Alex Matthiessen

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Alex Matthiessen (born July 3, 1964) has been the Hudson Riverkeeper and President of Riverkeeper, Inc. since July 2000. He is the son of author and naturalist Peter Matthiessen.

[edit] Biography

Mr. Matthiessen graduated from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1988 with a BA in Biology and Environmental Studies, and earned his Masters of Public Administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in 1995.[1]

Matthiessen began his activist career in 1990 as the grassroots program director for the Rainforest Action Network in San Francisco. In this capacity, he organized and managed an international network of affiliate activist groups. During the summer of 1994, he interned at the White House Council on Environmental Quality. From 1995-96, Matthiessen worked for the Harvard Institute for International Development (HIID) as a macroeconomic policy analyst in the Indonesian Ministry of Finance.[1]

In 1997, Matthiessen was appointed as a special assistant to the U.S. Department of the Interior, where he worked on matters of special importance for Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt. He managed a multi-agency task force charged with reforming the hydropower licensing process of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. He was also co-creator and head of the Green Energy Parks initiative, a joint program between the Department of the Interior’s National Park Service and the Department of Energy, which promotes renewable and energy efficient technology throughout the national park system. Matthiessen received a Presidential Award from the White House for his work on this project.[2]

Since Matthiessen became Riverkeeper’s chief executive in 2000, the environmental non-profit that protects and defends the Hudson River and the New York City watershed has maintained a full-time patrol boat enforcement presence up and down the Hudson River and its tributaries, and has extended its principle jurisdiction from north of Albany to New York Harbor. In addition to strengthening the group’s traditional enforcement role, Matthiessen has pushed the organization to develop long-term, preventative strategies designed to strengthen the deterrents and incentives necessary to avoid pollution in the first place.[3]

Under Matthiessen’s leadership, Riverkeeper has joined forces with institutions such as Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University School of Law, and Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, to enhance scientific understanding of the Hudson River, as well as stop what it views as ill-conceived development projects along the waterfront.[1]

In 2006, Matthiessen served on New York State Governor Eliot Spitzer’s transition team as an advisor on the new administration’s goals for energy and environmental policy. He currently serves as chair of the energy committee for Westchester County’s Climate Change Task Force as well as chair of the MTA Blue Ribbon Commission on Sustainability’s water committee.[1]Matthiessen serves on the boards of directors of the Hudson River Improvement Fund, Catskill Mountainkeeper, and Waterkeeper Alliance -- the umbrella organization for 172 Waterkeeper programs around the world dedicated to protecting local water resources.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Riverkeeper - Alex Matthiessen bio
  2. ^ Alex Matthiessen National Outdoor Leadership School
  3. ^ The Hudson Riverkeeper Boating on the Hudson
  4. ^ Board of Trustees Water Keeper Alliance