Senate confirms new director of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

WASHINGTON — The Senate confirmed Sam D. Hamilton as director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service this week. In a release, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar praised the decision.

“Sam is a veteran manager, innovative leader, and strong advocate for sound science,” Salazar said in the release. “His three decades of experience with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s mission, responsibilities and programs will enable him to firmly guide the agency in its critical work conserving our nation’s wildlife and its habitat and addressing the impacts of climate change.”

Hamilton is a career senior biologist and manager with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Most recently, he had been director of the agency’s Southeast Region in Atlanta, Ga., where he was responsible for the oversight and management of more than 350 federally listed threatened and endangered species and 128 national wildlife refuges.

Prior to becoming regional director, Hamilton served as assistant regional director of the ecological services in Atlanta and the Service’s Texas state administrator in Austin. Hamilton graduated from Mississippi State University with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology in 1977.

“Hamilton’s leadership fostered creative solutions and innovation that led to the establishment of a carbon sequestration program that has helped biologists in the Southeast restore roughly 80,000 acres of wildlife habitat,” according to Salazar’s release. “His emphasis on partnership bolstered the Service’s fisheries program and helped establish the Southeast Aquatic Resources Partnership to restore vital aquatic habitats across the region.”

Hamilton also oversaw recovery and restoration work following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, which devastated coastal wetlands, wildlife refuges, and other wildlife habitat along the Gulf of Mexico.

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