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Pitt Magazine

Pitt celebrates Paul Supowitz upon his retirement

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Man wearing Pitt shirt.
Paul Supowitz lends a hand on Pitt's United Way Day of Caring.

Paul Supowitz鈥檚 family was in the shoe business.

It all started in the early 1900s with a single cart on Fifth Avenue in Pittsburgh, but as the steel industry grew, so, too, did the business. Soon, S&S Shoes occupied multiple storefronts in bustling towns along the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, selling everything from steel-toed boots to Mary Janes.

For most of his teenage years, Supowitz dragged himself out of bed on Saturday mornings to work in the warehouse on the city鈥檚 South Side or at one of the locations in nearby Homestead. But, by the time he graduated from Pitt鈥檚 School of Law in 1989, S&S was no more. The steel industry collapse and resulting population tumble had forced the business into bankruptcy.

Supowitz remembers the decline well. Within the span of a decade, the flourishing Western Pennsylvania of his youth was nearly unrecognizable. With perhaps one exception 鈥 the 91porn视频. 聽

Pitt stood as a kind of beacon for the demoralized region, promising better days ahead. It鈥檚 the reason Supowitz, after an eight-year stint in environmental law, eagerly returned to the University, ready to play his part in both the city鈥檚 history and its future.

鈥淚 feel very fortunate to have been at Pitt for these 27 years and to be a part of the renaissance of Pittsburgh,鈥 Supowitz says. 鈥淭o be at a place that鈥檚 had such an outsized role in that change has always been a big motivator for me.鈥

Supowitz retired from Pitt on Aug. 23 having played an outsized part in many of the University鈥檚 most impactful developments in the past quarter century.

鈥淲hen I think of the phrase 鈥業t鈥檚 Possible at Pitt,鈥 Paul Supowitz is one of the first people who comes to mind,鈥 says Chancellor Joan Gabel. 鈥淒uring his 20-plus-year career at the 91porn视频, Paul has epitomized Pitt鈥檚 spirit of possibility, from his leadership in preserving and strengthening the University鈥檚 relationship with the commonwealth to his contributions to several strategic initiatives on behalf of this office. Personally, I鈥檓 incredibly grateful for his invaluable support during my first year as chancellor, and I wish him all the best in retirement.鈥

Supowitz began his Pitt career in 1997 as an associate general counsel tasked with helping to secure approvals for the Petersen Events Center on Allequippa Street and the Bouquet Gardens apartment complex near Posvar Hall. It was not exactly a plush assignment.

鈥淎t that time, our relationships with the neighbors were not good,鈥 Supowitz says. 鈥淲e really dug in and turned that around. We worked hard not just to get those projects off the ground but also to revitalize the relationships with the neighbors.鈥

One person who took notice was Renny Clark, then the vice chancellor for community and governmental relations. He remembers Supowitz being both methodical and even-tempered 鈥 a product of his legal education 鈥 and adept at fostering relationships with crucial partners, including the Oakland Business Improvement District and the Oakland Planning and Development Corporation.

Clark and then-Chancellor Mark Nordenberg soon agreed that Supowitz could better serve the University by nurturing and reviving those relationships. He joined Clark鈥檚 office in 2002 as associate vice chancellor for commonwealth, city and county relations. In 2006, when Clark left to be Nordenberg鈥檚 chief of staff, Supowitz became vice chancellor for community and government relations, leading Pitt鈥檚 interactions with all levels of government.

Many of Pitt鈥檚 signature developments, such as Schenley Plaza, the Petersen Sports Complex (the 12-acre site for baseball, softball and soccer), the refurbishment of Bigelow Boulevard and the creation of the Community Engagement Centers (CECs) came to fruition under Supowitz, proving Clark and Nordenberg鈥檚 hunch correct. Supowitz also led the University through what Nordenberg calls 鈥渟ome of our most historically demanding times in terms of commonwealth relations,鈥 including a protracted state funding dispute.

鈥淲hat everyone who has worked with Paul knows is that he is very smart and completely trustworthy,鈥 says Nordenberg.聽鈥淒epending upon the circumstances, he has the ability to be either a forceful advocate or a respectful listener, complementary abilities that are indispensable in governmental relations work.鈥

Supowitz wasn鈥檛 just a force on campus, says Kevin Washo, senior vice chancellor for university relations and the chancellor's chief of staff. He鈥檚 also left his mark on the surrounding community, serving on multiple boards, including the Oakland Task Force and Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not often you get to make an impact both internally and externally,鈥 Washo says. 鈥淧aul was in a unique position where he was able to do amazing work for Pitt and with the boards he served on. And he did it with integrity.鈥

Clark believes Supowitz鈥檚 success, on campus and beyond, had as much to do with what he did as what he never did: He never got frustrated. He never ignored a call. And he never let a misconception about Pitt go uncorrected.

Lina Dostilio, the vice chancellor of engagement and community affairs (whose hiring Supowitz calls the best thing he did for the University), would add one more never to Clark鈥檚 list: Supowitz never thought any job or any person was beneath him.

鈥淗e led in a way that encouraged transparency and warm relationships,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen Paul led a team, you knew that team鈥檚 work would be really effective.鈥

One of her most enduring memories of working with Supowitz, and maybe the one most emblematic of his character, happened on a summer day in Pittsburgh鈥檚 Homewood neighborhood. It was 2017, the early days of Pitt鈥檚 community engagement initiative, when the now-thriving CEC was an idea but not yet a reality. The University invited residents and key partners in the Homewood community to a picnic to celebrate their collaboration.

As the afternoon wore on and the temperature crept up, they began to run out of refreshments. It was Supowitz who took multiple trips to the drugstore down the street to buy cases of water and lug them back to the celebration, ensuring no one went thirsty.

鈥淗e is the epitome of a servant leader,鈥 Dostilio says. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 think of anyone more invested in Pitt being a better version of itself.鈥