The Department of the Interior (DOI) is a cabinet-level agency of the federal government that focuses on conservation and use of federal lands. DOI is responsible for preserving the natural wonders of the American landscape for present and future generations to enjoy, while facilitating the development of public lands for use by mining and oil companies. The mission of Interior officials is to implement programs that offer recreational opportunities for all Americans, support American Indian and Alaska Native populations, conduct scientific research, provide stewardship of energy and mineral resources, foster sound use of land and water resources and conserve and protect fish and wildlife.
Although the Department of the Interior has been around for more than 150 years, it has not always been the government’s leading voice on American lands and conservation. In fact, when it was first created by Congress, Interior (originally known as the Home Department) was something of a “kitchen sink” department where various agencies were placed to address domestic matters of one kind or another. As a result, Interior was known during its early years as the “Department of Everything Else,” responsible for such things as the construction of Washington, DC’s water system, oversight of the District of Columbia jail, the colonization of freed slaves in Haiti, exploration of western wilderness, regulation of territorial governments, management of hospitals, universities and public parks, and basic responsibilities for Native Americans, public lands, patents and pensions.
The Department of the Interior (DOI) is one of the oldest cabinet-level departments of the federal government, responsible for programs that manage America’s natural resources and preserve its environment. DOI essentially stewards the lands, waters and species of the United States so that the country can enjoy its natural beauty while also exploiting the precious minerals and fossil fuels contained within the Earth. Interior officials oversee National Parks and other government-designated sanctuaries, enforce laws protecting threatened species of fish and animal life, manage key water supplies that Western urban centers and farmers rely on, monitor mining activities and implement programs affecting Native American and Alaskans, including tribal gambling operations.
The Interior Department has spent $28.6 billion on contractors this decade, according to USAspending.gov. More than 111,000 companies and organizations received Interior funds to provide telecommunications services, research and development, facility operations and maintenance, and engineering and technical services, among functions.
SAIC, Inc.
|
$849,555,670
|
Northrop Grumman
|
$735,705,404
|
Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
|
$571,917,362
|
Nana Regional Corp.
|
$414,394,490
|
Cherryroad GT Inc.
|
$322,496,032
|
Dell Inc.
|
$314,761,168
|
Motorola, Inc.
|
$303,853,272
|
IBM
|
$289,307,843
|
BAE Systems PLC
|
$271,037,910
|
WPP Group PLC
|
$262,758,904
|
NPS Management Policies Create Friction
To Drill or Not to Drill
Indian Trust in Need of Change
Gale Norton (January 2001 - March 2006)
During his political career, Ryan Zinke’s position on climate change has moved from supporting legislation to slow the effects of the phenomenon to doubting that mankind has caused global warming. Now, Zinke, a Montana congressman who was confirmed by a 68 to 31 U.S. Senate vote on March 1, 2017, to be secretary of the Department of the Interior, will be leading one of the departments most tied to climate change. At his confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, he supported coal mining on federal lands, but also opposed the sale or transfer of federal lands.
Zinke was born in Bozeman, Montana, on November 1, 1961, to Ray, a plumber, and Jean Zinke. Zinke played football at Whitefish High School, and after he graduated in 1980 he went on to play center at the University of Oregon. He graduated from there in 1984 with a B.S. in geology. He later earned an MBA from National University in 1991 and an M.S. in global leadership from the University of San Diego in 2003.
Zinke wanted to be a deep-sea diver and was persuaded to join the Navy in 1986. He went into the SEALs, the Navy’s commando unit. He rose quickly through the ranks, but in the mid-1990s took a trip to Montana on the taxpayers’ dime that Zinke claimed was to scout training sites for the SEALs. The Navy thought otherwise—some reports had Zinke using the trip to work on family property—and he was forced to repay the government $211 for his airfare.
Zinke served on the famous (and infamous) SEAL Team Six from 1990 to 1993 and from 1996 to 1999 as a team leader, ground force commander, task force commander and current operations officer, in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia and Kosovo. He also served in Iraq and in 2004 was made deputy and acting commander of Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force Arabian Peninsula. Zinke was never made a commander of a unit, however, and contemporaries pointed to the Montana “scouting” trip as the reason. Zinke denied this and retired in 2008 with the rank of commander.
