J. Randolph "Randy" Lewis (born c. 1950) is an American businessman, a disability employment advocate,[1] and author.[2]
Lewis is a former senior vice president of a Fortune 50 company, and board member of a national restaurant chain.[3] He was the head of supply chain and logistics at Walgreens for 17 years until his retirement in 2013.[4] Over his last ten years there, he created a program in its distribution centers to integrate large numbers of people with disabilities as equals into its workforce.[1]
Lewis was a Chicago-based partner at Ernst & Young and Walgreens was his client by the late 1980s.[5] His primary client in 1992, Walgreens offered him a position.[4]
Walgreens
Lewis joined Walgreens in 1992 as divisional vice president, logistics and planning and promoted to vice president to head its supply chain in 1996. He was promoted to senior vice president in 1999.[3] During his time there, Walgreens expanded from 1,500 to 8,000 stores.[4] When he took over in 1996, Walgreens began to contract outside agencies that employed people with disabilities in its distribution centers on a limited basis, typically in non-production areas.[6]
List of other companies who have implemented this program
Walgreens recognized as Diversity Council Honors Award Winner – 2011[11]
Human Spirit Award from Georgetown University Conference on Employment of People With Disabilities – 2013[12]
Books, talks, and miscellaneous
No Greatness Without Goodness: How a Father's Love Changed a Company and Sparked a Movement by Randy Lewis[2]
Lewis has a contribution in the book Able! How One Company's Extraordinary Workforce Changed the Way We Look at Disability Today by Nancy Henderson[13]