It’s always exciting to add new members to our team. Here are some of the fresh faces at North Shore Bank.
Oak Creek teller Sara Connolly was born in Muskego and still lives there. She previously worked for Sendik’s Food Market. “I am a professional makeup artist and licensed lash technician!” Sara says.
Paraplanner Tamara Drinkwine, who joins the Investments Department, is originally from Green Bay. “I spent 10 years in Minneapolis and another 13 in Wausau, but I’m back home now,” she says. She previously worked with financial advisors at Ameriprise Financial and is getting her master’s through North Central University in Minneapolis. “I love numbers,” Tammy says. “I’m a numbers girl — even though in the 10th grade, I was in the 4 percent level for math proficiency.”
Mortgage loan officer Taimur Khan was formerly a Community Reinvestment Act mortgage loan officer with US Bank. He says, “A cool fact about me is that I can speak four languages: English, Urdu, Hindi, and Punjabi. I have Spanish on my bucket list.”
Mortgage loan officer Anthony Larke is from Germantown and was previously a mortgage lender at AnchorBank/Old National Bank. “I ride a 2007 Harley Davidson Street Glide,” Tony says.
Sturgeon Bay universal banker Dale Massey says, “I have lived in rural Algoma all of my life, except for four years of college.” Dale recently retired from Door County Medical Center, where he was the patient access manager. He has been married to his wife, Cindy, for 39 years, and they have three children and six grandchildren. “I love going on adventures with the grandchildren,” he says.
Franklin teller Patience Scribner is from Shawano and previously worked at a call center for Disney. She says, “I also work for my dad, building dirt-track race cars for people all over the United States.”
Mortgage loan officer Eric Van Den Busch is from Green Bay. He previously worked as an organizational development consultant. “I helped businesspeople (many of them Realtors) increase communication and sales skills, grow their business, and become more organized and effective at their work,” he says. Eric has taught 194 credits at four regional colleges in the areas of leadership, marketing, and finance — “over nine years of full-time experience,” he notes.