People, Companies & Deals
January 1, 2008
• Delta Air Lines President Ed Bastian will remain the airline's CFO, as new CEO Richard Anderson
continues to shape the company's management structure. The decision to keep Bastian in both roles
curtails a search for a new finance officer, a move that commenced after Anderson was hired last
August. Bastian was promoted to president, and the airline initially said it would seek a new CFO.
With Bastian as permanent president/CFO, Anderson will lead Delta's overall operations,
leaving Bastian to handle the money side. Bastian also will oversee route-planning and marketing
functions.
The structure is somewhat unusual. At most airlines, the No. 2 position typically pairs the
president and COO titles, while a separate CFO oversees financial duties.
In other Delta news, the airline is replacing its top operations executive, Joe Kolshak, with
Stephen Gorman. Kolshak is retiring after 20 years with the company. Gorman was in charge of
operations and maintenance at Northwest Airlines and most recently ran Greyhound Lines.
• James J. Roberts has been appointed executive group president of office products and
cleaning, organization and décor for Newell Rubbermaid. William A. Burke III will succeed Roberts
as group president for tools and hardware. Also, Steven G. Marton has been named president of
special assignments, after heading up the company's office products segment since 2004. The
management changes are in addition to the recently announced appointment of Jay D. Gould as group
president for home and family. All four executives will report directly to Newell Rubbermaid
President and CEO Mark Ketchum.
• Mark G. Kill, AIA, has joined the architectural firm Cooper Gary as COO. Kill will strive
for effectiveness in the firm's various practice groups and departments.
• Sara González, president and CEO of the Georgia Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (GHCC), will
be stepping down, effective May 2008. Since González became president in 1996, the GHCC has grown
in both endowment and membership, from 172 members in 1996 to nearly 1,500 members in 2007. In
2007, González received the Purpose Prize for her creative and effective work to tackle some of the
nation's most pressing problems.
• Ron Hughes, senior VP with the private banking and investment group at Merrill Lynch in
Atlanta, has been recognized in Worth Magazine's "Top 100 Wealth Advisors," Barron's "Top 100
Financial Advisors," and Registered Rep.'s "America's Top 100 Advisors." Hughes is the only private
wealth advisor at Merrill Lynch and one of two financial advisors nationally to be named in all
three 2007 rankings.
• Seyfarth Shaw was given the Pro Bono Partnership of Atlanta's 2007 Law Firm of the Year
Award for its contributions of time and legal expertise in helping Atlanta area nonprofits. w
Atlanta-based Carter Brothers received the National Urban League's Inaugural Entrepreneurship Award
during the organization's 51st Annual Equal Opportunity Day Awards Dinner.
• To follow up its recent expansion into the metro area, Computers for Youth, a national
nonprofit organization that helps low-income children do better in school by improving their
learning environment at home, named Simone Joye as its new executive director for the Atlanta
office.