• Contact
  • Privacy Policy
Blacksonrise.com
DONATE
  • Home
    • Caribbean
    • African American
    • African
  • Consultation EST
  • Herbs
  • Ecourses
  • Login
    • LogOut
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
    • Caribbean
    • African American
    • African
  • Consultation EST
  • Herbs
  • Ecourses
  • Login
    • LogOut
No Result
View All Result
Blacksonrise.com
No Result
View All Result

Oakland Pays Unprecedented Tribute to CEO and Hometown Hero Bernard Tyson

blacksonrise by blacksonrise
November 18, 2019
in Uncategorized
0
Oakland Pays Unprecedented Tribute to CEO and Hometown Hero Bernard Tyson
0
SHARES
31
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

“Don’t ask permission to help improve the lives of the people and communities you’ve pledged to serve. Instead, march through the doors of red tape, make bold moves, and usher in access for your communities to be served.” — Bernard Tyson, 1959–2019

If the measure of a man can be taken by the outpouring of genuine sorrow and respect once he is gone, then the late CEO of Kaiser Permanente, Bernard J. Tyson, was without question among the rarest of revered corporate leaders.

On Sunday morning, Tyson’s flag-draped casket was placed in the center of the palatial circular lobby of the Rotunda, one of the most impressive and distinctive spaces in the city of Oakland, as a steady stream of admirers filed past.

Some, like Raymond McGuire, Citi’s Global Head of Corporate and Investment Banking, had flown in from New York in time to pay his respects a day before Tyson’s invitation-only memorial service, which will take place this afternoon at none other than the new San Francisco home of the Oakland Warriors.

For McGuire, Tyson was more than a professional peer, he was a friend.

To others, he was a mentor and a boss. Asked what set Tyson apart as a leader, John Nelson, Kaiser’s vice president of communications, struggled to compose himself before answering. He spoke first of Tyson’s deep humanity, his sense of humor, and how “he loved to laugh and to make people laugh.”

But Nelson, who worked closely with Tyson for the last decade, went on to laud the CEO for his constancy in pressing the organization to live up to its mission, “and not just in a trite way,” Nelson pointed out, “in a real way. One of his broadest accomplishments is that it feels like public service to work at Kaiser Permanente.”

Advertisements

Great Speaker, Oakland Champion, and Jay-Z Fan

While Tyson was outspoken in his advocacy of making healthcare affordable, it was in part his affection for and commitment to the city of Oakland that led Kaiser to hold Sunday’s public viewing. It was an unprecedented gesture, and Nelson admits the team of about 20 volunteers wasn’t sure what to expect.

By Nelson’s estimate, about 2,000 people paid their respects, gently directed by a team of hostesses, all volunteers from Kaiser’s African American Professional Association, which Tyson helped launch several years ago.

Among the personal friends like McGuire, and colleagues like Nelson, were those who didn’t know Tyson. They only knew of him but were nonetheless moved to come to the Rotunda to pay their respects.

A local kid (Tyson hails from another Bay Area city, Vallejo) who began working at Kaiser as an intern while pursuing his M.B.A. at Golden Gate University, he became the model smart, young black male who could start at the bottom and make it to the top. The fact that he did so without losing himself or his ties to the black community is a primary aspect of what many say set him apart.

“My favorite thing about Bernard was his authenticity and how comfortable he was with himself and how down to earth he was,” said Dr. Linda Oubre, president of Whittier College. “He believed not only in climbing up the ladder of success but also made sure to pull up others with him. He was as comfortable giving a speech to corporate executives or playing Jay-Z at a business meeting.”

Oubre and her husband, Nate Oubre, a Kaiser executive, attended Harvard Business School with Tyson’s widow, Denise Bradley-Tyson, and have known him for almost 30 years. “Today’s repose was quintessential Bernard: warm, loving, calm, and respectful. It was beautiful to see so many people whose lives were touched by Bernard come together.”

Many of Kaiser’s 200,000 employees came. Some knew and worked with him during his more than 30-year career at the healthcare provider. Others only knew of him but, with heads bowed and in hushed tones, they expressed their appreciation for his work and their shock at his sudden death on Nov. 10.

Tyson, who knew he had a heart condition, died in his sleep mere hours after speaking at Afrotech, which he attended with his family.

Paying Honor, Shedding Tears for Bernard Tyson

Patricia J. Titus is a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge who attended Stanford University as an undergraduate with Bradley-Tyson. A second marriage for both, the Tysons recently celebrated their 10th anniversary.

