Ann Sweeney

Vice President, People And Culture at Mount Auburn Cemetery

Ann Sweeney has extensive experience in human resources and talent acquisition. Ann has held various leadership roles throughout their career, including Vice President of People and Culture at Mount Auburn Cemetery, Vice President of Human Resources at Cambridge Consultants, and Principal and Founder of Acadia Consulting.

Ann has a proven track record of rebuilding HR functions, creating best business practices, and implementing successful talent acquisition programs. Ann has also demonstrated expertise in areas such as global immigration, talent mobility, affirmative action planning, and diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.

Throughout their career, Ann has been instrumental in developing and implementing COVID safety protocols, virtual benefits enrollment and onboarding processes, and support plans for new parents. Ann has also managed employment compliance and immigration activities on a local, national, and global scale, ensuring the smooth operation of these functions.

Overall, Ann has a strong background in HR leadership and has successfully driven change and excellence in the organizations they have worked for.

Ann Sweeney received a BA in English from Rutgers University. There is no specific information about the start and end years of their education at Rutgers University.

Location

Cambridge, United States

Links

Previous companies


Org chart


Teams


Offices


Mount Auburn Cemetery

1 followers

Mount Auburn Cemetery has been designated a National Historic Landmark by the Department of the Interior, recognizing it as one of the country's most significant cultural landscapes. Founded in 1831, it was the first large-scale designed landscape open to the public in the United States. Today its beauty, historical associations and horticultural collections are internationally renowned. Our founders believed that burying and commemorating the dead was best done in a tranquil and beautiful natural setting at a short distance from the city center. They also believed that the Cemetery should be a place for the living, "embellishing" the natural landscape with ornamental plantings, monuments, fences, fountains and chapels. This inspired concept was copied widely throughout the United States, giving birth to the rural cemetery movement and the tradition of garden cemeteries. Their popularity led, in turn, to the establishment of America's public parks.


Industries

Employees

51-200

Links