Michael Dombeck

Michael P. Dombeck is an American conservationist, educator, scientist, and outdoorsman. He served as Acting Director of the Bureau of Land Management from 1994–1997 and was the 14th Chief of the United States Forest Service from 1997 to 2001. Dombeck also served as UW System Fellow and Professor of Global Conservation at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point from 2001 to 2010. He has been the Executive Director of the David Smith Post-Doctoral Conservation Research Fellowship since 2005[1]

Michael Dombeck

Early career

Dombeck worked as a fishing guide for 11 summers near Hayward, Wisconsin, which informed the path his career would take. He attended the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and earned a B.S. in biology and general sciences and an M.S.T. in biology and education degrees. He attended the University of Minnesota, earning an M.S. in Zoology and later earned a PhD from Iowa State University in 1984. His research included studies on the movement, behavior, reproduction, and early life ecology of the muskellunge, Wisconsin's state fish. His research lead him to become Program Chairman of the 1st International Muskellunge Symposium held in 1984 with proceedings published by the American Fisheries Society.[2] After three years of teaching zoology at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, Dombeck joined the United States Forest Service (USFS) as a fisheries biologist on the Hiawatha National Forest.[3] He held additional Forest Service assignments throughout the Midwest and California, focused on both aquatic research and fisheries management, after which he was promoted to National Fisheries Program Manager for the USFS where he led the integration of aquatic resources considerations into national forest management and the Rise to the Future Program. He spent a year in 1989 as a LEGIS Fellow working in the U.S. Senate on agriculture and appropriations issues.

Federal Service

Bureau of Land Management (BLM)

At the beginning of the George H. W. Bush administration, Dombeck was assigned as Special Assistant to the Director of the Bureau of Land Management and later was named Science Advisor.[4] [5] At the beginning of the Clinton Administration, he was assigned Acting Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Lands and Minerals Management. In 1994 he was appointed Acting Director of the Bureau of Land Management by Secretary of the Interior, Bruce Babbitt. Dombeck held that position until 1997 when Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman named him the 14th Chief of the U.S. Forest Service.

Dombeck's time at the BLM was marked by a focus on wildlife protection, riparian and aquatic resources and InFish. Dombeck worked closely with then Forest Service Chief Jack Ward Thomas to increase the two agencies' accessibility to public land users, and to promote ecosystem-based management and watershed restoration on public land.

United States Forest Service

In 1997, Dombeck and the Forest Service Leadership team crafted a four-point agenda, known as The Natural Resources Agenda. It emphasized four major topics; watershed health and restoration, ecologically sustainable forest and grasslands management, recreation and a long-term forest roads policy. Dombeck emphasized the importance of clean water as a forest a product, appointing a task force of scientists and economists to the quantity and value of water flowing from the National Forests.[6] He staunchly defended land conservation and science-based management in speeches delivered to U.S. Congress.

Under Dombeck’s leadership, the Roadless Rule was developed, which protected 58 million acres of the most remote national forest lands. Dombeck out laid his proposal for roadless area management in a speech in 2000. This provided the groundwork for enhancing and increasing Americans’ experiences in the nation’s forests by protecting million acres of the remaining wildest places for outdoor recreation and protecting the health and quality of watersheds and ecosystems.[7]

His career in public service was recognized with the highest award in career federal service, the Presidential Rank-Distinguished Executive Award by President George W. Bush in 2001.[8] He was the only person to have led the nation's two largest public land management agencies.

Post Federal Service

After retiring from federal service, Dombeck took a position as Professor of Global Conservation at University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and was later named UW System Fellow, where he served from 2001 to 2010.[9] He currently serves as Executive Director of the David Smith Post Doctoral Fellowship in conservation biology (since 2005),[10] as a trustee of the Johnson Foundation at Wingspread (since 2002),[11] and is a former trustee for Trout Unlimited and the Wisconsin chapter of The Nature Conservancy.

Dombeck has authored, co-authored, and edited more than 200 popular and scholarly publications, including the books:

Awards

For his efforts in land conservation, Dombeck was awarded the Ansel Adams Award in 2010[13], the Aldo Leopold Restoration Award in 2009, an honorary doctorate from Haverford University in 2007, Conservationist of the Year by the National Wildlife Federation in 2001, US-IALE Distinguished Landscape Practitioner in 2019, and numerous other awards.

References

  1. "Program staff". conbio.org. Retrieved 2019-09-02.
  2. Hall, Gordon (February 1987). Managing Muskies: A Treatise on the Biology and Propagation of Muskellunge in North America. Amer Fisheries Society. ISBN 978-0913235331.
  3. Steen, Harold K. "The Chiefs Remember". Forest History Society, 2004, p.123
  4. Steen, Harold K. "The Chiefs Remember". Forest History Society, 2004, p.124
  5. Steen, Harold K. "The Chiefs Remember". Forest History Society, 2004, p.124
  6. Sedell, James (2000). Water & The Forest Service. Washington, DC: United States Department of Agriculture - Forest Service.
  7. Dombeck, Michael. "Roadless Area Conservation" (PDF). Federal Register. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  8. Dombeck, Mike (2003-01-03). "Opinion | The Forgotten Forest Product: Water". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-09-02.
  9. Steen, Harold K. "The Chiefs Remember". Forest History Society, 2004, p.144.
  10. "Science Advisory Board". http://www.conbio.org/SmithFellows/about/advisory.cfm Archived 2010-08-03 at the Wayback Machine.
  11. "On Board". http://conbio.org/mini-sites/smith-fellows/about-the-program/science-advisory-board. 2001.
  12. Michael P. Dombeck - Publications Archived 2008-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
  13. "Dombeck receives Ansel Adams Award for protecting National Forests." http://wilderness.org/content/dombeck-receives-ansel-adams-award-leadership-protecting-national-forests. 2010
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