More

Ray Mabus: Oil Spill Recovery Chief Will Work Part Time

Ray Mabus

First Posted: 06/18/10 09:21 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:50 PM ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama's point man charting a new future for the oil-poisoned Gulf Coast will do the job part-time. Some environmentalists said the job demands someone's full attention.

Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, who oversees 900,000 Navy and Marine personnel, is inheriting an amorphous second job as the Obama administration's leader of long-term environmental and economic planning. His task is no less than rebuilding a region still suffering after Hurricane Katrina and beset by decades of environmental problems.

Mabus won't resign from his Navy job. When President George W. Bush picked Donald Powell to lead the recovery after Hurricane Katrina, Powell resigned as head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

"The president talked to the governor about this, and they both agreed that he had the ability to do both," White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Thursday after Mabus met with Obama at the White House.

That prompted quick criticism from the Defenders of Wildlife, which is working to save animals from the oil that has gushed from an offshore BP oil well for nearly two months.

"The idea that he is only going to work on this part-time is disturbing," said Robert Irvin, the group's vice president for conservation programs. "If this is the equivalent of war, as the president has been saying, it needs a full-time general."

In his year at the helm of the Navy, Mabus has called for a cleaner, more energy-efficient fleet. But he is largely unknown among environmental groups dealing with the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history. After Obama named Mabus in a speech Tuesday night, environmental leaders called around, asking each other for insight.

"I don't know what demands being head of the Navy requires, but from what I've heard he's got a good head on his shoulders," said Jill Mastrototaro, the head of the Sierra Club for the Gulf region.

While Obama selected Mabus for his ties to the Gulf Coast, the wealthy businessman also has had financial ties to the oil industry. Environmentalists want to know more about that from the man charged with helping remake the coastal economy.

When Mabus joined the Obama administration, energy investments were among the largest holdings in his portfolio. Between $350,000 and $750,000 was invested in partnerships trading energy commodities such as crude oil and natural gas. He also owned between $15,000 and $51,000 in Exxon Mobil stock and as much as $69,000 in energy mutual funds.

Mabus, whose net worth is millions of dollars, sold all his energy holdings upon taking office, Navy spokesman Thomas Oppel said.

The White House has not said exactly what Mabus' job will be, so it's unclear what sway he will have over the future of Gulf Coast environmental regulations and economic development policies, two things that could affect the coastal oil industry.

"Nothing in his background would suggest he will do anything but put the interests of the people of the Gulf first as he completes this critical mission, and the president has full confidence in his leadership," White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said.

Mabus was one of the Democratic Party's rising stars when he was elected Mississippi governor in 1987. He had exposed county government corruption as state auditor and campaigned for governor with the slogan "Mississippi will never be last again."

But Mabus had a strained relationship with lawmakers. In a state where legislators, not the governor, have the most power, Mabus saw many of his proposals snubbed. At his urging, lawmakers expanded Medicaid coverage, but other efforts such as spending more money on early childhood literacy never materialized.

In his new job, Mabus must build consensus across the region. Already there are signs that won't be easy. Louisiana's former Republican Gov. Buddy Roemer declared that Obama "could not have picked a better man," but Mississippi's governor, Haley Barbour, was quick with a barb.

"If this is really what it sounded like - that is, the federal government is going to make a long-term plan for the Gulf states - then it's a terrible idea," said Barbour, a possible Republican candidate for president in 2012. "Mississippians will decide about Mississippi's future."

Oliver Diaz, who was elected to the Mississippi House from the Gulf Coast the same year Mabus took office, said that despite growing up in northern Mississippi nearly 250 miles from the Gulf, Mabus developed strong political ties to the coast that will help him in his new job. Mabus is usually friendly but can be tough, Diaz said.

"He exercised the strength of the governor's office when he had to. That's just part of the job, and it's going to be part of this new position that he's been appointed to," Diaz said. "He's going to have to exercise some control, whether it's with oil company executives or people affected by the spill. I think he's a guy that is going to take control."

In his only major environmental decision as governor, Mabus angered politically powerful farmers in 1989 by opposing a plan to build the world's largest pumps to drain water from flood-prone areas in the Yazoo River basin in rural western Mississippi. Mabus said the proposed federal project would have damaged sensitive wetlands to help agricultural interests.

The project was discussed for decades, and the EPA eventually killed the $220 million proposal in 2008.

Mabus' decision to allow dockside casino gambling along the Mississippi River and Gulf Coast became his unexpected legacy. Millions of dollars poured into Mississippi's budget, but in a state with historically weak environmental regulations, the decision allowed widespread development in sensitive coastal areas.

Mabus angered many of his own supporters - including, critically, the Legislative Black Caucus - by closing Mississippi's three charity hospitals, which for decades had cared for some of the poorest people in the nation. He never recovered politically and lost the 1991 governor's race to Republican Kirk Fordice, a blunt-spoken contractor.

During the re-election campaign, Mabus received $1,000 each from oil companies BP America, Shell and Chevron. Each gave the most allowed by law, a tiny fraction of a $3 million campaign that got much broader support from bankers and lawyers.

