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Those
who have seen the recent television commercial with
ex-N.Y. Yankee great and linguistic icon, Yogi
Berra, where he is explaining the merits of owning
supplemental insurance for when you can’t work (“The
insurance you don’t know you need until you know you
need it…”) can perhaps begin to appreciate the
confusing nature of insurance protection. Throw in
Workman Compensation issues, Federal and State
Employment Regulations, etc., within the context of
a rapidly changing business environment, and you
begin to understand the broad challenges faced by
the Human Resource professional. Insurance and
traditional employees benefit programs are in a
constant flux, and the cost-realities of providing
such service are a significant concern to any
business’s management. Construction is one industry
that has really felt the ‘pinch’ when it comes to
providing various risk coverage. Today, it is
absolutely critical for companies to employ capable
personnel who are able to sort through the latest
changes and requirements. For Trumbull-Nelson, the
“go-to” person offering such professional skill with
energetic vigor and key administrative insight is
Kathleen Raynak.
What does she most like about working in the Human
Resource field? Kathleen loves building
relationships with employees and benefit providers,
and helping employees maneuver through insurance
quagmires.
As Trumbull-Nelson’s Human Resource Coordinator,
Kathleen is one of the first people that newly hired
personnel meet. She was instrumental in developing
an employee orientation process to help individuals
to better understand the Company’s policies and
benefits program. Others in the Company turn to
Kathleen for information and advice on such matters
as health insurance, 401(k)’s, vacation-time
accrual….and new hats! Kathleen is helping to select
and order a wide assortment of Company clothing that
sport the T-N logo.
Kathleen’s work with Trumbull-Nelson began 4 years
ago, when she was hired as an administrative
assistant. Vestiges of administrative duties do
still exist; ordering jobsite phones, toilets, water
and cell phones. She enjoys being helpful in this
regard, as such tasks “keep her in the know” about
where employees are working and which jobs are
beginning and ending.
Kathleen’s home is in Thetford, VT. This is a good
distance from the southwestern Pennsylvania town
where she grew up, and where many family members
still reside. While there, she attended the
University of Pennsylvania, graduating with a BS
degree in Geriatrics in 1979. She spent 5 years in
the field, caring for the elderly and mentally
challenged, before deciding to seek alternative work
challenges in areas that included Los Angeles. With
the birth of her son, Ben, she decided to settle
down in a place she had come to love…New England. In
the following years, she worked in various
administrative and human resource capacities for
such organizations as Alice Peck Day Memorial
Hospital, The Quechee Landowner’s Association, and
Kimball Union Academy.
For Kathleen, the work of Human Resource Coordinator
presents many challenges and rewards.
She indicates a comfort level in a role that
sometimes makes her ‘walk the middle road between
administration and employees’. “I believe that the
symbiotic relationship of business and employees is
simple to understand and work with. A company needs
to remain healthy and profitable in order to employ
people and grow,” she suggests. “Employees need the
jobs that companies provide in order to live.”
What does she most like about working in the Human
Resource field? Kathleen loves building
relationships with employees and benefit providers,
and helping employees maneuver through insurance
quagmires. “I believe that communication, patience
and a sense of humor are vital in relationship
building, and that is how I approach my work.”
Kathleen’s knowledge, professional approach, and
sense of humor have earned her the respect of the
management, staff and employees of Trumbull-Nelson
Construction Company. Keep up the great work,
Kathleen! And keep those hats coming!
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