Hazel
Reid O'Leary (born May 17,
1937) was the seventh United States Secretary of Energy, from 1993 to 1997,
appointed by President Bill Clinton. She was the
first woman and first African American to hold the position. She served as
president of Fisk University,
a historically black college and her alma mater, from 2004
to 2013. O'Leary's tenure at Fisk came amid financial difficulty for the
school, during which time she increased enrollment and contentiously used the
school's art collection to raise funds. O'Leary received her bachelor's degree
from Fisk before earning her Bachelor of Laws degree from Rutgers School of Law.
O'Leary worked as a prosecutor in New Jersey and then in a private
consulting/accounting firm before joining the Carter Administration. O'Leary
returned to the private sector and rejoined the government as the first
Secretary of Energy of the Clinton administration. As Secretary of Energy,
O'Leary declassified documents detailing how the United States had previously
conducted secret testing on the effects of radiation on unsuspecting American
citizens. O'Leary received criticism for her excessive spending as secretary. Hazel
Reid was born in Newport News, Virginia.
Her parents, Russel E. Reid and Hazel Reid, were both physicians. They divorced
when she was 18 months old Her father and stepmother, a teacher named Mattie
Pullman Reid, raised Hazel and her older sister Edna Reid, primarily in
the East End neighborhood. Hazel
attended school in a segregated school system in Newport News for eight years. She
and her sister were then sent to live with an aunt in Essex County, New Jersey,
and attend Arts High School, an integrated school. She earned a bachelor's
degree at Fisk University in Nashville in 1959. She then married Carl Rollins and
had a son before returning to school and earning her Bachelor of
Laws degree from Rutgers Law School in
Newark in 1966. O'Leary worked as a prosecutor in New Jersey on organized crime
cases, later becoming an assistant attorney general
for the state. In 1969, after obtaining a divorce, O'Leary moved to Washington,
D.C., where she joined the consulting/accounting firm Coopers & Lybrand.During the Carter administration,
O'Leary was appointed assistant administrator of the Federal Energy
Administration, general counsel of the Community Services Administration,
and administrator of the Economic Regulatory Administration at the newly
created Department of Energy.
At the Department of Energy, Hazel met her third husband, Jack O'Leary. In 1981
O'Leary and her husband established the consulting firm O'Leary &
Associates in Morristown, New Jersey,
where she served as vice president and general counsel. After Jack died of
cancer, Hazel moved to Minnesota. From 1989 to 1993 she worked as
an executive vice president of the Northern States Power
Company, a Minnesota-based public utilities. In a press conference on December 21, 1992, held in Little Rock, Arkansas, then President-elect Bill Clinton announced his intention to nominate O'Leary as Secretary of Energy. Clinton officially made the nomination on
January 20, 1993, and the Senate confirmed O'Leary
by unanimous consent the next day O'Leary became the first woman and first
African American to serve as Secretary of Energy. She was also the first
Secretary of Energy to have worked for an energy company. At the time she led
the Department of Energy, it had an annual budget of $18 billion] and approximately 18,000 employees. O'Leary challenged the way the
department had traditionally been run, particularly its focus on developing and
testing nuclear weapons. During her tenure, the size of the Department of
Energy was reduced by a third. It was also a target for Republicans who wanted
it eliminated entirely While reducing the size of the department overall,
O'Leary shifted resources toward efficient and renewable energy sources, a
priority of the Clinton administration.