In nominating Earl F. Gohl, Jr. to serve as the next federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission, President Barack Obama played up Gohl’s years of experience in Pennsylvania state and local government. Left out of the November 16, 2009, announcement was the fact Gohl has also worked as a lobbyist for Puerto Rico in Washington, DC, and that his wife is a prominent leader of a union representing federal employees.
Gohl received his Bachelor of Arts from Rider College and his Master of Public Administration from Pennsylvania State University (1973).
According to the Obama administration, Gohl’s first job was spent working for the State Association of Boroughs in Pennsylvania, followed by serving as the executive assistant to the mayor of Harrisburg.
Gohl also served as deputy secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Community Affairs. In this capacity he reportedly awarded and administered $100 million annually in housing and community development programs benefiting communities within the Appalachian region.
Gohl served in Pennsylvania Governor Robert Casey’s Washington, DC, office during 1993-1994, where he was listed as a budget analyst and director of the office. The sweeping Republican victory in November 1994 cost Gohl his job, and those of others working in the office, thanks to Republican Tom Ridge’s victory in the gubernatorial contest against Democrat Mark Singel.