Visionary Efforts Shaping Society: Introducing the 2024 Risk All Stars

The brilliance of the 2024 Risk All Stars is benefiting not just businesses or nonprofits but society at large.
By: | July 14, 2024

So many headlines focus on the word “insurance,” and way too few mention the discipline that encompasses it. Of course, I’m talking about risk management, the science and art of preventing losses and transferring risk.

The 2024 collection of Risk All Stars contains examples of risk management passion, creativity and perseverance that are so impressive, I am tempted to call them the best class of Risk All Stars that we have ever had … but that would be unfair to the dozens of Risk All Stars that we have selected in previous years.

They are all excellent. In this issue, though, we do have the example of Eric Johnson, senior vice president with the Maryland Stadium Authority. As part of a massive interagency effort, Johnson oversaw the management of construction risk on a project that renovated or replaced public school buildings in some of Baltimore’s most densely populated neighborhoods.

The owner-controlled insurance program that he built enabled what is known as the 21st Century School Buildings Program to exceed its goals in using minority business enterprise contractors and hiring local workers. To share just one data point: The authority set a goal of hiring 558 local workers and ended up employing 1,528 to date.

Not only did the project benefit our most important asset — our students — it served double duty by putting paychecks into the pockets of adults in that same community.

Further to the west, Pittsburgh-based Jason Malatak is making waves by doing the hard work of addressing mental health issues in the construction profession. As director of risk management for Mosites Construction Company, Malatak is working to remove the stigma around mental health concerns and making it easier for construction workers to reach out if they are suffering.

Suicide risk haunts construction workers due to the physically demanding aspect of their jobs, the prevalent risk of injury and the fact that they often spend long stretches of time away from their families. Malatak has even gone so far as to approach his competitors to share success stories from his program and encourage them to take similar steps.

Even further west, Curt Fernandez, director of risk management for the Arlington Independent School District in Arlington, Texas, is implementing safety programs for the district’s more than 8,000 employees and 56,000 students. With a background in city government, Fernandez has a lot to learn about a sprawling school district but is already cutting down on vehicle accidents through comprehensive training for the district’s supervisors.

The list of what Fernandez is implementing is too long to repeat in this space, but his professorial approach to learning and teaching about risk and his talent for down-to-earth collaboration serve as an example to many.

I know of no clearer examples of the benefits of insurance and risk management to society than the portraits in the following pages. It’s a pity society at large remains so unaware of this profession and these amazing achievements. &


The 2024 Risk All Stars

Bobby Collins, corporate director of workers’ compensation, Ballad Health

Curt Fernandez, director, risk management, AISD

Marinda Griese, claims administrator, California Joint Powers Risk Management Authority

Hoda Hussein, senior risk management consultant, United Educators

Josh Jeffers, director of risk management, Knife River Corporation

Eric Johnson, senior vice president, Maryland Stadium Authority

Jason Malatak, director of risk management, Mosites Construction Company

Darrell Mathis, director of workers’ compensation, City of Chicago

Jessica Morgan, senior vice president of risk and safety, ABM

John Quigley, manager, corporate insurance, Endeavor

The R&I Editorial Team can be reached at [email protected].

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