Suzan LeVine
• Member of the Supervisory Board
• Member of the Audit Committee
• Member of the Strategy and Risk Committee
Biography
Suzan LeVine was appointed Commissioner for the Employment Security Department in 2018. She was US ambassador to the Swiss Confederation and the Principality of Liechtenstein from 2014 to 2017. Her participation on the Career Connect Washington Task Force, on the Board of Directors of CareerWise Colorado, on the Rework America Task Force set up by the Markle Foundation and on the CEMETS (Center on the Economics and Management of Education and Training) Advisory Board at ETH University in Zurich gave her an opportunity to share her passion on issues surrounding apprenticeships and careers. She was previously focused on education, technology, community, innovation, travel, corporate social responsibility and youth awareness. She worked at Microsoft, and at Expedia as Vice President of Sales and Marketing for luxury travel. She co-founded two non-profits: the Kavana Cooperative and an Advisory Board for ILABS (Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences) at Washington University. She graduated from Brown University with a Bachelor of Arts in English and a Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering specialized in aerospace applications.
Other offices and positions held within the Group
None
Main offices and positions held outside the Group
• Commissioner for the Washington State Employment Security Department (United States)
• Director: The National Association of State Workforce Agencies (NASWA) (United States), CareerWise Colorado (United States), The American-Swiss Foundation (United States),
• Member of the Markle Foundation’s Rework America Task Force (United States)
• Member of the Advisory Board of the CEMETS (Center on the Economics and Management of Education and Training) at ETH University in Zurich (Switzerland)
Offices and positions held outside the Group in the last five years
Positions listed above as well as the following office:
US Ambassador to the Swiss Confederation and the Principality of Liechtenstein (term ended in 2017)