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Sams Sworn In As National Park Service Director

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Chuck Sams was sworn in Thursday as director of the National Park Service/NPS

Chuck Sams was sworn in Thursday as director of the National Park Service by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland/NPS

Unseasonably mild weather was present Thursday as Charles F. "Chuck" Sams III was sworn in as director of the National Park Service, a job that comes with a hefty to-do list as the agency struggles to cope with climate change, invasive species, staffing, and crowding that is impacting resources in some parks and the park experience.

At the same time, Sams must oversee how billions of dollars flooding into the Park System through the Great American Outdoors Act and the administration's infrastructure measure are spent judiciously.

“I am honored to serve as director of the National Park Service and thank President Biden and (Interior) Secretary (Deb) Haaland for entrusting in me the care of one of America’s greatest gifts: our National Park System," Sams said after the outdoor ceremony. "I am also incredibly proud to work with the dedicated employees of the National Park Service. I have no doubt that together, we’ll be able to expand access to the outdoors, protect America’s public lands, and upgrade our nation’s infrastructure system through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.”

Haaland presided over the ceremony that saw Sams become the first tribal citizen to lead the agency, which has been without a Senate-confirmed leader since Jon Jarvis retired at the end of the Obama administration in January 2017.

“Everyone should have access to the outdoors no matter where they live, how much money they have, or what their background is," said the Interior secretary. "Chuck Sams understands the importance of connecting people to nature, and I am thrilled to work with him as the Interior Department works to make our National Park system accessible to all Americans.

“Under his leadership, the National Park Service will continue to protect our public lands for generations to come and make critical investments in the vast infrastructure that sustains our public lands and national parks,” added Haaland.

In addition to historic funding for climate resiliency initiatives and legacy pollution clean-up, the infrastructure law provides for a five-year reauthorization of the Federal Lands Transportation Program, which will help invest in repairing and upgrading NPS roads, bridges, trails and transit systems. The law also invests in projects that will help fund bridge replacements and resiliency, repair ferry boats and terminal facilities, and maintain wildlife crossings that keep people and surrounding wildlife safe.

Sams has worked in state and tribal governments and the non-profit natural resource and conservation management fields for more than 25 years. He most recently served as a Council Member to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, appointed by Oregon Governor Kate Brown.

He has held a variety of roles with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, most recently as their executive director. He has also had roles as the President/Chief Executive Officer of the Indian Country Conservancy, Executive Director for the Umatilla Tribal Community Foundation, National Director of the Tribal & Native Lands Program for the Trust for Public Land, Executive Director for the Columbia Slough Watershed Council, Executive Director for the Community Energy Project, and President/Chief Executive Officer for the Earth Conservation Corps.

Sams holds a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration from Concordia University-Portland and a Master of Legal Studies in Indigenous peoples law from the University of Oklahoma. He is a veteran of the U.S. Navy.  He is an enrolled member, Cayuse and Walla Walla, of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, where he lives with his wife and their four children.

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Comments

Best wishe to Mr. Sams!


Let's all plan on giving him a significant honeymoon period. He is assuming a job left open for the entirety of the previous administration. With the job left unfilled like that there is no doubt we'll find the silverware pilfered and the linens shuffled.


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