NMSF Names James L. Connaughton to Board of Trustees
Silver Spring, MD – The Honorable James L. Connaughton, former Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, and current Executive Vice President with Constellation Energy, was officially named as the newest member of the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation Board of Trustees.
“We are excited and very fortunate to add such a tremendously distinguished and successful environmental expert to our Board of Trustees. Jim is a knowledgeable and proven leader who shares our commitment and passion for ocean conservation and the need to support our national marine sanctuary system,” said Bob Talbot, Chairman of the Board for the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation.
James L. Connaughton currently holds the post of Executive Vice President, Corporate Affairs, Public and Environmental Policy at Constellation Energy. He is the former Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) from 2001-2009. In this capacity, he served on President Bush’s Senior Staff as senior environment, energy and natural resources advisor, and as Director of the White House Office of Environmental Policy. Mr. Connaughton helped develop and carry out major energy and environmental policy initiatives, coordinated interagency implementation of environment and natural resource programs, and mediated key policy disagreements among Federal agencies, state, tribal and local governments and private citizens.
A major component of Mr. Connaughton’s policy and management portfolio involved the development and implementation of a comprehensive national ocean policy. Mr. Connaughton worked closely with the Presidentially-appointed U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy. Following the publication of the Commission’s recommendations in the fall of 2004, President Bush designated Mr. Connaughton chairman of a new Cabinet Committee on Ocean Policy tasked with ensuring prompt and effective action on the Commission’s recommendations. In this role, Mr. Connaughton oversaw the development of the U.S. Ocean Action, which contained more than 80 high-level actions that the Executive Branch substantially completed over a three-year period, and he helped set the stage for equally comprehensive opportunities for action by the Obama Administration.
Mr. Connaughton played an instrumental role in President Bush’s historic decisions to establish four new Marine National Monuments in the Pacific, protecting 330,000 square miles of coral and marine habitat—the largest area of ocean conservation in the world. These include: the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands; the Mariana Trench Marine National Monument in the area of the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands; the Rose Atoll Marine National Monument in the area of American Samoa; and the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument.
Prior to joining the Bush Administration, Mr. Connaughton was a partner in the law firm Sidley Austin, in its Environmental Practice Group, covering a wide range of environmental policy issues. He helped lead the development and implementation of the ISO 14000 series of international environmental management system standards.
Mr. Connaughton is a graduate of Yale University and graduated second in his class, magna cum laude, Order of the Coif, from the Northwestern University School of Law.

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