An early supporter of Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton's presidential bid, Mabus landed in the Clinton administration as ambassador to Saudi Arabia. He was the top U.S. diplomat to the oil-rich nation from 1994 until shortly before the deadly Khobar Towers terrorist attacks in 1996.

After helping with Clinton's re-election campaign, Mabus stepped out of politics. But he was cast into the public eye in 1998 because of a messy divorce with his wife, Julie. The divorce became national news because Mabus secretly recorded his wife's conversation with a priest, catching her on tape admitting adultery.

Before being tapped as Navy secretary, Mabus sat on corporate boards and charities. As CEO of Foamex International Inc. from 2006 to 2007, Mabus steered the polyurethane foam products company out of bankruptcy. He owns more than 4,700 acres of Mississippi timberland worth between $5 million and $25 million.

He was an early supporter of Obama's presidential campaign, endorsing him in 2007 and surprising some political observers who had expected Mabus to support Hillary Rodham Clinton because of Mabus' past political ties to Bill Clinton.

Political savvy may be the most important aspect of Mabus' new job. Steven Peyronnin, executive director of the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana, said Mabus can learn quickly about environmental problems. The cleanup effort so far has been dogged by criticism that nobody is in charge. Peyronnin said the coast needs someone who can make decisions and get things done quickly.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama's point man charting a new future for the oil-poisoned Gulf Coast will do the job part-time. Some environmentalists said the job demands someone's full atten...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama's point man charting a new future for the oil-poisoned Gulf Coast will do the job part-time. Some environmentalists said the job demands someone's full atten...
Filed by Katherine Goldstein  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 135
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
12:05 AM on 06/21/2010
Nothing against the new guy, but Obama's pick so far on everything have been a little disheartening.

He entire team is made up of boobs, and we are paying not Him. They messed up fixing the Economy, blew it on the Recovery Act, messed up Health care Reform, and put Thad Allen in charge of the BP spill making it worse. They can't seem to hold anyone to account or reform Wall Street. So now a new guy He picked is going to make everything better.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:31 PM on 06/20/2010
So from the outset let me say I am a recovered-tin-foil-hatter. I went through a phase in college where I devoured conspiracy theories and prophetic readings. When I read this story I felt I needed to dig my foil cap out from under the bed and just put an idea of there. For no other reason than fun, but if there are other Nostradamians out there, feel free to run wild (I'll respectfully decline and retire to my porch and sip on some lemonade). Arguably Nostradamus named the first two anti-Christs with marginal success. He was off a couple letters in their names and birth[places, yada, yada, yada. He did name his third snti-Christ as man named Mabus. He'll be wearing a blue turban. GO!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winged Pegasus
10:58 PM on 06/20/2010
Thanks for permission (to go). We really need to stop all this and bring together the MIT, CIT, Sanford, Johns Hopkins, Texas A&M, and other experts in engineering together to "Plug The Damn Hole" (the presidents quote a month ago, not mine). Law suits, George Bush did it, BP sucks, We hate rich people, Yacht races, White Sox Baseball games, mean nothing right now. IT DOESN'T MATTER WHOSE FAULT IT IS RIGHT NOW JUNE 20th, 2010.We need the Dutch, Norwegians, Russians, Venezuelans, whoever to PLUG THE DAMN HOLE PERIOD!
07:12 PM on 06/20/2010
Try to get an idea to any of these people in charge. Blocked at every turn by underlings. Mr. Mabus should see this. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UP8iN4ZX1JU&feature=channel
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
bbrecht
"pray for the dead, fight like hell for the liv
09:03 AM on 06/20/2010
The gulf coast needs help with sustainable development = development of industry that won't kill them.
11:39 PM on 06/18/2010
didn't nostradamus write about mabus

laughing
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
right Alice
01:25 PM on 06/19/2010
Yes, he did, and I'm laughing with you.
You are the first to mention this here,
and I am wondering: in all this 2012 end time talk,
why would anyone at this point hire someone named Mabus!?
Is it destiny? Sigh.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lynettema
Little old lady
11:28 PM on 06/18/2010
So is Adm. Thad Allen resigning?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lynettema
Little old lady
11:18 PM on 06/18/2010
Good grief. Could these people wait for the criticism until AFTER he has done a cr.ap.py job?
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:08 PM on 06/18/2010
Part-time? How insulting to the victims of this environmental and economic disaster.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paros
09:36 PM on 06/18/2010
Haley Barbour, ""Mississippians will decide about Mississippi's future."
Knowing but pretending not to, that Mabus is a Mississippian.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winged Pegasus
11:18 PM on 06/18/2010
Ironically, the guy in charge could have been Secretary of the Navy, Joe Sestak if he would have accepted the Presidents offer of recusal from the Democrat Senatorial Primary in Pennsylvania. Whether or not one is from Mississippi may have less to do with competence to plug the hole then specifically trained geological engineers from MIT, Sanford, Texas A&M, CIT, Purdue, and others. If you have some insight that this type of trouble shooting committe has been put together then please fill me in.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eileenflemingWAWA
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
08:57 PM on 06/18/2010
"The oil spill is taking on new dimensions with scientists warning that the gushing oil contains vast amounts of methane.

