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Pacific Region Selects New
Assistant Regional Director for Refuges
For Release on February 9, 2011
Contact: Joan Jewett, 503-231-6211
Robin West, a 32-year veteran of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
has
been named the Pacific Region’s Assistant Regional Director for
Refuges,
Regional Director Robyn Thorson announced today. The Pacific Region
includes Hawai’i, Idaho, Oregon, Washington and U.S.-affiliated
Pacific
Islands.
West assumes his new duties February 13. He succeeds Carolyn Bohan,
who
retired in January.
“With his long background in refuges and experience in other Service
programs, Robin brings an invaluable perspective and impeccable
stewardship
credentials to the regional refuge chief’s job,” Regional Director
Thorson
said. “He will provide strong leadership in working with states,
tribes and
others to protect, restore and enhance fish, wildlife and other
natural
resources.”
In his new position, West will be responsible for nearly 270 million
acres
of land, water, coral reefs and ocean floor on 67 national wildlife
refuges
and five national monuments. This includes three South Pacific
national
marine monuments totaling 125 million acres of land and water, and
co-management of the 89-million acre Papahânaumokuâkea Marine
National
Monument in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands with the National
Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and the State of Hawai’i.
“The Pacific Region’s national wildlife refuges are truly special
places
and I can think of no better job in the world,” West said. “I am
humbled
and excited by this new challenge.”
Prior to being selected to lead the regional refuge program, West
was a
Supervisory Wildlife Refuge Specialist in the Pacific Regional
Office, with
oversight responsibility for 20 refuges in Oregon, Washington and
Nevada.
Before coming to the Pacific Region, West worked for 31 years in the
Service’s Alaska Region, where he held various refuge management
positions,
including 14 years as the manager of the two million-acre Kenai
National
Wildlife Refuge. He spent four years as the Alaska Region’s
Migratory Bird
Coordinator, during which he worked successfully nationally and
internationally on Migratory Bird Treaty amendments to provide a
legal
basis for managing spring subsistence hunting of migratory birds by
Alaska
Natives. He also was instrumental in acquiring valuable habitat for
the
Pacific Flyway. Before that, he worked for three years as a fishery
biologist, supervising fisheries field work on the Arctic National
Wildlife
Refuge and preparing reports to Congress on possible impacts to fish
and
wildlife resources associated with potential oil development.
West started his career with the Fish and Wildlife Service in 1978
in
Anchorage, Alaska, as a writer/photographer. He left Alaska briefly
for a
job at Hillside National Wildlife Refuge in Mississippi. But Alaska
had a
strong hold on him and he returned in 1981 to take a job as a Fish
and
Wildlife Service contaminants biologist. In that job, he published
work
that resulted in changes in industrial practices at Prudhoe Bay.
While West spent most of his career in Alaska, he has been involved
in many
Service initiatives that have taken him in an official capacity to
44
states and several foreign countries. He is active in numerous
professional
organizations.
Born and raised in Grants Pass, Oregon, West has a Bachelor’s Degree
in
Wildlife Science from Oregon State University. He and his wife,
Shannon,
have three grown children. In his spare time, he enjoys traveling,
hunting,
fishing, photographing wildlife and spending time with friends and
family.
The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with
others to
conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their
habitats for
the continuing benefit of the American people. We are both a leader
and
trusted partner in fish and wildlife conservation, known for our
scientific
excellence, stewardship of lands and natural resources, dedicated
professionals and commitment to public service.
For more information on our work and the people who
make it happen, visit
www.fws.gov
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