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== Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor & Industry ==
== Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor & Industry ==
Foley was named Acting Secretary of Labor & Industry by Governor Robert P. Casey to succeed Harris Wofford upon Wofford’s appointment to the United States Senate, becoming the youngest person to ever hold that post. Foley had previously served as a special assistant to the Governor<ref>{{Cite web|last=McMullen, Larry|first=Philadelphia Daily News|date=24 September 1990|title=The Governor's Man|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1roWRUIterwL6i7Xm1N89Q5rbP2Ch0aZ0/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|last=Governor's Office|first=press release|date=8 November 1989|title=Governor Casey Names Thomas P. Foley Special Assistant|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1E0LG1E0_XYw80d1v_Fs2KG5wsIe7wZmU/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> and as the Executive Deputy Secretary at Labor & Industry.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Casey, Robert P.|first=letter from Governor|date=7 March 1994|title=Gov. Casey accepts resignation letter|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LwMiNj39XVVXAUM2R3QlaFOrI7DbjBJK/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> He was named acting secretary on May 16, 1991 and confirmed by the State Senate and sworn in as secretary on July 11, 1991.

As Secretary of Labor & Industry, he oversaw the department's $3 billion budget, 6,000 person workforce and a broad mandate spanning labor law, unemployment and workers’ compensation insurance, occupational and industrial safety, labor-management meditation and workforce development.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Casey|first=Foley|date=July 1993|title=Getting The Job Done: A Report to Labor, Industry and the Public|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QMrLFYH1hgBmtstfknWcMFY-UEef2iOh/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> Major initiatives during his tenure included modernizing the State Workers’ Insurance Fund (SWIF),<ref>{{Cite web|last=Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry|date=1992|title=The State Workman's Insurance Fund: A Case Study in Reinventing Government|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1A57yuFP6aBxPuzit5snJFhuY6OxB0l_Y/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|last=Legislative Budget and Finance Committee|date=August 1993|title=Performance Audit: State Workman's Insurance Fund|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1O7WIp0CdMf2-cXP2qZbVXY9JYgDeUauu/view|url-status=live}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|last=Foley, Tom|first=The Bottom Line|date=Winter 1994|title=From the Desk of Tom Foley|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1E9iONCTEp2YWOOL3nnOOzwVoTuIkjuWw/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref>mediating labor management conflicts, preserving the solvency of State Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund (UCTF),<ref>{{Cite web|last=The Morning Call|first=editorial|date=13 November 1988|title=And so does Gov. Casey|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1njIE91AhNN1vK8cylqgwns3ghWjjp8QP/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|last=Jones, Clifford, President|first=Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry|date=24 October 1988|title=Letter to Deputy Secretary Foley|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U9x-iuGcRRBqo7BBq6z6UGw6fooP_OEK/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref>creating the Joint Jobs Initiative<ref>{{Cite web|last=Ruoff, Mary|first=Williamsport Sun-Gazette|date=20 October 1993|title=Foley States Case For Dislocated Workers Centers|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1iDK9icGRKBTE484JEqBmkexgj1Zti0zU/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> the Rapid Response Initiative,<ref>{{Cite web|last=Subcommittee on Trade|first=US House Committee on Ways and Means|date=1 August 1991|title=Worker Adjustment Assistance Programs|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zY26xIuRapZN69rxYbk5noe4gha-d9Dj/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> and public service programs including PennSERVE<ref>{{Cite web|last=Department of Labor & Industry|first=issue brief|date=1993|title=The Pennsylvania Corps: 'Just typical everyday heroes'|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZOe7SzPuDn2zuTembpofM6uoffhOBFh6/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> and the Youth Service Corps.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Pennsylvania Pride|first=Journal of Service Learning and Youth Leadership|date=Fall 1993|title=Service Learning|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LFULEJkOrGtrGvLuxknmmQiUOaTYM16D/view|url-status=live}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|last=Department of Labor & Industry|first=Pennsylvania Conservation Corps|date=25 October 1991|title=Annual Report FY 1990-91|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uEDV9VYMi56-aetLslsuWr0jhLQHkNBK/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> He also helped transform the state’s unemployment offices into one-stop Job Centers,<ref>{{Cite web|last=Ranii, David|first=Pittsburgh Press|date=30 May 1991|title=Casey Nominee vows to aid job centers|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/17_-9X6XeoJIz1KQdWJbSsOvDRWbct6Qz/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|last=Governor Robert P. Casey|first=Weekly Radio Address|date=21 October 1989|title=Our Job Centers Put People and Jobs Together|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oeJno-fYGgkHO5pIad5HA0JxSNzpGghO/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref> an innovation recognized by Harvard’s Kennedy School as a national model for government service delivery and workforce development.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Department of Labor & Industry|first=A Report to Labor, Industry and the Public|date=July 1993|title=Progress Report|url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MAkaPfyaGWqKIFOm2o9L01jTqlHPyMY_/view|url-status=live|website=Google Drive}}</ref>


