Showing posts with label QA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label QA. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Q&A with Author & Former Ambassador Chase Untermeyer


 After just a few pages into his latest book, Inside Reagan’s Navy, I knew I had to Q&A with Ambassador Untermeyer. It was clear that he had an inside look at a part of our government only a few are privilidged to see, however, it was his casual, relatable diary entries that make his book truly unique. Rather than an embellished and overly-dramatic tell-all, Untermeyer's entries reveal day to day life at the pentagon in a way that is easy to understand, believable, and still captivating. The author, himself, is just as interesting. Ambassador Untermeyer eagerly agreed to my request to do a Q&A with him, much to my appreciation. Here is a peak inside the mind behind Inside Reagan’s Navy:   

Q: You have been a diarist since the age of nine. What encouraged you to share your diary entries relative to your time in the White House and Pentagon?

 Ambassador Untermeyer: I felt the journal entries would not only tell the story of those very interesting days but do so in a fresh, contemporaneous manner.

Q: As a person who has experienced life in the Pentagon and the White House, how does public opinion of these entities compare to the reality of what goes on in both?
 
Ambassador Untermeyer: Perhaps the greatest pubic misperception of the White House is that it runs the US Government. At most, the White House sets the policy and the message for the administration and handles the politics. Day-to-day governing is done by the president’s appointees in the departments and agencies. What the public may not fully grasp about the Pentagon is how convoluted its bureaucracy (both military and civilian) is and how much that bureaucracy is fixated on the budgetary process.   

Q: In the book you describe the White House as a "silken cocoon." Why was it a silken cocoon, and why did you feel the need to leave?
 
Ambassador Untermeyer: The White House is a “silken cocoon” because it is a very special place where historic things happen and whose denizens live every day in a rarefied atmosphere. Few who work there, in any administration of either party, can conceive of being anywhere else. I enjoyed and appreciated both my spells of duty in the West Wing, but I knew that to gain genuine satisfaction and benefit from serving in Washington, I had to leave for a job in a department/agency where policy is actually implemented. 

Q:  You seem to express admiration for Jeb Bush in your book. Why, and what are your thoughts regarding his current campaign? 
 
Ambassador Untermeyer: I have known Jeb Bush since 1979, when he was 23 years old and working in his father’s first campaign for president. Even then, he struck me as a man of mature depth, strength, and judgment. His subsequent service as governor of Florida demonstrated how well he can handle complex issues and political controversy in a very diverse place. These are exactly what we need and expect in a president. Although I wish Jeb’s poll numbers were higher than they are right now, over the length of the primary campaign I am confident that voters will come to see these qualities and support him.  

Q:  In your book you suggest an alternative solution to Navy Disability Pay. What might those changes look like today? 
 
Ambassador Untermeyer: Any disability system needs sensible rules, but it must allow someone at the top – in this case, the (civilian) secretary of a military service or his/her designee – to bend or overrule those guidelines if particular cases merit such sympathetic action.  

Q: You express concern in the book about your reputation as a political fixer. Was this a fair assessment in your opinion, and in what ways has this perception changed over time? 

Ambassador Untermeyer: Although I have had a life-long interest in politics – and won election to public office all four times that I ran – I have never been a political “operative”. (I prefer this word to “fixer”, because the latter denotes someone outside government who seeks to affect administrative and legislative decisions. The operative is concerned with winning elections.) But I have recognized that in the American system, opportunities to serve in government often (if not always) come from helping specific candidates in their campaigns. When people ask how I became an ambassador, I only half-jokingly reply, “I stood in the snow in New Hampshire and waved a sign.” President George W. Bush certainly appointed me to head the US embassy in Qatar for other reasons, but he also knew I was a proven supporter. 

Q: What do you believe is one of the greatest things readers are able to take away from Inside Reagan's Navy?

 Ambassador Untermeyer: I hope the book conveys some of the drama, excitement, and humor in a major center of action during in the Reagan Administration, the Navy Department. If I have succeeded, people who were not even born yet can sense what it was like to be in Washington during those days.

To get a closer look at Ambassador Untermeyer’s life in the pentagon, purchase Inside Reagan’s Navy here.
I would like to thank Ambassador Untermeyer for taking the time to engage in this Q&A with me and for his willingness to offer such candid responses.

Written By Rebecca Reap

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Q&A with Gay Gomez, author of The Louisiana Coast: Guide to an American Wetland





Gay Gomez is associate professor of geography at McNeese State University in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Gomez, a professional nature guide and longtime activist and champion for the state's wetlands, has served on the board of directors for the Coalistion to Restore Coastal Louisiana and the Louisiana Ornithological Society. She is actively involved in many other organizations and is the author of The Louisiana Coast: Guide to an American Wetland.

