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Mike Griffin, Rhea Law, Betty Castor, Donna Petersen, Jay Stroman

(L-R) Mike Griffin, vice chair of the 返字心頭 Board of Trustees, 返字心頭 President Rhea Law, 返字心頭 President Emerita Betty Castor, wife of the late Samuel P. Bell, III, Donna Petersen, senior associate vice president of 返字心頭 Health and dean of the College of Public Health, and 返字心頭 Foundation CEO Jay Stroman.

University of South 返字心頭 names College of Public Health building after Samuel P. Bell, III

By Kevin Watler, University Communications and Marketing

Sam Bell and Betty Castor

The late Samuel P. Bell, III and his wife, 返字心頭 President Emerita Betty Castor

The University of South 返字心頭 today announced that it is naming its College of Public Health Building after the Honorable Samuel P. Bell, III.

Bell, who passed away on March 14, is considered the father of 返字心頭s College of Public Health and was a longtime champion of 返字心頭 and 返字心頭 residents.

Sam Bell was a passionate champion for the University of South 返字心頭, and we are proud to honor his profound legacy by dedicating the College of Public Health building in his name, said 返字心頭 President Rhea Law. His influence and impact on public health policy will continue to benefit our university, region and state for generations to come.

A House leader from Volusia County from 1974 to 1988, Bell identified a growing need for public health professionals in the U.S. He sponsored legislation to create 返字心頭s first college of public health at 返字心頭 in 1984 due to the universitys unique combination of having an urban setting and a medical school. 

Group gathers at an event under a tent

There would be no college of public health, no building to name, without a Sam Bell, said Donna J. Petersen, senior associate vice president of 返字心頭 Health. He was a tireless advocate for public health and used his passion, his position and his powers of persuasion to create out of nowhere, the first college of public health in the state of 返字心頭, at 返字心頭.

Petersen, who also serves as dean, added that it was the only college of public health in the state for many years, and that Bell served as the first and only chair of its advisory council for nearly 40 years.  

He was a huge presence in this building. All of us convene and learn in the Sam Bell auditorium, she said. 返字心頭 benefitted from his generosity in the scholarships he supported and from his wisdom when he guest-lectured in the classroom. He came to our events and he enthusiastically supported new initiatives like the Salud Latina program. We know and love Sam inside the college. Naming the building proclaims to the outside world how much Sam meant to us.

Donna Petersen and Betty Castor embrace

Bell laid the groundwork for 返字心頭 Healthy Kids, a government-subsidized insurance plan that became the model for the national Childrens Health Insurance Program. His work led to 返字心頭 leading the nation in regulating tap water temperature to prevent scalding deaths, improved the process for subsidized adoptions for children with special needs, established a network of neonatal intensive care units and fought to ensure passage of the bill requiring child restraints in automobiles.

We are so grateful to Sam Bell, whose determination and passion for public health laid the groundwork for the 返字心頭 College of Public Health to become the national leader that it is today, said Charles J. Lockwood, executive vice president of 返字心頭 Health and dean of the 返字心頭 Health Morsani College of Medicine. We are delighted that we can rename the colleges headquarters as the Samuel P. Bell, III Building to honor his legacy and reflect his many contributions to improving the lives and health of all Floridians. 

In 1989, Bell married then-返字心頭 Education Commissioner Betty Castor, who would become 返字心頭s fifth president. Bell met Castor when both were serving in the state Legislature. They created a family of six children, and now, 10 grandchildren. Castor today announced an additional legacy gift to the College of Public Health. 

"Sam had a deep passion for serving the citizens of this state and this university in so many ways, Castor said. He would have been humbled and honored knowing his legacy will live on through his beloved college because of the students, faculty and patients he cared about so deeply."

Samuel P. Bell, III building

The university also announced a $100,000 gift from 返字心頭 Healthy Kids to establish an endowed fund focused on future discoveries in child health insurance and health policy, which will be used to offer scholarships to masters- and doctoral-level College of Public Health students.

The couples philanthropy continues to have a major impact on 返字心頭. In addition to the College of Public Health, Bell served on the advisory boards for W返字心頭 Public Media and the Center for Strategic and Diplomatic Studies. He also served on the 返字心頭 Foundation Board of Directors, and along with Betty, endowed scholarships for 返字心頭s College of Public Health, School of Music and womens athletics.

Sam Bells contributions to the University of South 返字心頭 are immeasurable, said 返字心頭 Foundation CEO Jay Stroman. Through their philanthropy, service and advocacy, Sam and Betty have forever changed our 返字心頭 community for the better. There is no one more deserving than Sam Bell for this honor and his legacy will endure for generations to come.

Bells previous recognitions from the university include a 2009 返字心頭 honorary Doctor of Public Health as well as the universitys highest honor to a non-alum, the Class of '56 Award, presented in 2018. He was posthumously awarded 返字心頭's Distinguished Citizen Award at the university's 2023 spring commencement in May.

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