Zinke returned to Montana and won a seat in the state senate, where he was seen as a moderate Republican. In 2010, he was among more than 1,000 state legislators to sign a letter to President Brack Obama and Congress calling for “comprehensive clean energy jobs and climate change legislation.”
In 2012, Zinke ran for lieutenant governor in the Montana Republican primary, but his ticket finished fifth out of seven entrants. That year, he also founded a Super PAC, Special Operations for America. It paid for anti-Obama advertising that year, but spent far more on “fundraising consulting” fees paid to Continental Divide International, which was owned by Zinke, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. According to Zinke’s 2014 financial report, he resigned from Special Operations for America in 2013, after which it began funding his congressional campaign. However, the following year’s report showed that he was still chairman of the organization in 2014. Super PACs are not supposed to have any connection with the candidates they support.
As part of the 2014 campaign, Zinke sent out fundraising emails with the header “Who killed Osama bin Laden?” In the emails, he wrote “I spent 23 years as a Navy SEAL and served as a Team Leader on SEAL Team Six — the team responsible for the mission to get Osama bin Laden.” What he didn’t mention in the emails was that he’d been out of the Navy for three years when the mission against bin Laden was carried out. During that campaign, Zinke also made a statement saying that while humans have some role in climate change, “the evidence is equally as strong that there are other factors, such as rising ocean temperatures, that have a greater influence.”
Zinke won election to Congress and took seats on the House Armed Services and Natural Resources committees. He was dogged by another controversy when he ran for reelection in 2016. This time, it was a question of whether he actually lived in Montana.
Zinke claimed that he lived at his parents’ old home there. But corporate records show the house belonging to Zinke’s corporation. The house was approved by the city of Whitefish for use as a bed and breakfast, called the Snowfrog Inn, and even has its own webpage. Meanwhile, Zinke appeared to spend much of his time in Santa Barbara, California, home of his wife, Lola. He’s even had fundraisers for other politicians advertised as being held at his Santa Barbara home. He also listed a Santa Barbara address in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing he made for another corporation he owns in 2013. He received twice as many campaign contributions from California in 2016 as he did from Montana. Nevertheless, Zinke won reelection just before being nominated by Donald Trump to lead the Interior Department.
Zinke and his wife, the former Lolita Hand, have two adult sons, Wolfgang and Konrad, and a daughter, Jennifer, who is a U.S. Navy diver.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Ryan Zinke Statement for Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
Zinke’s Nomination Could Bring Questions About Super PAC Ties (by Soo Rin Kim, Center for Responsive Politics)
Trump Taps Montana Congressman Ryan Zinke as Interior Secretary (by Juliet Eilperin, Washington Post)
Zinke Decries Attacks on his Montana Residency (by Jayme Fraser and Holly Michels, The Missoulian)
Does Congressman Zinke Even Live in Montana or is He California Dreamin’? (by Don Pogreba, Intelligent Discontent)
Does Being a Veteran Help Candidates? A Montana Politician Hopes So (by Alan Zarembo, Los Angeles Times)
U.S. House Candidate Profile: Ryan Zinke (by Charles S. Johnson, Ravalli Republic)
His Former Commander Exposes Ryan Zinke’s Navy SEAL Career and Defective “Moral Make-Up” (by Don Pogreba, Intelligent Discontent
President Barack Obama has nominated a new leader for the Department of the Interior—the cabinet-level agency that focuses on conservation and use of federal lands, balancing the preservation of natural wonders with the economic development of public lands. Nominated on February 6, 2013, Sally Jewell is an avid outdoorswoman who has spent her career in the private sector. Jewell was confirmed by the Senate on April 10, succeeding Ken Salazar, who had served since January 20, 2009.
Born in 1955 in England, Jewell is the daughter of Anne (née Murphy), a nurse, midwife and nurse practitioner for 60 years, and Peter Roffey, an anesthesiologist who moved the family to Seattle, Washington, when Sally was four to work at the University of Washington. Sally Jewell graduated in 1973 from Renton High School, and earned a B.S. in mechanical engineering in 1978 at the University of Washington.
Although she worked for Mobil Oil in Oklahoma from 1978 through 1981, Jewell spent twenty years of her career in the banking industry. In 1981, she joined Rainier Bank, which was hiring engineers to advise on lending to oil companies, and stayed after Rainier was acquired by Security Pacific Bank until 1992, when it was acquired by Bank of America. At Security Pacific, Jewell ran the bank’s business-banking activities. Jewell worked for WestOne Bank from 1992 to 1995 and for Washington Mutual from 1995 to 2000.