== US Department of Labor Regional Representative ==
== US Department of Labor Regional Representative ==

Revision as of 14:41, 7 April 2021

Tom Foley
Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor and Industry
In office
May 16, 1991 – February 11, 1994
GovernorBob Casey
Preceded byHarris Wofford
Succeeded byRobert Barnett
Personal details
Born (1953-12-31) December 31, 1953 (age 70)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMichele
ChildrenThree
ResidenceHershey, Pennsylvania
Alma materDartmouth College
Yale Law School

Thomas Patrick Foley (born December 31, 1953)[1] has served as a Belfast peace advocate, state and federal government official, political candidate, state NGO chief executive, and college president. He currently serves as president of the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in Pennsylvania.[2]

Previously, he served as president of Mount Aloysius College,[3] president of the United Way of Pennsylvania and CEO of the Red Cross of Southeastern Pennsylvania.[4] He was the Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor and Industry under Gov. Robert P. Casey,[5] and served as a White House appointee in the Clinton administration Department of Labor.[6] Prior to that he worked on Capitol Hill, in the US Senate as chief speech writer and legislative aide on Irish issues for Sen. Joseph R. Biden,[7] in the US House as a legislative aide to Rep. James Shannon.[8]

Early Life and Education

Foley grew up in Ambler and Flourtown, Pennsylvania, one of 12 children of Jack and Angela Foley. His grandparents emigrated from Ireland and settled in Philadelphia.  He attended St. Genevieve’s parish grade school and Bishop McDevitt High School.  He received scholarships to Dartmouth College (BA, Summa Cum Laude) and to Yale Law School (JD), where he was an editor of Yale’s international law journal.  He also studied at University College Dublin as a post-graduate fellow and later completed non-degree programs in executive leadership at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard Business School, and Harvard Graduate School of Education. [9]

Northern Ireland Peace and Justice Advocate

Foley spent his year on a graduate fellowship at University College Dublin studying American-Irish diplomatic history.  He spent part of that time in 1975-76 with Voluntary Service Belfast (VSB), working to reclaim bombed-out buildings and organizing cross-community youth activities.  He later took a two-year leave from Yale Law School in 1979-81 to serve as a full-time volunteer with the Nobel Prize-winning organization Peace People in Belfast. [10] [11] [12] He later worked with two US Speakers of the House, Tip O’Neill and Tom Foley (no relation), and for Senator Joe Biden on Irish issues in Washington.[13] He hosted Irish Nobel Peace Prize winners Mairead Corrigan Maguire and John Hume on visits to the US,[14] [15] and has spoken and written often on the situation in Northern Ireland.[16]