"John Kessler, a Texas A&M University oceanographer, says that while typical oil deposits include only 5 percent of natural gas or Methane, the crude oozing from the seabed in the Gulf of Mexico contains nearly 40 percent of the gas.

"Kessler, who is closely looking at the effects of methane from the BP oil leak, told AP that, "This is the most vigorous methane eruption in modern human history."

"This massive bubble of methane, scientists believe, almost kills the environment as it forms "dead zones" where oxygen is so depleted that nothing can live.

"Scientists are still trying to measure how much methane has escaped into the water and how it may damage the Gulf and its living organisms.

"Millions of gallons of oil have gushed into the water since the Deepwater Horizon rig blew up on April 20, killing 11 workers.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=131016§ionid=3510203
07:55 PM on 06/18/2010
I'm sure that Ray Mabus is not praying to George Marshall for guidance every night. But perhaps he should be.

Not unlike the grand design to rebuild the economic foundation for the countries of Western Europe, the former Mississippi Governor and the current Secretary of the Navy has the same opportunity to change a bulbous chunk of the United States.

Thanks to the President, Mabus has been bequeathed with the mojo to make things right in the south.

REM, as we used to call him, has the presidential wag of the thumb to twist, twirl and transform those states which border the Gulf of Mexico.

The one-time "youngest Governor" has gotten the nod to oversee long-term restoration of the Gulf Coast. Thanks to President Barack Obama, my former boss can do what he always wanted to do (albeit on a much grander scale).

Ray can fix it if he throws his fate to the wind and realizes THIS IS IT. Not only for him, but for the South, too.
07:55 PM on 06/18/2010
Mabus has been given the chance to reform the South in ways that goes far beyond growing sweeter peaches, appointing minorities to power, picking softer cotton, challenging traditional thought, being transparent in his governing technique, fighting your basic political a-holes, netting fresher mudbugs, or distilling better moonshine.

And this time it all starts with the beaches from Texas to Florida. The swamps. The folks who have little to give right now but much to share later.

But much different from the Marshall Plan, Mabus needs to bring big money into play. He won't have the help of sixteen nations like GM. And thirteen-billion bucks in the 40’s translates to 95-choo-choo-lillion bucks in the 21st-Century. The twenty-billion bucks announced by the President is a half-filled penny jar nowadays.

My message to Ray is this: Turn corporate America into saints. Offer no strings. Give no ads. Get them to go immortal. Make it easy for capitalism do the right thing. Let the saviors of industry do it without credit. Let business make a difference without competition. Fix it, man. Fix it, Ray.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winged Pegasus
11:25 PM on 06/18/2010
The Marshall plan was a scheme put into action two years after the cessation of hostilities in Europe. This(the leak) is a continual event happening in real time, demanding primary and immediate attention right now. Discussions on Marshall plan like reclamation and restoration need to wait until the hole is plugged.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Chernynkaya
07:47 PM on 06/18/2010
I dunno, but in selecting Mabus to oversee long-term restoration of the Gulf Coast, Mississippi’s political people say Obama selected a former governor with a deep understanding of the region’s economy and who is well-respected by them.

“He has the ability to speak the language of the local leadership. As governor, he got to know many of the leaders in that area, so he will not come as a naive, uninformed person about the problem that he’s going to be confronted with,” said former Mississippi Gov. William Winter. But Haley Barbour doesn't like him and that's an endorsement for me.

He's got to be trusted by those in the Gulf states, be a Navy guy, and be a Dem. We'll see.

“He understands the economy, culture and dynamics of the region, and he knows the officials in the administration who can make the plan for restoration become a reality,” Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) said in an e-mailed statement.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0610/38695.html#ixzz0rFdntIpR
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winged Pegasus
10:59 PM on 06/18/2010
The understanding of the people and their needs, being a Democrat at odds with the current governor of Mississippi for whatever reason is going to facilitate a halt to the flow of oil into the Gulf. Please, a brief explaination on how this helps with the immediate problem of plugging the hole. During the California fire season, a director of forest reclamation is not sent in to plant new tree saplings until the fire is out so please explain how Secretary Mabus will help short of mobilizing the U.S. Marine core to build sand burms, pick up oil balls, and organize a deep sea capping system for the spill.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lynettema
Little old lady
11:20 PM on 06/18/2010
You are right. If Haley Barbour doesn't like him, he must be okay.
07:35 PM on 06/18/2010
The Secretary of the Navy is responsible for the Marines as well as the Navy. While we have Navy vessels and Marines deployed, I feel he should be focused on that! How he would have time to handle this mess down here is beyond me. We need a full time guy in charge down here, and the SecNav needs to be able to devote his full attention to the Navy and Marine corps.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hokeysmokes
acorn aficionado
07:31 PM on 06/18/2010
The only rationale I can see for a part time chief is all is lost. No point in trying. Methane producing a gulf wide dead zone. A portent dome swelling around the bore hole. Fissures in the seabed spewing oil. From the beginning, worse case scenarios have been rolling closer and closer. One worse case would have the bore hole eroding into a massive gusher impossible to stop. Worse than that? A collapse of the seafloor resulting in a toxic tsunami. Part time huh?