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Duke鈥檚 Steady Legal Hand Bids Farewell

Since 1987, Kate Hendricks has provided wise counsel for growing institution

Kate Hendricks
Since 1987, Kate Hendricks has provided steady legal guidance for Duke. Photo by Stephen Schramm.

It鈥檚 fair to say that most of the time when human resources professionals and lawyers find themselves working together on something, things have gotten complicated.

Since 1987, when those often delicate and important situations have occurred, Kate Hendricks, Duke鈥檚 deputy general counsel for labor and employment, has been at the table, providing collaborators with wisdom drawn from her deep legal experience and reassurance through her innate calm confidence.

鈥淪he has a way of keeping everyone even-keeled,鈥 said Duke Health System鈥檚 Chief Human Resources Officer and Senior Vice President Rhonda Brandon, who works with Hendricks often. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like when you鈥檙e on an airplane and you hit turbulence. If you look at the flight attendant and they鈥檙e fine, you know you鈥檙e going to be OK.鈥

Kate Hendricks At the end of December 2022, Hendricks will retire from the place she鈥檚 been an important piece of for three-and-a-half decades. She鈥檒l leave behind an institution that is routinely cited as a best place to work, and a network of colleagues and collaborators who have benefitted from her understanding of the law, her knowledge about Duke, and her commitment to the people who make it go.

鈥淔or the relationships between Duke鈥檚 employees and the institution, between its faculty and its students, and between Duke and anybody who relies on us, trust and respect are core components,鈥 said Duke Chief Audit, Risk and Compliance Officer Leigh Goller. 鈥淜ate has been a faithful steward of both.鈥

While some work has involved student issues, research collaborations and trademarks, most of Hendricks鈥 focus has been on employment and labor laws. With her sharp memory and deep experience, she鈥檚 helped guide Duke leaders toward solutions in often complex 鈥 and usually confidential 鈥 situations involving workplace policies, employment misconduct and union negotiations.

鈥淲e are lawyers, we鈥檙e here to provide the best legal advice to Duke,鈥 Hendricks said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e best served by having a moral compass and making sure that we鈥檙e treating people fairly. You can focus on the laws and regulations, and the like, but ultimately, Duke is going to be best served by treating its employees, its students and others fairly. You have to keep that bigger picture in mind.鈥

Kate HendricksA native of Jackson, Mississippi, Hendricks first came to Duke as a student at the 老牛影视 School of Law. After graduating in 1983, she spent four years working in private practice in Washington, D.C. for a firm which occasionally did work for Duke.

鈥淲hen I would work on our Duke matters, I kept thinking, 鈥榊ou know, I really like it down here,鈥欌 Hendricks said. 鈥淲hen a job opportunity at Duke became available, I jumped at it and never looked back.鈥

In 1987, Hendricks joined Duke鈥檚 team of around a half-dozen lawyers working in the lower level of the Allen Building. At the time, Duke鈥檚 workforce was less than half the size it is now, it operated just one hospital and its world-class research operations were still taking shape.

In the decades to come, the  grew from a handful of attorneys to more than 20 and Hendricks鈥 workspace moved from the Allen Building, to North Pavilion and eventually the American Tobacco Campus. Along the way, she collected stories and experiences which made her an invaluable asset to her colleagues, who sought her guidance when facing complex issues.

鈥淵ou can sit down with Kate and start talking about a situation and she鈥檒l slowly remove her glasses and tell you about cases she remembers from years ago,鈥 said Duke Interim Vice President for Human Resources Antwan Lofton. 鈥淪he鈥檒l go all the way back to the 1980s and can tell you the names of cases, and who was in the meetings. You can鈥檛 replace that.鈥

While she鈥檚 seen immense change during her time at Duke, Hendricks is encouraged by the fact that the  of respect and trust have remained constants. That quality is what kept her at Duke and something she expects will endure long after her work is done. 

鈥淭he folks I have worked with at Duke have always been committed to treating people fairly,鈥 Hendricks said. 鈥淚f we hadn鈥檛 shared that same set of values, I鈥檓 not sure I would have been here that long. But that moral compass, I felt that when I first got here and continue to feel that to this day.鈥

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