SENATE ENERGY & NATURAL RESOURCES COMMITTEE SCHEDULE FOR THE WEEK OF MARCH 14
March 11, 2005
12:00 AM
Washington, D.C. - The Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committee will hold one subcommittee hearing and one business meeting next week.
The National Parks subcommittee will hold a hearing on Tuesday, March 15 at 2:30 p.m. to receive testimony on S. 175, a bill to establish the Bleeding Kansas and Enduring Struggle for Freedom National Heritage Area; S. 322, a bill to establish the Champlain Valley National Heritage Partnership in the States of Vermont and New York; S. 323, a bill to authorize the Secretary of the Interior to study the suitability and feasibility of designating the French Colonial Heritage Area in the State of Missouri as a unit of the National Park System; and S. 429, a bill to establish the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area in the State of Connecticut and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Invited Witnesses Include:
Panel 1
Ms. Janet Snyder Matthews
Associate Director for Cultural Resources
National Park Service
Department of the Interior
Panel 2
Mr. James Baker
Historic Site Administrator
Missouri Department of Natural Resources
St. Genevieve, Missouri
Ms. Judy Billings
Senior Vice President
Lawrence Chamber of Commerce
Lawrence Convention & Visitors Bureau
Lawrence, Kansas
Mr. Ronald Jones
Chairman
Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area, Inc.
Salisbury, Connecticut
Ms. Ann Cousins
Field Services Representative
Preservation Trust of Vermont
Burlington, Vermont
Panel 3
Mr. John W. Cosgrove
Executive Director
Alliance of National Heritage Areas
Scranton, Pennsylvania
Mr. Peyton Knight
Executive Director
American Policy Center and
Washington Representative for American Land Rights Association
Warrenton, Virginia
The full committee will hold a business meeting on Wednesday, March 16 at 11:30 a.m. to consider the following items:
To consider the nomination of Jeffrey Clay Sell, to be Deputy Secretary of Energy.
President Bush nominated Clay Sell to be Deputy Secretary of Energy on February 28, 2005.
Since February, 2004, Mr. Sell had served as a Special Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs, working in the President’s Office of Legislative Affairs and specializing in coordinating and achieving the President’s legislative agenda in the United States Senate in the policy areas of energy, natural resources, budget and appropriations. Previously, Mr. Sell had served as a Special Assistant to the President for Economic Policy, working within the President’s National Economic Council, since July, 2003. In that capacity, Mr. Sell advised the President on domestic energy policy and coordinated the formation and implementation of the Administration’s energy policy.
Prior to serving at the White House, Mr. Sell served as the Majority Clerk and Staff Director for the Energy and Water Development Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, working directly for the subcommittee Chairman, Senator Pete V. Domenici of New Mexico, and the full Committee on Appropriations Chairman, Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska. Mr. Sell led the Republican staff on Energy and Water from January, 2000, to July, 2003.
Previously, Mr. Sell served on the Bush-Cheney Transition as part of the energy policy team. From 1995 to 1999, he served on the staff of Congressman Mac Thornberry of Texas, the last two years as Thornberry's Administrative Assistant.
To consider the nomination of Patricia Lynn Scarlett, to be the Deputy Secretary of the Interior.
Lynn Scarlett is Assistant Secretary of Policy, Management, and Budget at the Department of the Interior. Since taking her post at Interior in July 2001, Ms. Scarlett coordinates budget planning within the Department and has helped the Department implement the President’s Management Agenda and other key management initiatives. She serves as both the Chief Financial Officer and Chief Human Capital Officer of the Department. She also helps coordinate Department-wide environmental policy initiatives to implement Secretary Gale Norton’s “4 C’s” vision of conservation through cooperation, communication, and consultation.
From June 2003-2004, she chaired the Wildland Fire Leadership Council, an interagency and intergovernmental forum for implementing the National Fire Plan and 10-Year Implementation Plan. She co-chairs the Recreation Fee Leadership Council, and interagency groupl to coordinate recreation fee policy and practices. She serves on the Board of Trustees of the Udall Foundation as the Department of the Interior Representative.
Prior to joining the Bush Administration in July 2001, she was President of the Los Angeles-based Reason Foundation, a nonprofit current affairs research and communications organization. In addition to her management role, her policy research focused on environmental, land use, and natural resources issues.
Ms. Scarlett served on Pres. George W. Bush's environmental policy task force during his presidential campaign. She was appointed by former Gov. Pete Wilson to chair California's Inspection and Maintenance Review Committee, a position she held for 6 years. Ms. Scarlett served as an Expert Panelist on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's full-cost accounting and "pay-as-you-throw" projects. She chaired the "How Clean Is Clean" Working Group of the National Environmental Policy Institute from 1993-98 and served at the request of former EPA Administrator William Ruckelshaus on the Enterprise for the Environment Task Force, which examined new directions for U.S. environmental policy.
Ms. Scarlett received her B.A. and M.A. in political science from the University of California, Santa Barbara, where she also completed her Ph.D. course work and exams in political science and political economy.