  1. What is a wetland environment? And, why should we preserve them?

"Wetlands are transition environments between dry land and open water. They are places where standing water is present for all or part of the year, and, because of this, they support vegetation that is adapted to saturated soil conditions. In the Gulf Coast region, swamps and marshes predominate. Swamps are forested wetlands, while marshes feature many species of grasses, sedges, rushes, and submerged aquatic vegetation. 'Water brings life,' and these wetland habitats are high in both plant and animal diversity. Humans also are part of these ecosystems; we impact them by managing water and wildlife and use them for a variety of commercial and recreational activities, from bird watching to seafood harvesting. Without coastal wetlands, valuable fish and shellfish like brown shrimp, white shrimp, redfish (red drum) speckled trout (spotted sea trout), gulf menhaden, blue crabs, and American oysters would not have a place to grow to adulthood. Without these wetlands, many species of waterfowl and other wildlife would not have a refuge in winter, or a place to breed in summer, or a spot to rest and feed during migration."


Photo by Gay Gomez at the Cameron East Jetty Park and Pier, Camero, LA

2. In your book, The Louisiana Coast: Guide to an American Wetland, you describe the coast as a "place of interaction among land, people, and ideas." Can you tell us more about this connection between the land and local people? Why is this connection unique to the Louisiana coast?

"People are an integral part of the Louisiana coastal environment. Generations of families of many ethnicities have adapted to the opportunities and challenges of the region, which include a long growing season, bountiful fishery, and location along the Mississippi and central flyways, as well as threats from hurricanes, storm surges, flooding and insects. Louisiana coastal culture reflects these adaptations in its architecture, food ways, wetland and wildlife management, commercial and recreational activities and attitude toward life. According to 2007 U.S. Census estimates, approximately 47% of Louisiana’s population lives in the state’s coastal parishes. There is a strong emotional attachment and sense of identity associated with living in or near the coast and using its resources. People here feel we are part of the coast, and it is part of us."

3. Over many years, hurricane damage, erosion, human land development, and the byproducts of oil exploration have taken their toll on the coast. What are the specific, long-term implications of the recent BP oil spill with which you are most concerned?

"I’m concerned about the presence and effects of both oil and toxic dispersants in our wetlands, on our beaches, and in our marine environment. All these habitats are interconnected; foul one habitat and the others will also be affected. I fear the contaminants will have long-lasting effects on our fisheries and of course on the entire food web. I’m also wondering how the presence of oil will affect water temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico. If the presence of oil results in higher water temperature, this could cause hurricanes to intensify as they pass over the warmer area. I recall how rapidly Hurricane Katrina strengthened to a category 5 storm as it passed over a warm water eddy west of Florida in 2005. On the subject of hurricanes, I’m concerned that a hurricane and storm surge crossing oil-impacted wetlands will both convey oil further into fragile wetland areas and cause land loss where wetland plants have already succumbed to the suffocating effects of the oil."

Photo courtesy of Gay Gomez. Shrimp boat and the Gulf of Mexico shoreline at Holly Beach, LA.

4. You also discuss coastal restoration at length, in your book. The environmental devastation associated with this spill seems to be massive and widespread, with broad implications. What can individuals do now to aid both in recovery from the spill and long-term restoration?

"Individuals can stay informed about the spill and can learn about its impacts on coastal wetlands by exploring sites like the coalition to restore coastal Louisiana, http://www.crcl.org/, and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, http://www.wlf.louisiana.gov/. Becoming informed about and supporting coastal restoration, and urging your U.S. congressmen and senators to do likewise, will also help. One way you can support the gulf coast seafood harvesters and businesses is by refusing to buy imported shrimp, crabs and oysters; don’t let the spill be an opportunity for foreign competitors to steal the market from domestic producers and suppliers. In addition, people might want to help by coming to the gulf coast and directly patronizing businesses impacted by the spill. There is much to see and do, even if fishing and swimming are currently unavailable in some areas."

5. Tourism will, no doubt, be affected by the spill. Will it be safe for families to visit the coast this summer? If so, what are some of your favorite, must-see spots?

"I believe tourism is still a possibility, especially eco-tourism. It is still possible to visit many wildlife refuges and coastal communities. Some of my favorite spots in Louisiana are the Creole Nature Trail in Cameron Parish, Grand Isle in Jefferson Parish, and the Louisiana Great Gulf Coast Birding Trail, which stretches across the state’s entire coast region. My book, The Louisiana Coast: Guide to an American Wetland, has information on these and other locations.