Monday, March 19, 2012

Garver & Zichal bho 's Non Science graduates Formulating policies in Science (NASA & Energy)

Lori Garver was born in Lansing, Michigan on May 22, 1961, and she graduated fromHaslett High School in Haslett, Michigan in 1979. In 1983, she earned a Bachelor of Artsdegree in political science and economics from Colorado College. While working for Senator John Glenn from 1983–1984, she became interested in space, and went on to earn a Master of Arts degree in science, technology and public policy from the George Washington University in 1989.[6][8]

[edit]Biography

Zichal grew up in Elkader, Iowa,[2] with parents Ken (a family physician) and Fran and a younger brother.[3] She graduated from Central Elkader High School in 1994.[2] She attended Cook College at Rutgers University, where she studied environmental policy and graduated in 1999.[2][1][4]
While at Rutgers she had interned at the state chapter of the Sierra Club and was part of a panel interviewing candidates for U.S. House of Representatives in New Jersey's 12th congressional district.[5] The support of her and other environmentalists helped DemocratRush D. Holt, Jr. stage an upset victory over Republican incumbent Michael J. Pappas.[5]Impressed by her sharpness, Holt hired Zichal, and she went to Washington, D.C., where she served as a legislative director for him.[5][1] She held the same position for Representative Frank Pallone from 2001 to 2002.[1] She then was a legislative assistant and later director for U.S. Senator John Kerry from 2002 to 2008,[6][1] She also worked as an assistant for the Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee.[7] In these positions she worked on legislation to address climate change, reduce the country's dependence on oil for energy, and to protect American natural resources.[8] She also served as a top advisor on energy and environmental issues to the 2004 Kerry presidential campaign and the 2008 Obama presidential campaign[1][2][5] (having first met Obama when he was lost in one of the Senate buildings and asked her for directions).[9]
After serving on the Obama-Biden Transition Project in its Energy and Environment Policy Working Group,[2] where she achieved some public visibility,[1] she was named to be Deputy Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change in December 2008, to serve as deputy to Carol Browner, who was named director of the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy[8][10](as such, Browner's position was also informally referred to as the "Climate Czar" or "Energy Czar").[11] Zichal took office in January 2009.[1]
When Browner left the White House in March 2011, Zichal took over the general responsibilities of coordinating the administration's energy and climate policy, now operating from within the U.S. Domestic Policy Council[12] (the "czar" position itself having been reorganized away by the White House and its funding subsequently abolished by Congress in the mid-April 2011 federal spending agreement that averted a possible government shutdown).[13][14][15] Zichal and the administration faced a political challenge; with Republicans having taken over the House of Representatives following the 2010 midterm elections, chances of the large-scale climate and energy legislation passing that Browner had worked towards were essentially nil.[16][1][5] Instead, the administration intended to pursue more modest goals that could attract bipartisan support, such as reducing oil imports and promoting clean or renewable energy sources.[5] Zichal's past experience in both legislative and political campaigning was seen as valuable in trying to achieve such goals.[1][5]
[edit]Career



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