Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts
President Obama Announces More Key Administration
Posts, 5/13/2010
WASHINGTON
– Today, President Barack Obama announced his intent to
appoint the following individuals to key administration
posts:
• Thomas R. Acevedo, Member,
National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
•
• Derek J. Bailey,
Member, National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
•
• Robin A.
Butterfield, Member, National Advisory Council on
Indian Education
•
• Robert B.
Cook, Member, National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
•
• Deborah
Jackson-Dennison, Member, National Advisory Council
on Indian Education
•
• Alyce Spotted
Bear, Member, National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
•
• Irasema Coronado,
Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of the Commission
for Environmental
Cooperation
•
• Geoffrey Garver,
Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of the Commission
for Environmental Cooperation
•
• Felicia
Marcus, Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of
the Commission for Environmental
Cooperation
•
• Diane Takvorian,
Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of the Commission
for Environmental
Cooperation
•
• Jonathan
Waterhouse, Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee
of the Commission for Environmental
Cooperation
•
President Obama
said, “The expertise and commitment these men and
women bring to their roles will make them tremendous assets
to my administration, and I look forward to working with
them in the months and years ahead.”
President Obama announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to key administration posts:
Thomas R.
Acevedo, Appointee for Member, National Advisory Council on
Indian Education
Thomas Acevedo is the CEO for
S&K Technologies, Inc. a company wholly owned by the Salish
& Kootenai Tribes, of which he is a member. Mr. Acevedo
previously served as the Chief of Staff for the Mohegan
Tribe of Connecticut and the Chief of Staff for the National
Indian Gaming Commission. He has served on the boards of
several national Indian organizations throughout his career.
Mr. Acevedo is a graduate of the University of Montana and
of the University of New Mexico School of
Law.
Derek J. Bailey, Appointee for Member,
National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
Derek J. Bailey was sworn in as Tribal
Chairman of the Grand Traverse Band on December 11, 2008.
Chairman Bailey is the fifth Chairman since the Grand
Traverse Band was federally reaffirmed in May 1980, and the
youngest in the Tribe’s history. He is currently the
Chairman of the Inter-Tribal Council of Michigan, and most
recently selected as the Chairman of CORA (Chippewa/Ottawa
Resource Authority). He holds a Master’s degree in Social
Work, graduating from Grand Valley State University in 1998.
Robin A. Butterfield, Appointee for Member,
National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
Robin Butterfield is a Senior Liaison
within the Minority Community Outreach Department of the
National Education Association. Before working at NEA, Ms
Butterfield was the Professional Development Specialist at
the Center for School Improvement within the Bureau of
Indian Affairs, located in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Ms.
Butterfield worked at the classroom level in tribal and
public schools in Wisconsin; coordinated the Salem-Keizer
Indian Education Program at the district level in Oregon;
served in the position of Indian Education/Civil Rights
Specialist for the Oregon Department of Education for nine
years; and worked at two different regional educational
technical assistance centers, Northwest Regional Educational
Laboratory and the Gonzaga University Indian Education
Technical Assistance Center III. She is an enrolled member
of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska with ancestry from the
White Earth Ojibwa Tribe of Minnesota. Ms. Butterfield
received her B.A in English/Secondary Education from the
University of Puget Sound, her M.S. in Elementary Education
from the University of Wisconsin/Madison, and her
Administrative Certification from Portland State
University.
Robert B. Cook, Appointee for Member,
National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
Robert B. Cook is an enrolled member
of the Oglala Sioux Tribe (Oglala Lakota) and serves as the
Principal of Pine Ridge High School on the Pine Ridge Indian
Reservation. Mr. Cook has over twenty years of teaching and
administrative experience in American Indian education,
serving in both tribal and public schools. He is a member
of the Technical Review Panel of the National Indian
Education Study, a member of the South Dakota Indian
Education Advisory Council and recently completed his term
as President of the National Indian Education Association.
Mr. Cook graduated from Black Hills State University with a
degree in Secondary Education and received his master’s
degree in Education Administration from Oglala Lakota
College.
Deborah Jackson-Dennison, Appointee for
Member, National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
Dr. Deborah Jackson-Dennison is the
Superintendent of Window Rock Unified School District No. 8
located in the Navajo Indian Nation and is an enrolled
member of the Navajo Tribe. She has also served as
Superintendent of Schools for Ganado Unified School District
No. 20 also located on the Navajo Indian Nation. Dr.
Jackson-Dennison has provided over 24 years of service as an
educator, 11 as a classroom teacher at both at the high
school and college levels, and 13 as a school administrator,
including 8 as a school district superintendent. She earned
an Associates degree from Dine College in 1981, a B.A. in
Education from the University of New Mexico in 1986, and
both her Masters and Ed.D. degrees in Educational Leadership
and Policy Studies from Arizona State University in 1997 and
2001.
Alyce Spotted Bear, Appointee for Member,
National Advisory Council on Indian
Education
Alyce Spotted Bear is an enrolled
member of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Tribes of the
Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota. Spotted
Bear, a former Tribal Chairman, has worked at all levels of
Indian education, including as a teacher, principal, school
superintendent, federal programs administrator, and college
instructor/administrator. Ms. Spotted Bear is currently the
Vice President for Native American Studies at the Fort
Berthold Community College in North Dakota. She earned her
bachelor and master degrees in education from Dickinson
State College, and Pennsylvania State College, respectively,
and completed coursework for a Ph.D. in Education at Cornell
University.
