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responsible for program development and implementation of Disability
Employment program. I devised methods for evaluating courses at all learning
centers and for collecting data for reports. I maintained data on all training
programs Department-wide, as well as specific information on programs
offered by immediate staff.
From 1974 to 1980, I served as a Personnel Officer at the Department of
Labor in Employee Relations and as a Training Officer. There I supervised 40
plus personnel and training employees for the Mine Safety and Health
Administration. I developed, initiated and managed all Human Relations and
Human Relations Development programs for 3,000 plus employees. I was also
responsible for HR programs, including classification, recruitment,
performance management, training, labor relations and awards.
Following my federal service, I worked from 1994 to 2004 for Vantage
Human Resource Services Inc., as Program Director and Career
Coach/Trainer. As a Career Consultant and Life Coach from 2001 to the
present, I serve as executive and career coach for individual clients and
employees of Nuclear Regulatory Commission (SES Candidate Development
Program), Internal Revenue Service (Executive Readiness Program),
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center (Project Manager and Career Coach),
Department of Labor (SESCDP and Manager Career Resource Center),
Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), Health and Human Services and
other federal agencies.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
I am Keith Behr and I served with the Uniformed Division of the United
States Secret Service. Beginning in 2013, while still an active federal
employee with the United States Secret Service, I was trained to become a
Eucharistic Minister serving Communion to the Catholic patients at the
Baltimore-Washington Medical Center, on behalf of St. John the Evangelist
Roman Catholic Church in Severna Park, Maryland. In 1995, while traveling
with President Clinton to Indonesia, I was bothered by the fact that so many
individuals were living in poverty – as we rested comfortably and dined
luxuriously in a five-star hotel. That was just one of many trips that made an
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