Sharon Decker

Sharon Allred Decker (born 1957) is an American businesswoman and political figure who served as North Carolina Secretary of Commerce under the McCrory Administration. In that role, she was also a member of the North Carolina Cabinet.[1]

Sharon Allred Decker
North Carolina Secretary of Commerce
In office
January, 2013  January, 2015
Preceded byKeith Crisco
Succeeded byJohn Skvarla
Personal details
Born1957
Stanly County, North Carolina
ResidenceRutherfordton, North Carolina
Alma materUniversity of North Carolina at Greensboro

Business career

Decker graduated summa cum laude from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. From 1980 to 1997, Decker served at Duke Energy Corporation (formerly known as Duke Power Company) as Corporate Vice President. Her 18 years tenure with the energy provider included working in areas from marketing and community relations to customer service. She helped establish the creation of Duke Energy's 24-hour customer service center.[2]

In later years, Decker was the founding president of The Lynnwood Foundation, served on the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce and was president of the Doncaster division of Tanner Companies.[3] She was the Charlotte "Woman of the Year" in 1998.

Decker is also a lay pastor in the Presbyterian Church. She and her husband, Bob, have four children.

gollark: According to Wikipedia, tin has 10 stable isotopes, so you could probably get it to one, um, dectet per atom that way.
gollark: It is probably also true that in both instances of "rebuild from practically nothing" you lose a lot, but in the eldræverse case that losing a lot would still put them substantially above us.
gollark: Anyway, in the middle of that graph you get complex interdependent highly globalised societies like ours, except with no convenient shortcut to bootstrapping your technology again.
gollark: I'm talking about maintaining technology level, not exactly the entire society.
gollark: Wikipedia, while not exactly useful to rebuild civilization from, fits 20 times over on one of those tiny 256GB SD cards.

References


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