Bill Walczak

Bill Walczak is a community activist in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. In April 2013 he became a candidate for mayor of Boston.

Family
Walczak is a resident of Savin Hill where he lives with his wife, Linda. Originally from New Jersey, he came to Boston on a Boston University scholarship but dropped out after one semester to work on the lettuce boycott of the United Farm Workers.

Education
Walczak has a Bachelor's degree in history from the University of Massachusetts in Boston. He is also a member of the board and former chairman of the University of Massachusetts Boston Alumni and Friends.

Career
Walczak founded and ran the nonprofit Codman Square Health Center in Dorchester for more than thirty years. Walczak co-founded the center 1979, which provides over 22,000 area residents with primary medical care, urgent care, radiology, dentistry, and eye care services. According to Walczak, “Codman Square was burning down and it needed something and we decided that was a health center. We figured if you combine the impact of good health care and good education we could turn peoples’ lives around.” Walczak had come to the attention of the neighborhood association in 1979 by asking a lot of questions, and was chosen as the Health Center's director. Walczak established the health center in the basement of an old library and eventually took over the entire building.

In 2000, Walczak co-founded the Codman Academy Charter Public School and remains its president.

In early 2011 he became President of Steward Carney Hospital in Dorchester. In April 2012 he left the position in controversial circumstances. There was speculation that Walczak's activist background did not fit with the ethos of the private company, Seward, that owned the hospital. Walczak had proposed a three-year plan which required additional financial investment from Seward. Seward claimed Walczak had resigned, though Walczak denied this.

He is currently Vice President of Community Relations at Shawmut Design and Construction.

Walczak is the founding president of the Massachusetts Nonprofit Network.

Walczak is the chairman of STRIVE, a job training program located in Dorchester; and is a member of the Executive Advisory Council for WBUR Radio.

Run for Mayor
Walczak announced his candidacy on April 7, 2013, at which time he was the seventh person to announce a bid for Boston mayor.

Awards & Honors

 * The Public Health Award for Outstanding Service to the Community from the Harvard School of Public Health (1994),
 * Health Center Director of the Year from the Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers (1993)
 * The Robert Quinn Award for Outstanding Community Leadership from the University of Massachusetts- Boston (2008)
 * Lifetime Achievement Award from the Boston Business Journal (2010)
 * Outstanding Leadership in Promoting and Protecting the Health of the Residents of the Commonwealth award from the Massachusetts Health Council (2010).