While at Washington Mutual, Jewell joined the board of outdoor products retailer REI, the nation’s largest consumer cooperative, in 1996. In 2000, the board hired her to be REI’s chief operating officer, and in 2005 she succeeded Dennis Madsen as chief executive officer. Jewell has promoted green policies at REI, which uses energy-efficient building materials, buys renewable energy, and offsets the carbon emissions from store-sponsored travel-adventure packages by buying “green tags,” which subsidize alternative energy in developing countries.
Jewell has sat on the boards of Premera, the National Parks Conservation Association, and the University of Washington Board of Regents. She is also a founding board member and immediate past president of the Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust.
Jewell is a lifelong lover of the outdoors, whose father became an REI member shortly after moving to Seattle and took the family on many camping trips, the first of them to Mount Rainier National Park. She has climbed Vinson Massif (elev.: 16,050 ft.) the highest mountain in Antarctica.
Jewell, who resides in Seattle, is married to Warren Jewell, also an engineer, with whom she has two adult children. A lifelong Democrat, Jewell has made political donations totaling $40,800 since 2006, 44% of it to two trade associations—the Outdoor Industry Association ($11,500) and the Retail Industry Leaders Association ($6,500). The remainder went overwhelmingly to Democratic candidates and causes, including $2,300 to Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, $4,800 to Sen. Patty Murray (D-Washington), $2,000 to Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Washington), and $900 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee in 2012. Her only donations to Republicans have been $1,000 to Rep. Dave Reichert (R-Washington) and $500 to Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s 2009 re-election campaign.
To Learn More:
A Profile of REI’s Sally Jewell: Team player at her Peak (by Monica Soto Ouchi, Seattle Times)
Executive Q & A: Sally Jewell, President and CEO of REI (by Leslie D. Helm, Seattle Business)
Sally Jewell, CEO of Outdoor Retailer REI, Nominated for Interior Secretary (by Danica Zupic, Wildlife Society News)
The Department of the Interior (DOI) is a cabinet-level agency of the federal government that focuses on conservation and use of federal lands. DOI is responsible for preserving the natural wonders of the American landscape for present and future generations to enjoy, while facilitating the development of public lands for use by mining and oil companies. The mission of Interior officials is to implement programs that offer recreational opportunities for all Americans, support American Indian and Alaska Native populations, conduct scientific research, provide stewardship of energy and mineral resources, foster sound use of land and water resources and conserve and protect fish and wildlife.
Although the Department of the Interior has been around for more than 150 years, it has not always been the government’s leading voice on American lands and conservation. In fact, when it was first created by Congress, Interior (originally known as the Home Department) was something of a “kitchen sink” department where various agencies were placed to address domestic matters of one kind or another. As a result, Interior was known during its early years as the “Department of Everything Else,” responsible for such things as the construction of Washington, DC’s water system, oversight of the District of Columbia jail, the colonization of freed slaves in Haiti, exploration of western wilderness, regulation of territorial governments, management of hospitals, universities and public parks, and basic responsibilities for Native Americans, public lands, patents and pensions.
The Department of the Interior (DOI) is one of the oldest cabinet-level departments of the federal government, responsible for programs that manage America’s natural resources and preserve its environment. DOI essentially stewards the lands, waters and species of the United States so that the country can enjoy its natural beauty while also exploiting the precious minerals and fossil fuels contained within the Earth. Interior officials oversee National Parks and other government-designated sanctuaries, enforce laws protecting threatened species of fish and animal life, manage key water supplies that Western urban centers and farmers rely on, monitor mining activities and implement programs affecting Native American and Alaskans, including tribal gambling operations.
The Interior Department has spent $28.6 billion on contractors this decade, according to USAspending.gov. More than 111,000 companies and organizations received Interior funds to provide telecommunications services, research and development, facility operations and maintenance, and engineering and technical services, among functions.
