  • Michael Van Aken ’99

Against this backdrop, John Longmire ’05, a partner at Wilkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, announced his plans to underwrite the Professor Lawrence M. Joseph Scholarship in honor of Lawrence Joseph, the Law School’s Reverend Joseph T. Tinnelly, C.M., Professor of Law. Diane Pfadenhauer ’96, an HR Consultant for Employment Practices Advisor, Inc., offered inspirational remarks about the value of a St. John’s education as she inaugurated the Robert J. Nobile ’84 Scholarship. Lauding Nobile ― a partner at Seyfarth Shaw LLP and co-chair of the Center’s Executive Committee ― for his professional accomplishments and ability to “personally guide aspiring students and lawyers,” she explained that she especially admires how he not only gives back to the Law School at the macro level, but supports it at a micro level by “personally impacting the students that pass through its halls.” The Nobile Scholarship memorializes her desire to follow in the footsteps of her mentor.

Taking the podium, George Marlin offered a compelling and thorough historical account of the crises in state and county finance. He explained the strange circumstances that have led Nassau County, the third wealthiest county in the United States, to face seemingly insurmountable debt, comparing local New York governments’ reactions to similar crises and detailing how fiscal control boards were first implemented. Sharing his view that past financial challenges were handled effectively because leaders dealing with them were willing to accept responsibility and make difficult choices, Marlin chastised current Nassau County leaders for refusing to face financial constraints and make sacrifices. He concluded his talk with insights about the future of the American Northeast and warned that spiraling tax rates and depressed employment possibilities would drive successive generations away from New York.

His Eminence Edward Cardinal Egan, Archbishop Emeritus of New York and the Center’s inaugural Honorary Chairman, then responded to some of Marlin’s questions and comments, echoing the need for responsible and resolute government leaders and offering the example of former Governor Hugh L. Carey ’42, ’51L, who was able to accommodate disparate groups’ interests and manage contingencies. Cardinal Egan questioned the propriety of establishing financial control boards and expressed cautious optimism about local governments’ abilities to recover from their financial woes. In closing, he also reflected on the religious and moral dimensions of public service.