Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1048886
n e w h a v e n b i z . c o m N o v e m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 1 8 | n e w h a v e n B I Z 39 T H E L O O P C-SUITE DelMonico named Q Chamber's 'Woman of the Year' Nutmeg FCU chair tapped for national post Luis Ramos, board chair of Nutmeg State Financial Credit Union, has been elected to a three-year term as a director of the National Association of Credit Union Chairmen (NACUC). Ramos has served as chairman of Nutmeg since 2014. e credit union, chartered in 1936, is headquartered in Rocky Hill with ten branches across the state, and soon to open its next location in North Haven. Nutmeg State FCU is a full-ser- vice, community credit union which serves nearly 39,000 mem- bers and holds more than $457 million in assets. Headquartered in Del Mar, Calif., the National Association of Credit Union Chairmen is the only national trade association dedicated to the development of credit union chairpersons through high-level education and network- ing programs. Webster Bank names HR executive Rog Webster Bank has named Mimi Rog of Fairfield senior vice president and director of learning and talent management. Reporting to Chief Human Resources Officer Bernard Garri- gues, Rog will be responsible for strategy and programs related to talent management, professional development, business education, leadership development, career development and certifications. Rog spent the previous 27 years with General Electric, most recent- ly as executive HR business partner for digital technology. Before that, she was chief learning officer for GE Capital. Rog earned a bachelor's degree in political science from Allegheny College. McKinney named chair at Quinnipiac Fred McK- inney of Trumbull has been named the Carlton Highsmith Chair of Innovation and Entrepreneur- ship and director of the Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship at Quinnipiac University. McKinney earned a doctorate in economics from Yale University. He also holds a bachelor's degree from UCLA. McKinney spent two summers at the Rand Corp. on domestic economic policy and one year in Washington, D.C. as a member of the President's Council of Econom- ic Advisers. McKinney was an assistant professor at Brandeis Universi- ty's Heller School for Advanced Studies in Social Policy. In 1987, he became an economics professor in the MBA and executive MBA programs at the University of Con- necticut's School of Business. In 2001, McKinney became President and CEO of the Con- necticut Minority Supplier Development Council (CMSDC). During his tenure, McKinney and his team executed two nonprofit ac- quisitions and expanded to become the Greater New England Minority Supplier Development Council, which operated Minority Business Development Agency Centers in Boston and Bridgeport. n Fred McKinney Luis Ramos Mimi Rog J ennifer M. DelMonico, managing partner of law firm of Murtha Cullina LLP, was awarded the 2018 "Woman of the Year" honor from the Quinnipiac Chamber of Commerce. DelMonico was feted at the chamber's Oct. 18 Women's Achievement Awards Luncheon in Wallingford. DelMonico chairs the board of directors of the Greater New Haven Chamber of Commerce and is vice chair of the Connecticut Business & Industry Association (CBIA). She is also a director of the New Haven Symphony Orchestra and a James W. Cooper Fellow of the Connecticut Bar Foundation. Before being named managing partner of Murtha Cullina in January 2015, DelMonico chaired the firm's Litigation Department. She earned a J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law and a bachelor of music degree from Northwestern University. In 2017, DelMonico received the Hartford Business Journal's "Women in Business" Award. A P P O I N T M E N T S P R O M O T I O N S

