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News Release
USDA Forest Service
Washington, D.C.
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| FS-0148 |
Contact:
Heidi Valetkevitch, 202-205-1134 |

FOREST SERVICE
MAKES ADDITIONAL PERSONNEL ANNOUNCEMENTS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 24, 2001 -- U.S.
Department of Agriculture Forest Service Chief Dale
Bosworth today announced further changes to top
agency posts: Brad Powell as regional forester of
the Northern Region; Bov Eav as associate deputy
chief for Research and Development; Michael Rains
as director of the Northeastern Research Station;
and Randy Phillips as executive director of the
Forest Counties Payments Advisory Committee.
Powell, currently serving as regional forester
of the agency's Pacific Southwest Region (Vallejo,
Calif.), will move to Missoula, Mont. to head up
the Northern Region--filling the position vacated
by Dale Bosworth, who became Forest Service chief
in April. The Northern Region encompasses 25 million
acres in 12 national forests and four national grasslands
across northern Idaho, Montana, North Dakota and
northwestern South Dakota.
Powell began working for the Forest Service as
a seasonal firefighter in Arizona in 1969. After
holding numerous staff positions in recreation,
lands and forest management on ranger districts
in Arizona, New Mexico and Alaska, he became a district
ranger on the Santa Fe National Forest in New Mexico
in 1984. He assumed leadership of the Mount St.
Helens National Volcanic Monument on the Gifford
Pinchot National Forest in Washington in 1987. In
1991, Powell was promoted to deputy forest supervisor
of the Daniel Boone National Forest in Kentucky
and in 1993 as forest supervisor. In 1995, he moved
to the Tongass National Forest as forest supervisor
and in 1998 assumed the deputy regional forester
position of the Pacific Southwest Region. Powell
has been regional forester for the California region
since 1999.
Powell received a bachelors degree in 1972
in forest science from the University of Missouri.
Eav, who is now director for the agencys
Northeastern Research Station (Newtown Square, Pa.),
will become an associate deputy chief for Research
and Development in Washington, D.C. The agencys
research and development arm provides new information
and technologies to help ensure sustainable natural
resources for multiple uses, including healthy watersheds,
forest products, wildlife protection and recreation
opportunities.
In 1985, Eav joined the Forest Service as an operations
research analyst for State and Private Forestrys
(S&PF) Methods Application Group (MAG) in Forest
Pest Management at Fort Collins, Colo. Later, he
became associate director and manager of the Quantitative
Techniques Program for MAG. In 1994, he became director
of the National Center of Forest Health Management
in Morgantown, W. Va., but soon returned to Fort
Collins as director of the Forest Service's Forest
Health Technology Enterprise Team. Eav has been
the Northeastern Research Stations director
since 1997.
Eav earned a degree in forestry in 1970 from the
Universite des Sciences Agronomique, Chumkar Daung,
Cambodia, a masters degree in forest biometrics
in 1974 and a doctorate degree in forest biometrics/remote
sensing in 1977 from the State University of New
York College of Environmental Science and Forestry,
Syracuse.
Rains, currently leading the S&PF deputy area
at the agencys national headquarters, will
direct the Northeastern Research Station--filling
the vacancy left by Eav. The station conducts extensive
research to enhance and protect productivity on
all of America's forests and rangelands with special
attention to long-term resource issues of national
and international scope in the northeastern United
States. It is one of seven such units nation wide,
maintaining 10 forestry research laboratories and
10 experimental forests throughout the northeastern
states.
Rains began his Forest Service career 32 years
ago as a wildland firefighter in California. He
has served in various agency positions across the
country, including in forest management, watershed
restoration, budget planning and development, information
systems and administration. In addition, he has
held leadership positions in S&PF for the last
12 years--as director of the Northeastern Area and
as associate deputy chief. In 2000, Rains led teams
to examine the cost of catastrophic wildfire and
to produce the National Fire Plan in response to
a presidential request. He has been deputy chief
for S&PF since late 2000.
Rains holds a bachelors degree in forestry
and a masters degree in watershed management
from Humbolt State University and a masters
degree in business administration from Georgia State
University.
Phillips, who currently serves as the agency's
deputy chief for Programs and Legislation in Washington,
D.C., will become executive director of the Forest
Counties Payments Advisory Committee. The committee,
made up of federal agency representatives and Congressional
appointees, will report to Congress on the new payments
to counties legislation. It was established in the
fiscal year 2001 Interior Appropriations bill.
Phillips' 24-year service with the agency includes
positions as forester, district ranger on two national
forests and grasslands and assistant to the regional
forester in the Northern Region. From 1993 to 1997,
Phillips was the forest supervisor for the four
national forests in North Carolina. He joined the
national headquarters in 1997 as budget coordinator
for the National Forest System and became deputy
chief of Programs and Legislation in 2000.
Phillips holds degrees in forest resource management
and political science from Emory University, Florida
State University and the University of Montana.
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