SAIC, Inc.
|
$849,555,670
|
Northrop Grumman
|
$735,705,404
|
Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
|
$571,917,362
|
Nana Regional Corp.
|
$414,394,490
|
Cherryroad GT Inc.
|
$322,496,032
|
Dell Inc.
|
$314,761,168
|
Motorola, Inc.
|
$303,853,272
|
IBM
|
$289,307,843
|
BAE Systems PLC
|
$271,037,910
|
WPP Group PLC
|
$262,758,904
|
NPS Management Policies Create Friction
To Drill or Not to Drill
Indian Trust in Need of Change
Gale Norton (January 2001 - March 2006)
During his political career, Ryan Zinke’s position on climate change has moved from supporting legislation to slow the effects of the phenomenon to doubting that mankind has caused global warming. Now, Zinke, a Montana congressman who was confirmed by a 68 to 31 U.S. Senate vote on March 1, 2017, to be secretary of the Department of the Interior, will be leading one of the departments most tied to climate change. At his confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, he supported coal mining on federal lands, but also opposed the sale or transfer of federal lands.
Zinke was born in Bozeman, Montana, on November 1, 1961, to Ray, a plumber, and Jean Zinke. Zinke played football at Whitefish High School, and after he graduated in 1980 he went on to play center at the University of Oregon. He graduated from there in 1984 with a B.S. in geology. He later earned an MBA from National University in 1991 and an M.S. in global leadership from the University of San Diego in 2003.
Zinke wanted to be a deep-sea diver and was persuaded to join the Navy in 1986. He went into the SEALs, the Navy’s commando unit. He rose quickly through the ranks, but in the mid-1990s took a trip to Montana on the taxpayers’ dime that Zinke claimed was to scout training sites for the SEALs. The Navy thought otherwise—some reports had Zinke using the trip to work on family property—and he was forced to repay the government $211 for his airfare.
Zinke served on the famous (and infamous) SEAL Team Six from 1990 to 1993 and from 1996 to 1999 as a team leader, ground force commander, task force commander and current operations officer, in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia and Kosovo. He also served in Iraq and in 2004 was made deputy and acting commander of Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force Arabian Peninsula. Zinke was never made a commander of a unit, however, and contemporaries pointed to the Montana “scouting” trip as the reason. Zinke denied this and retired in 2008 with the rank of commander.
Zinke returned to Montana and won a seat in the state senate, where he was seen as a moderate Republican. In 2010, he was among more than 1,000 state legislators to sign a letter to President Brack Obama and Congress calling for “comprehensive clean energy jobs and climate change legislation.”
In 2012, Zinke ran for lieutenant governor in the Montana Republican primary, but his ticket finished fifth out of seven entrants. That year, he also founded a Super PAC, Special Operations for America. It paid for anti-Obama advertising that year, but spent far more on “fundraising consulting” fees paid to Continental Divide International, which was owned by Zinke, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. According to Zinke’s 2014 financial report, he resigned from Special Operations for America in 2013, after which it began funding his congressional campaign. However, the following year’s report showed that he was still chairman of the organization in 2014. Super PACs are not supposed to have any connection with the candidates they support.
As part of the 2014 campaign, Zinke sent out fundraising emails with the header “Who killed Osama bin Laden?” In the emails, he wrote “I spent 23 years as a Navy SEAL and served as a Team Leader on SEAL Team Six — the team responsible for the mission to get Osama bin Laden.” What he didn’t mention in the emails was that he’d been out of the Navy for three years when the mission against bin Laden was carried out. During that campaign, Zinke also made a statement saying that while humans have some role in climate change, “the evidence is equally as strong that there are other factors, such as rising ocean temperatures, that have a greater influence.”
Zinke won election to Congress and took seats on the House Armed Services and Natural Resources committees. He was dogged by another controversy when he ran for reelection in 2016. This time, it was a question of whether he actually lived in Montana.
Zinke claimed that he lived at his parents’ old home there. But corporate records show the house belonging to Zinke’s corporation. The house was approved by the city of Whitefish for use as a bed and breakfast, called the Snowfrog Inn, and even has its own webpage. Meanwhile, Zinke appeared to spend much of his time in Santa Barbara, California, home of his wife, Lola. He’s even had fundraisers for other politicians advertised as being held at his Santa Barbara home. He also listed a Santa Barbara address in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing he made for another corporation he owns in 2013. He received twice as many campaign contributions from California in 2016 as he did from Montana. Nevertheless, Zinke won reelection just before being nominated by Donald Trump to lead the Interior Department.