Irasema Coronado, Appointee for
Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of the Commission
for Environmental Cooperation
Irasema Coronado,
Ph.D. currently serves as an Associate Provost of The
University of Texas at El Paso. Dr. Coronado is also an
Associate Professor in the Political Science Department and
a faculty member in the Environmental Science and
Engineering Ph.D. program. Dr. Coronado has served as
Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts (2006-2008),
chair of the Political Science Department (2005- 2006), and
Assistant Professor of the Center for Inter-American and
Border Studies (1999-2003) at The University of Texas at El
Paso. Dr. Coronado was also a Fulbright Scholar at the
Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez in Mexico
(2004-2005), and a faculty member at the University of the
Incarnate Word in San Antonio, Texas (1995-1999). Dr.
Coronado has held other academic and visiting scholar
positions at the University of Texas at San Antonio
(1998-1999), the University of Arizona (1997 and 2001), El
Colegio de la Frontera Norte in Sonora, Mexico (1992-1995),
and Cochise College (1991). Dr. Coronado is currently a
Board member of Frontera Women’s Foundation, the Coalition
Against Violence Toward Women and Children on the Border,
and FEMAP (Mexican Federation of Private Associations). Dr.
Coronado holds a B.A. from the University of South Florida
and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of
Arizona.
Geoffrey Garver, Appointee for Member,
Joint Public Advisory Committee of the Commission for
Environmental Cooperation
Geoffrey Garver is
currently an Adjunct Law Professor at the University of
Montreal in Montreal, Canada. Mr. Garver also serves as an
independent environmental consultant for the Organization of
American States and the Secretariat for Environmental
Matters for the Dominican Republic-Central America Free
Trade Agreement region. From 2000 to 2007, Mr. Garver
served as Director of Submissions on Enforcement Matters at
the Commission for Environmental Cooperation for North
America. From 1989 to 1993 and 1995 to 2000, Mr. Garver was
a trial attorney and then became Acting Assistant Chief in
the U.S. Department of Justice, Environment and Natural
Resources Division. From 1993 to 1995, Mr. Garver served as
a Special Assistant and Senior Policy Counsel to the
Assistant Administrator for Enforcement and Compliance
Assurance at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. And
from 1987 to 1989, Mr. Garver was a Law Clerk to then Chief
Judge Conrad K. Cyr in the United States District Court for
the District of Maine. Mr. Garver holds a B.S. from Cornell
University and a J.D. from the University of Michigan Law
School. Mr. Garver is currently pursuing an L.L.M. and a
Ph.D. at McGill University.
Felicia Marcus,
Appointee for Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of the
Commission for Environmental Cooperation
Felicia
Marcus is currently Western Director for the Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC). From 2001 to 2008, Ms.
Marcus served as Executive Vice-President and Chief
Operating Officer of the Trust for Public Land, a national
non-profit devoted to conserving land for people. From 1993
to 2001, Ms. Marcus was appointed by President Clinton as
Regional Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency for Region IX, which encompasses California, Arizona,
Nevada, Hawaii, former trust territories in the Pacific, and
over 140 federally-recognized Indian Tribes. From 1989 to
1991, Ms. Marcus was appointed to the Board of Public Works
for the City of Los Angeles. Earlier in her career, Ms.
Marcus served as a Law Clerk to Judge Harry Pregerson of the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Ms.
Marcus is a member of many non-profit Boards and Advisory
Councils, including the Public Policy Institute of
California, the Metropolitan Water District - Blue Ribbon
Committee, Urban Habitat, Natural Heritage Institute, and
the Center for Diversity and the Environment. Ms. Marcus
has an A.B. from Harvard College and a J.D. from New York
University School of Law.
Diane Takvorian,
Appointee for Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of the
Commission for Environmental Cooperation
Diane
Takvorian is currently the Executive Director and a Founder
of Environmental Health Coalition (EHC), where over the past
30 years she has built grassroots campaigns to address toxic
pollution, discriminatory land use, and unsustainable energy
policies in the San Diego/Tijuana region. Ms. Takvorian is
also a co-founder of the California Environmental Justice
Alliance, a coalition working to address environmental
justice issues throughout California. Prior to founding the
EHC, Ms. Takvorian managed programs at Community Congress of
San Diego (1978-1981), Social Advocates for Youth
(1976-1978), and the HELP Center of San Diego (1974-1976).
From 1984 to 2001, Ms. Takvorian served as a faculty member
in the School of Social Work at San Diego State University.
Ms. Takvorian currently serves on the California Global
Warming Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of the
California Environmental Protection Agency. In 1998,
President Clinton appointed Ms. Takvorian to the Border
Environmental Cooperation Commission. In 2008, Ms.
Takvorian received the James Irvine Foundation Leadership
Award and the Environment Section of the American Public
Health Association Calver Award. Ms. Takvorian holds a B.S.
and an M.A. in Social Work from San Diego State
University.
Jonathan Waterhouse, Appointee for
Member, Joint Public Advisory Committee of the Commission
for Environmental Cooperation
Jonathan
Waterhouse is the Director of the Yukon River Inter-Tribal
Watershed Council (YRITWC), a non-profit organization made
up of 70 Tribes and First Nations, created to preserve and
protect the Yukon Watershed and Native cultures. During his
tenure at YRITWC, Mr. Waterhouse worked to develop the
BackHaul Program that removed millions of pounds of
recyclables and hazardous waste from the Yukon watershed.
Prior to joining YRITWC, Mr. Waterhouse had oversight over
management, operations, and financial matters for Green
Connection (2003-2004), Alaska Airlines (2000-2003), and
Pavlof Services, Inc. (1995-2000). From 1997-2000, Mr.
Waterhouse served as City Councilman for the City of Cold
Bay, Alaska. In 1995, Mr. Waterhouse retired from a twenty
year career in the United States Navy as a decorated Chief
Petty Officer. Mr. Waterhouse is an Advisory Board Member
and Community Development Director for the Alaska-Sudan
Medical Project, which focuses on building medical clinics
and installing clean water systems in Southern Sudan.
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