Foley’s two years as a fulltime volunteer in Belfast occurred during the height of the Troubles and the hunger strikes of that period.  He organized integrated youth programs, served as counsel to Mairead Corrigan-Maguire, and was the first American elected to its board, serving as Executive Member for Justice Issues.[17] [18] In that role, Foley authored the Peace People’s proposals to resolve the Hunger Strikes at the Long Kesh prison and other Parliamentary submissions.[19] [20] With Corrigan-Maguire, he presented those proposals to top officials in the British, Irish and US Governments[21] as well as to leaders in Provisional Sinn Fein and in community and paramilitary groups across Northern Ireland.[22] [23]

His monograph Rights and Responsibilities: A Young Person's Guide to the Law[24] was adopted and reprinted by national youth organizations in Northern Ireland as their primary educational tool about the emergency laws.[25] His 1982 article Public Security and Individual Freedom: The Dilemma of Northern Ireland discussed the line between private liberty and public safety (Yale Journal of International Law) in the context of Northern Ireland and implications elsewhere.[26] [27] Foley was also a prime mover in the creation of the non-partisan Committee on the Administration of Justice (CAJ),[28] which later won the Reebok Human Rights Prize and the Council of Europe Human Rights Prize. He and civil rights lawyer Tom Hadden[29] [30] served as co-chairs of CAJ’s first public assembly,[31] and he was the author and editor of several of its initial publications.[32] [33]

Foley organized the first cross-community boys and girls youth soccer [34] and basketball programs [35] [36] in Northern Ireland during the Troubles--putting hundreds of children into communities whose lines they had never before crossed.  He also worked closely with leaders of the Corrymeela Community, a peace and reconciliation group dedicated to bringing all sides of the political conflict to the table.  

In 1982, after Foley and Corrigan-Maguire met in Washington with the Friends of Ireland, a bi-partisan group in the US Congress committed to peace in Northern Ireland,[37] Speaker Tip O’Neill arranged for him to join the staff of Congressman James Shannon.[38] Two years later, Foley joined Senator Joe Biden’s team as chief speechwriter and legislative aide for Irish issues.[39] During that time, Senator Biden led the debate over the US/UK Extradition Treaty,[40] and played a lead role (with Speaker O’Neill, and Senators Kennedy and Dodd) in the creation of the International Fund for Ireland, the first US economic development fund for Northern Ireland.[41]

Over the next 30 years, Foley has continued to write and lecture on issues around peace, justice, and economic development in Northern Ireland.[42] [43] He has received numerous recognitions for his commitment to Ireland, including being named one of the top 100 Irish Americans in both law[44] and education.[45]

Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor & Industry

Foley was named Acting Secretary of Labor & Industry by Governor Robert P. Casey to succeed Harris Wofford upon Wofford’s appointment to the United States Senate, becoming the youngest person to ever hold that post. Foley had previously served as a special assistant to the Governor[46] [47] and as the Executive Deputy Secretary at Labor & Industry.[48] He was named acting secretary on May 16, 1991 and confirmed by the State Senate and sworn in as secretary on July 11, 1991.

As Secretary of Labor & Industry, he oversaw the department's $3 billion budget, 6,000 person workforce and a broad mandate spanning labor law, unemployment and workers’ compensation insurance, occupational and industrial safety, labor-management meditation and workforce development.[49] Major initiatives during his tenure included modernizing the State Workers’ Insurance Fund (SWIF),[50] [51] [52]mediating labor management conflicts, preserving the solvency of State Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund (UCTF),[53] [54]creating the Joint Jobs Initiative[55] the Rapid Response Initiative,[56] and public service programs including PennSERVE[57] and the Youth Service Corps.[58] [59] He also helped transform the state’s unemployment offices into one-stop Job Centers,[60] [61] an innovation recognized by Harvard’s Kennedy School as a national model for government service delivery and workforce development.[62]

US Department of Labor Regional Representative

CEO Humanitarian NGOs

President United Way of Pennsylvania

CEO Red Cross of Southeastern Pennsylvania

Höhere Bildung

President Mount Aloysius College

From 2010-2018, Foley served as president of Mount Aloysius College,[63] a comprehensive liberal arts and sciences institution with a strong commitment to career-directed study founded by Irish-based Sisters of Mercy.

