David Vela

Raymond David Vela is a parks administrator who is the acting director of the United States National Park Service.[1]

David Vela
United States National Park Service acting director
Assumed office
2019
Preceded byP. Daniel Smith

Early life and education

Vela grew up in Wharton, Texas. At a Senate hearing, he described himself as the oldest grandchild of a sharecropper.[1]

He graduated from Texas A&M University with a degree in recreational parks and tourism sciences in 1982.[2]

Career

Vela is the former superintendent of Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.[1] He has also worked as the National Park Service's director for workforce and inclusion; director of the National Park Service Southeast region; and superintendent of the George Washington Memorial Parkway, Palo Alto Battlefield National Historic Site and Lyndon B. Johnson National Historical Park.[1]

He has held other positions at San Antonio Missions National Historical Park in Texas, Appomattox Court House National Historical Park in Virginia; Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[2]

National Park Service acting director

President Donald Trump first nominated Vela as director of the National Park Service in 2018. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee voted to advance Vela's nomination in 2018, but he was never confirmed by the Senate. Vela joined the National Park Service's Washington office as acting deputy director of operations.[1] In September 2019, Interior Secretary David Bernhardt announced that he was promoting Vela to director on an acting basis.[3]

Vela is the first Latino to lead the National Park Service.[4]

In May 2020, two activist groups, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and the Western Watersheds Project, sued over Bernhardt's ongoing interim appointments of Vela to run the National Park service and William Perry Pendley to run the Bureau of Land Management, which bypassed Senate confirmation.[5]

In June 2020, Vela announced that the Trump administration would end a five-year-old ban on certain hunting practices in Alaska. The rule change will allow hunters to bait hibernating bears from their dens, kill wolf mothers and pups in their dens, shoot swimming caribou from a boat, and target animals from airplanes and snowmobiles.[6]

Vela announced on August 7, 2020, that he would retire in September 2020.[7]

Personal

Vela is married and has a daughter and a son.[2]

gollark: Are you one of those moon deniers?
gollark: As you can see, I am a cool person.
gollark: Images are disabled in here for uncool people.
gollark: Apart from VPNs and similar stuff where you just route your traffic through some other server, the only way you could do that is if you had unusually large amounts of access to core internet infrastructure and somehow all the security measures failed to do anything.
gollark: Unless you use a VPN or whatever.

See also

References

  1. Hotakainen, Rob. "National Parks: Smith out, Vela in as NPS acting director". www.eenews.net. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  2. "Former Student Named National Park Service Acting Director". Texas A&M Today. 2019-10-22. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  3. "Secretary Bernhardt Announces New National Park Service Leadership2019 - Office of Communications (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  4. "NATIONAL PARKS: Trump's nominee to lead NPS lands new job". www.eenews.net. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  5. Webb, Dennis. "Pendley stays on as Bureau of Land Management head". The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  6. Fears, Darryl. "Trump administration to make it easier for hunters to kill Alaska bear cubs and wolf pups". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  7. "Third Acting NPS Director Under Trump Will Retire Next Month". Government Executive. Retrieved 2020-08-11.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.