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Janet L. Norwood

Janet L. Norwood
Born (1923-12-11)December 11, 1923
Newark, New Jersey
Died March 27, 2015(2015-03-27) (aged 91)
Austin, Texas
Education LL.D. (Honorary) Carnegie Mellon University, Harvard University, and Florida International University
Ph.D., M.A. Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
B.A. Douglass College

Janet Lippe Norwood (December 11, 1923 – March 27, 2015) was an American statistician and the first female Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) when she was appointed in 1979 by President Jimmy Carter. She was reappointed twice by President Reagan. She left the Bureau in 1991 and joined the Urban Institute as a Senior Fellow, a position she held until 1999. She was also appointed as the Chair of the Advisory Council on Unemployment Compensation, first by President George H. W. Bush in 1993 and then re-elected by President Bill Clinton. She stepped down from that position in 1996. She received numerous awards including several honorary doctorate degrees from academic institutions, including Harvard University.

Born in Newark, New Jersey, Janet Norwood grew up in Irvington, and graduated from the New Jersey College for Women (now Douglass College) of Rutgers University. She then earned her doctorate at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

Having entered the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics as a part-time junior economist in the early 1970s, she rose to head the agency for thirteen years upon Senatorial-approved four-year appointments, initially by President Jimmy Carter and twice by President Ronald Reagan. She took on management of the agency soon after the Nixon White House ordered the Bureau to cease holding press conferences on the occasion of the monthly release of employment and unemployment data. Immediately following that order, the Congressional Joint Economic Committee decided to restore the public airing of the data by holding public hearings at which it called the Bureau’s head to testify. Norwood developed a reputation for what the Committee cited, at the time of her retirement from Government service in 1991 and completion of 137 appearances over 13 year before it, her “integrity, professionalism, and impartiality.”

Frequently finding herself as the sole woman at government agency and professional association meetings, she helped bring recognition to female presence and leadership. Among the first group of women to be admitted to the Cosmos Club, in Washington, D.C., she became its first female president in 1995. When often asked, especially by young women, for guidance about career development, she advised them to have a supportive husband. She had married at the end of her sophomore year of college, when her husband was a private in a World War II Army college training program.


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