Zinke and his wife, the former Lolita Hand, have two adult sons, Wolfgang and Konrad, and a daughter, Jennifer, who is a U.S. Navy diver.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Ryan Zinke Statement for Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
Zinke’s Nomination Could Bring Questions About Super PAC Ties (by Soo Rin Kim, Center for Responsive Politics)
Trump Taps Montana Congressman Ryan Zinke as Interior Secretary (by Juliet Eilperin, Washington Post)
Zinke Decries Attacks on his Montana Residency (by Jayme Fraser and Holly Michels, The Missoulian)
Does Congressman Zinke Even Live in Montana or is He California Dreamin’? (by Don Pogreba, Intelligent Discontent)
Does Being a Veteran Help Candidates? A Montana Politician Hopes So (by Alan Zarembo, Los Angeles Times)
U.S. House Candidate Profile: Ryan Zinke (by Charles S. Johnson, Ravalli Republic)
His Former Commander Exposes Ryan Zinke’s Navy SEAL Career and Defective “Moral Make-Up” (by Don Pogreba, Intelligent Discontent
President Barack Obama has nominated a new leader for the Department of the Interior—the cabinet-level agency that focuses on conservation and use of federal lands, balancing the preservation of natural wonders with the economic development of public lands. Nominated on February 6, 2013, Sally Jewell is an avid outdoorswoman who has spent her career in the private sector. Jewell was confirmed by the Senate on April 10, succeeding Ken Salazar, who had served since January 20, 2009.
Born in 1955 in England, Jewell is the daughter of Anne (née Murphy), a nurse, midwife and nurse practitioner for 60 years, and Peter Roffey, an anesthesiologist who moved the family to Seattle, Washington, when Sally was four to work at the University of Washington. Sally Jewell graduated in 1973 from Renton High School, and earned a B.S. in mechanical engineering in 1978 at the University of Washington.
Although she worked for Mobil Oil in Oklahoma from 1978 through 1981, Jewell spent twenty years of her career in the banking industry. In 1981, she joined Rainier Bank, which was hiring engineers to advise on lending to oil companies, and stayed after Rainier was acquired by Security Pacific Bank until 1992, when it was acquired by Bank of America. At Security Pacific, Jewell ran the bank’s business-banking activities. Jewell worked for WestOne Bank from 1992 to 1995 and for Washington Mutual from 1995 to 2000.
While at Washington Mutual, Jewell joined the board of outdoor products retailer REI, the nation’s largest consumer cooperative, in 1996. In 2000, the board hired her to be REI’s chief operating officer, and in 2005 she succeeded Dennis Madsen as chief executive officer. Jewell has promoted green policies at REI, which uses energy-efficient building materials, buys renewable energy, and offsets the carbon emissions from store-sponsored travel-adventure packages by buying “green tags,” which subsidize alternative energy in developing countries.
Jewell has sat on the boards of Premera, the National Parks Conservation Association, and the University of Washington Board of Regents. She is also a founding board member and immediate past president of the Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust.
Jewell is a lifelong lover of the outdoors, whose father became an REI member shortly after moving to Seattle and took the family on many camping trips, the first of them to Mount Rainier National Park. She has climbed Vinson Massif (elev.: 16,050 ft.) the highest mountain in Antarctica.
Jewell, who resides in Seattle, is married to Warren Jewell, also an engineer, with whom she has two adult children. A lifelong Democrat, Jewell has made political donations totaling $40,800 since 2006, 44% of it to two trade associations—the Outdoor Industry Association ($11,500) and the Retail Industry Leaders Association ($6,500). The remainder went overwhelmingly to Democratic candidates and causes, including $2,300 to Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, $4,800 to Sen. Patty Murray (D-Washington), $2,000 to Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Washington), and $900 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee in 2012. Her only donations to Republicans have been $1,000 to Rep. Dave Reichert (R-Washington) and $500 to Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s 2009 re-election campaign.
To Learn More:
A Profile of REI’s Sally Jewell: Team player at her Peak (by Monica Soto Ouchi, Seattle Times)
Executive Q & A: Sally Jewell, President and CEO of REI (by Leslie D. Helm, Seattle Business)
Sally Jewell, CEO of Outdoor Retailer REI, Nominated for Interior Secretary (by Danica Zupic, Wildlife Society News)
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