“A lot of our peers from Stanford are Kaiser doctors,” Titus noted. “They’re devastated. You expect the family to be devastated, but the reaction of the staff has been unprecedented.”

Without question, she added, Tyson made an indelible impact not only on his peers in corporate America, healthcare, and the nonprofit world but also on average people—especially African Americans in California, where this native son is revered as much for being a hometown hero as a giant in business.

“Today’s ceremony was done with such excellence,” Titus said. “It was very befitting a man of his stature.

“It was important for me to be here,” she added, “and not just as a friend. He took his job seriously and he did so much good. It’s important to pay honor to whom honor is due.”


Credit: Source link

Previous Post

Africa’s young entrepreneurs defy the odds -

Next Post

Anger As Policeman Charged with Murder of Aboriginal Australian Teenager | Voice of America

Next Post
Anger As Policeman Charged with Murder of Aboriginal Australian Teenager | Voice of America

Anger As Policeman Charged with Murder of Aboriginal Australian Teenager | Voice of America

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

HOT Updates

(BPRW) Citizens for a Pro-Business Delaware Joins Pastor Hackett’s Protest for Diversity on Chancery Court | Press releases
African American News

(BPRW) Citizens for a Pro-Business Delaware Joins Pastor Hackett’s Protest for Diversity on Chancery Court | Press releases

April 15, 2021
James leads multistate lawsuit to end Facebook’s monopoly
Caribbean News

James applauds Biden’s efforts to end Title X ‘gag rule’

April 17, 2021
Chauvin likely to appeal, claiming trial tainted by civil settlement, media coverage
Caribbean News

Chauvin likely to appeal, claiming trial tainted by civil settlement, media coverage

April 20, 2021
Louis, Williams condemn police killing of Daunte Wright
Caribbean News

Louis, Williams condemn police killing of Daunte Wright

April 14, 2021
Uncategorized

GHS blames expired COVID-19 vaccines on ‘limited’ time frame for vaccination exercise

April 19, 2021
Chad’s Deby takes early election lead, partial results show – SABC News
African News

Chad’s Deby takes early election lead, partial results show – SABC News

April 18, 2021
Uncategorized

Energy department cautions against closure of oil refineries – SABC News

April 15, 2021
Africa: Opening Ceremony of the High-Level Virtual Conference On Expanding Africa’s Vaccine Manufacturing for Health Security
African News

Africa: Opening Ceremony of the High-Level Virtual Conference On Expanding Africa’s Vaccine Manufacturing for Health Security

April 14, 2021
San Francisco Human Rights Commission Issues Grants from City Reallocation Fund
African American News

San Francisco Human Rights Commission Issues Grants from City Reallocation Fund

April 17, 2021
Caribbean Life: Queens Edition: April 16, 2021
Caribbean News

Caribbean Life: Queens Edition: April 16, 2021

April 16, 2021
Family of murdered boy disappointed that age issue of one of the suspects not resolved
African News

Family of murdered boy disappointed that age issue of one of the suspects not resolved

April 20, 2021
Uncategorized

Speaker donates 200 bags of rice, 100 packs of sugar to Ghana Federation of Disabled

April 17, 2021
Nonprofit land trusts give low-income homebuyers a chance
African American News

Nonprofit land trusts give low-income homebuyers a chance

April 20, 2021
Why Spend Gh¢5million to construct Ghana Awards House whilst hospitals, schools continue to suffer? — Govt quizzed
African News

Why Spend Gh¢5million to construct Ghana Awards House whilst hospitals, schools continue to suffer? — Govt quizzed

April 15, 2021

BlackSonRise.com is an online news portal which aims to provide Caribbean News, African News, Business and much more stuff like that. Feel free to get in touch with us!

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Chauvin likely to appeal, claiming trial tainted by civil settlement, media coverage
  • Family of murdered boy disappointed that age issue of one of the suspects not resolved
  • Nonprofit land trusts give low-income homebuyers a chance

Subscribe NOW

Loading
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2019 Blacksonrise.com is an online news, e-learning, and business website that caters to the global black community.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
    • Caribbean
    • African American
    • African
  • Consultation EST
  • Herbs
  • Ecourses
  • Login
    • LogOut

© 2019 Blacksonrise.com is an online news, e-learning, and business website that caters to the global black community.

USD $
  • USD USD $
  • EUR EUR €
  • GBP GBP £