As President, he expanded the college’s community outreach efforts including community partnerships, service-learning activities, service-related internships, and service trips,[64] [65] and led the effort within the college’s athletic conference to promote community service by student-athletes—now a major conference-wide and website focus.[66] For these efforts, the college was named to the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll six times.

As President, Foley led fundraising for and completion of five major construction projects:[67] the campus convocation center[68] the technology commons,[69] the health studies center,[70] the outdoor athletic complex and the “Digital Grotto” media production center.[71]

The college’s work on behalf of lower-income students led the White House in 2015 to name Mount Aloysius one of four model higher education Engines of Opportunity in the country.[72]  Foley established nationally-recognized, yearlong, campus-wide explorations[73] on values-focused themes like The Common Good, Civil Discourse, and The Good Life, which included a Speaker Series, curricular offerings, orientation activities, and publications which were shared with the wider education community, and two of which were added to the permanent collection of the Library of Congress.[74] [75]

Foley and his wife Michele were awarded honorary doctorates by the Board of Trustees for their service to the college and community.[76]

President Association of Colleges and Universities of Pennsylvania (AICUP)

In 2018, after eight years as president of Mount Aloysius College, Foley was named president of the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in Pennsylvania (AICUP), comprised of the presidents of over 90 colleges and universities.[77] In this role, he represents independent, non-profit schools in the public arena in both Pennsylvania and Washington, DC, oversees a network of 40 collaborative programs between schools, and leads research efforts on higher education issues.[78]  Prior to becoming its President, Foley served as chair of the AICUP board.[79]

AICUP initiatives under his leadership include new collaborative programs that promote innovation and efficiency, research at the intersection of education, the pandemic and public policy, an enhanced communications hub for its members, and publication of the influential report, The Economic Impact of AICUP Schools in Pennsylvania.[80]

In 2018, Foley successfully advocated for the largest increase for low-income students in the history of Pennsylvania’s higher education aid program (PHEAA).[81]  [82]He led the AICUP institutions’ response to COVID-19, with on-going updates to college presidents, dozens of webinars on pandemic-specific topics, and serving as the only higher education representative on the Governor’s COVID education reopening committee (PA Path Forward).[83]

Candidate for Political Office

Foley has been a candidate for three statewide offices in Pennsylvania.  In 1994 he won an eight-way primary to become the Democratic Party’s candidate for Lieutenant Governor,[84] losing to the Republican ticket headed by Tom Ridge.[85]  He was a candidate for Pennsylvania Auditor General in 1996 and was one of six candidates in the US Senate Democratic primary seeking to unseat Republican US Senator Rick Santorum in 2000.[86] [87]

Public Policy Interests

Among public policy issues, three have been central to Foley’s career: volunteerism, workforce development, and education. His interest in volunteerism was highlighted by his own two-year, full-time volunteer experience in Northern Ireland during its Troubles. He continued this interest by working with Harris Wofford and others in developing and later chairing PennSERVE,[88] [89] which became a model for AmeriCorps.[90] He later served as CEO of the two largest volunteer organizations in Pennsylvania, the United Way of Pennsylvania and the Red Cross of Southeastern Pennsylvania.[91]

His interest in workforce development began with his work as Pennsylvania’s Secretary of Labor & Industry and in the US Labor Department on job training[92] [93] [94] and lifelong learning,[95] and continued through his work as an advocate for job-readiness in higher education.[96]

Foley’s interest in early education began during his time as head of the United Way of Pennsylvania,[97] advocating for its adoption and promoting the first public investment in pre-school education by the Pennsylvania state government,[98] and continues today with his role as co-chair of The Governor’s Early Learning Investment Commission.[99]

Personal

Foley is married to Michele McDonald Foley, a lifelong educator.  They have three sons.

