Ron Balsewich is an accomplished Human Resources executive and consultant, retired from Health Care Service Corporation (aka Blue Cross Blue Shield of IL, TX, NM, OK, and MT) after 33 years of experience and achievements. He completed his HCSC career in mid-2017 as Vice President Corporate Human Resources, directing compensation programs from executive through nonexempt levels as well as facilitating annual and long-term goal development. This included ongoing interaction at the senior executive and Board of Directors level. During his career, Ron led several areas of human resources, including employee/labor relations, leadership development, HR technology and service operations, budgeting and planning, policy management, merger & acquisition support, and subsidiary HR/board support. Prior to HCSC, Ron began his HR career with the City of Chicago.
With this broad experience and knowledge, Ron also has been a sought-after speaker at many Conference Board conferences, including Strategic HR Management, HR Metrics, and HR Technology. Not one to “sit on the sidelines” for long, he recently began providing human resources consulting services to organizations and has a strong network within the consulting field.
One of Ron’s passions is supporting people with disabilities, based on personal family matters. In his later years at HCSC, he chaired the company’s “In-Abled” resource group, providing outreach and services to current employees with disabilities as well as promoting the HCSC’s commitment to diversity and inclusion. He continues these efforts today for people with psychological disabilities and sits on the board of a Chicago Suburban chapter of the National Alliance for Mental Illness (NAMI).
Ron has a BS degree, cum laude, in Psychology from Loyola University of Chicago and a Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR) certification. He lives in Evergreen Park, IL with his wife Cathy and has three sons, with one married and one in college, and two granddaughters. In his free time, he enjoys travel, theatre, community service, and family time - especially the grandchildren (and he hopes those types of activities soon can return for everyone).