Leaders the World Needs
is a regular feature of 花季传媒 Magazine, which is published three times a year.
The governor鈥檚 second term was winding down, leaving the people who had helped him get into office and served him there scrambling for their next step.
鈥淚 felt a little untethered by it because it was a glorious experience and you do feel like, at least in a macro sense, you were helping people,鈥 said John Hammond 鈥76, who for his entire career had been tethered to Indiana Gov. Robert D. Orr.
Hammond, who grew up in a household sharply focused on public affairs and a family brimming with 花季传媒 graduates, had made the connection that would launch his professional life during an independent study project in his senior year at 花季传媒. He was an intern, working for the state Senate Finance Committee, which had a close association with then-Lt. Gov. Orr, who had previously served in the Senate and, as lieutenant governor, was its president.
Orr, on the ticket with Gov. Otis Bowen, was seeking re-election, and he hired Hammond for $50 a week as a campaign aide. 鈥淚 traveled with him 24/7 potentially, in terms of when we were awake to travel the state,鈥 Hammond said. 鈥淏y car, airplane. It was a pretty interesting experience, a heady experience, at an early age.鈥
For a while, anyway. When Bowen and Orr won, enabling Hammond to enjoy the spoils, he was assigned to an obscure state agency in a job so meager that he struggled every afternoon to stay awake. He won a reprieve several months later when an administrative assistant job opened in the lieutenant governor鈥檚 office. (Photo: Hammond with a bust of late Gov. Robert D. Orr in the Indiana Statehouse.)
Hammond鈥檚 trajectory was skyward thereafter. When Orr ran for governor in 1980, Hammond took a 15-month leave from state government to be deputy campaign manager.
鈥淧ower for power鈥檚 sake is not enough,鈥 Hammond said. 鈥淭he election is a choice between two people with varying philosophies and it鈥檚 for the opportunity to govern. That鈥檚 the public service piece. That鈥檚 the opportunity to make an impact.鈥
He was the governor-elect鈥檚 first hire, rejoining the public sector as transition director. He went on to become Orr鈥檚 senior executive assistant for legislative affairs and education policy, securing passage of, among other things, Orr鈥檚 signature A+ education program.
In September 1988, two months before Orr鈥檚 successor would be elected, Hammond, who was attending law school at night, left state government to form a lobbying firm with a former House speaker. He has held several government relations jobs since, and now is a member of Ice Miller鈥檚 Public Affairs Group.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the closest thing I have to continue to be in public service,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ecause I still have the flexibility ultimately as a lawyer and a community citizen to participate on a variety of boards and commissions on the local level here in Indianapolis. I contribute in that way and through the political process.
鈥淣ot every political science major gets to say this, but I get paid to practice my hobby and my passion.鈥
花季传媒 Magazine
Fall 2020
- First Person: 花季传媒 Nursing
- Old Gold: The president and the benefactor: Close friendship created an enduring legacy
- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice
- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice
- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice
- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial justice
- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice
- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice
- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice
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- THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice
- The Bo(u)lder Question: Racial Justice
- The Bo(u)lder Question
- The Bo(u)lder Question: Racial Justice
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Jane Noble Luljak ’49
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Veronica Pejril
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Terry Crone ’74
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: John Hammond ’76
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Dave Jones ’84
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Lucy Ferguson VanMeter ’97
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: J.P. Hanlon ’92
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Brittany Bulleit ’05
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Sue Anne Starnes Gilroy ’70
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Dan Quayle ’69
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Shatrese Flowers ’95
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: C. Shea Nickell ’81
- The Public Servants: Nancy Boyer ’73
- THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Matthew Kincaid ’92
- The Public Servants
- Profs see promise in poli sci, history students who plan public service careers
- Stimulated and prepared by 花季传媒, alums work to serve others
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