Selected Publications

“Finding a Way for Hope and History to Rhyme,” Johnstown Tribune Democrat, June 10, 2020.

“The Role of Private Higher Education in Workforce Development,” Association of Independent Colleges and Annual Meeting, Harrisburg, PA, April 3, 2017.

“Invest in the Bookends of Education,” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 1, 2017.

“The Good Life,” editor, Mount Aloysius College Press, Cresson, PA, 2016.  (permanent collection, Library of Congress).

“Campus Violence and the Role of Civil Discourse,” Johnstown Tribune-Democrat, December 1, 2015.

“Veteran’s Day Remembrance: Of Soldiers and Dreamers,” Vital Speeches of the Day, Vol. 1, January 2015.

“Box Scores and College Ratings,” Inside Higher Ed, April 8, 2014.

“The Common Good: 21st Century Citizenship,” editor, Mount Aloysius College Press, Cresson, PA, 2014.

“After the Boston Bombings, Look for the Helpers,” Allentown Morning Call, 21 April 2013.

“The Role of the University in Civil Discourse,” editor, Mount Aloysius College Press, Cresson, PA, 2012. (permanent collection, Library of Congress.)

“Nation Faces Critical Test in Katrina,” Harrisburg Patriot News, 23 October 2005.

“Hope and History:  With Today’s Vote, the Irish Can Write New Chapter for Ireland,” Philadelphia Inquirer, 22 May 1998.

“The 150th Chicken Dinner Tasted Worse than Defeat,” Philadelphia Inquirer, 28 November 1994.

“Job Training and Service Go Hand in Hand,” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 3 March 1993.

“The Changing Workforce,” Workforce, Vol. II, No. 22, Spring, 1993.

With Robert Coy, “Advancing Labor-Management Cooperation in Pennsylvania,” Labor Notes (publication of National Governors Association), 29 August 1988.

“Public Security and Individual Freedom: The Dilemma of Northern Ireland,” Yale Journal of World Public Order, Spring 1982 (reprinted in Congressional Record, July 17, 1986).

With Marcus D. Pohlmann, Ph.D., “Terrorism in the 70’s: Media’s Connection” National Forum, Summer 1981.

"Beating Terrorists?" [Book Review], Fortnight, (179), 19-20. December 1980.

“Rights and Responsibilities:  A Young Person’s Guide to the Law in Northern Ireland” (Belfast: Northern Ireland Youth Service), April 1980, special supplement.

With Ciaran McKeown, “Time for a Change: The Case for a Return to Normal Judicial Process,” Parliamentary Submission (Belfast: Peace People, Ltd.), 1980.

References

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  2. ^ "Foley named AICUP president.pdf". Google Docs. 2018-03-27. Retrieved 2021-03-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ "Mount Aloysius President leaving for new post". Johnstown Tribune-Democrat. 2018-03-16.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "Red Cross names Foley president, CEO". Philadelphia Business Journal. 2004-09-29.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "DLI Secretaries". Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. April 1987.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "US Secretary of Labor appoints Tom Foley Regional Representative". Google Drive. 17 September 1996.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ "Personal letter from V.P. Joseph R. Biden". Google Drive. 5 August 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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  55. ^ Ruoff, Mary, Williamsport Sun-Gazette (20 October 1993). "Foley States Case For Dislocated Workers Centers". Google Drive.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  56. ^ Subcommittee on Trade, US House Committee on Ways and Means (1 August 1991). "Worker Adjustment Assistance Programs". Google Drive.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  57. ^ Department of Labor & Industry, issue brief (1993). "The Pennsylvania Corps: 'Just typical everyday heroes'". Google Drive.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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  1. Secretaries of L&I: Tom Foley
Political offices
Preceded by Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor and Industry
1991–1994
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania
1994
Succeeded by