bruset said:
He's a LAWYER! Where is his qualifications to run the DFW, let alone the DEP? Shouldn't he have a degree in Environmental Science?
Hey now Ben, don't throw out the baby with the bath water. It annoys me that you guys take his stance on the bear hunt and use that to say he is a no good S.O. B.
He has done plenty for this state. I don't know where you got his Bio, but he does have experience in environmental policy and managing these type of programs:
Before his appointment as Commissioner of the DEP, Campbell was a visiting professor at the University of North Carolina's Law School, where he taught classes on natural resources and the environment, property rights and the Constitution, and contracts. In 1999, President Bill Clinton appointed Campbell to work at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as Regional Administrator for the Mid-Atlantic Region, where he was responsible for implementing and enforcing federal environmental laws. During his tenure at the EPA, Campbell addressed lead contamination in Philadelphia schools, worked on smart growth pilot projects and negotiated a new agreement to strengthen protection of the Chesapeake Bay. Earlier, he served as Associate Director of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, where he was responsible for all toxic and environmental protection matters from 1995-1999. In that position, he negotiated a 1996 landmark agreement affecting New Jersey that strengthened ocean protection while ensuring that needed port development could move forward.
From 1990-1994, Campbell served as an attorney-advisor for the U. S. Department of Justice, Environment and Natural Resources Division, where he was responsible for trial and appellate litigation and advised client agencies and the Assistant Attorney General on a range of environmental issues.
Here is just a small sample of what he has done for NJ. If you guys still want to crucify him, so be it. But don't say he is a do-nothing guy who's only in it for himself:
(04/82) TRENTON – New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced the final
adoption of regulations providing the state’s highest level of
protection for 14 streams and rivers that provide drinking water for
residents in Monmouth and Ocean counties.
(04/132) TRENTON - Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced final rules that
require safe pest control methods in schools.
(04/130) PRINCETON – New Jersey Department of Environmental
Protection (DEP) Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced the
adoption of new rules that establish the strongest mercury and arsenic
standards in the nation.
(04/126) TRENTON -Advancing its work to reduce children's exposure to
diesel exhaust from school buses, Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced a one-of-a kind retrofit project for New Jersey school buses.
(04/125) TRENTON--Emphasizing the importance of preserving water
resources and habitat, Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced the acquisition of the
S.V. Farming Property, a 597.6-acre former clay mine in Quinton
Township, Salem County. DEP Division of Fish and Wildlife will
administer the property as part of the Maskells Mill Pond Wildlife
Management Area.
(04/124) TRENTON - The Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is
offering residents the opportunity to cut firewood at any of four
participating state parks and forests for $15 a cord while supplies
last. Through its Homeowner's Firewood Program, DEP's Division of Parks
and Forestry opens up state land to individuals interested in cutting
firewood for personal use.
(PATERSON) - Governor James E. McGreevey today announced the
designation of three new state parks at historic destinations in
Paterson, Trenton and River Edge, adding that a national competition
would be held for the design of the Trenton and Paterson sites.
The Governor made the announcement at the Great Falls in Paterson,
where he was joined by Department of Environmental Protection
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell
(04/122) PAULSBORO-Highlighting the importance of reducing diesel
idling, Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) Commissioner
Bradley M. Campbell today announced a diesel emission reduction project, the first of its kind in New Jersey.
(04/113) TRENTON--Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced the preservation of the final remaining open space parcel adjacent to the Malibu Beach Wildlife Management Area in Egg Harbor Township, Atlantic County. DEP will manage the beachfront property as part of the Malibu Beach Wildlife Management Area.
(04/111) STOCKTON-Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced the preservation of a
92-acre tract known as the My Ben property in Stockton Borough and
Delaware Township in Hunterdon County. DEP will manage the property as
part of the Delaware and Raritan Canal State Park.
(09/109) TRENTON - The New Jersey Department of Environmental
Protection (DEP) and the Environmental Infrastructure Trust (EIT) today
announced funding for the City of Trenton to clean and upgrade water
mains that supply drinking water to over 250,000 people in the Trenton
area.
(04-108) TRENTON-Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced the acquisition of 43
properties located throughout New Jersey that provide fishing access for New Jersey residents and visitors. The properties, which comprise 3,662 acres of permanently protected open space, were purchased through the DEP Green Acres Program at a total cost of $16,770,000.
(04/106) WOODLAND - New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today joined former Governor
James Florio, Congressman Rush Holt, Senator Martha Bark, and members of the New Jersey Conservation Foundation (NJCF) to celebrate the
dedication of 9,400 acres of open space in the Pinelands to be managed
as the Franklin Parker Preserve. The DEP contributed $3.5 million from the State Land Acquisition Fund towards the purchase.
(04/104) TRENTON- Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced funding in the amount
of $28,000 to improve water quality and fishing and boating
opportunities in Lake Musconetcong.
(04/101) TRENTON -- Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced a Raritan River
initiative that requires specific cleanup work by responsible parties at five contaminated sites along the river's lower section to improve
water quality
(04/96) TRENTON - New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell announced the start of a new,
enhanced statewide underground storage tank compliance inspection
program to prevent pollution by reducing the number of leaking tanks.
(04/90) TRENTON--Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced the successful
completion of the Ocean County Medical Waste Generator Compliance and
Enforcement initiative. The sweep, which DEP led in partnership with the Department of Health and Senior Services, assessed compliance with state requirements that protect the public from the potential hazards of discarded needles, syringes, and other medical waste.
(TRENTON)--Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Bradley
M. Campbell on Thursday will announce the preservation of a 298-acre
Lebanon Township property located in the core of the Highlands region.
TRENTON --- Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) Commissioner
Bradley M. Campbell will officially open new offices and laboratories
for the Bureau of Marine Water Monitoring in Leeds Point, Atlantic
County at 11 a.m. Tuesday. The facility will conduct regular testing of
shellfish for metals and other contaminants, as well as help in the
monitoring of marine water quality and events such as oil spills and
algal blooms.
(03/77) TRENTON – New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced an agreement with PPL Generation, LLC (PPL), to shut down two coal-fired units at its Martins Creek power plant in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, and to take other actions to significantly reduce emissions of air pollutants from the plant.
(04/87) Trenton Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
Commissioner Bradley M. Campbell today announced completion of a $14
million cleanup at Burnt Fly Bog Superfund site in Marlboro where more
than 55,000 tons of PCB and lead contaminated soil were removed and
seven acres of wetlands restored with vegetation.