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Neil Skene
Neil Skene, a private investor and corporate executive in Tallahassee, has a 35-year career in revitalizing and redirecting companies as well as long experience as a journalist covering courts, government and American politics.
He is vice chairman and a principal shareholder of MedAffinity Corporation, a start-up company providing electronic-health-records software and services to health-care practitioners. He has just concluded 2˝ years as part-time special counsel to the secretary of the Florida Department of Children and Families, a once-troubled agency which has become a national leader in child welfare. He is writing a third volume of the history of the Florida Supreme Court, covering the period since 1972 through the early 200s, including the famous 2000 election cases.
Neil served for seven years as president of Congressional Quarterly Inc., a nationally respected Washington publisher of books, journals and newsletters that became a pioneer in electronic publishing and integrated newsroom operations. He was a trustee of the Poynter Institute for Media Studies for 14 years, and for 10 years served on the board of directors of the Times Publishing Co. in St. Petersburg. He was a reporter, assistant city editor, and capital bureau chief for the St. Petersburg Times before becoming editor of its sister paper, the Evening Independent, in 1984. After 20 years with Times Publishing and CQ, Neil became senior vice president for editorial and product development for an Internet pioneer in Boston, Individual Inc. After the acquisition of Individual in 1998, he co-founded Classified Intelligence (now part of the Advanced Interactive Media Group) to focus on the shift of classified advertising to the Internet, and he remains a principal of the organization.
He was the Schumann Distinguished Professor of Journalism at Mercer University in 2009, and taught political communication in the political science master’s program at Florida State. He also taught professional programs in newsroom management in Lebanon, Eritrea, South Africa and Swaziland. He was a member of the Mercer Law School Board of Visitors 1985-92, including two years as chairman, and in 1990 became the founding chair of the Board of Advisers of the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California at Berkeley, one of the country’s most prominent journalism programs.
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