[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 127 (Thursday, July 27, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S4419]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO CYNTHIA K. DOHNER
Mr. BOOZMAN. Mr. President, today I wish to recognize the
distinguished public service career of Cynthia K. Dohner. Cindy served
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with distinction and honor for more
than 24 years and will leave the Service on August 30, 2017.
Cindy's passion for the outdoors began at an early age while fishing
and hunting with her father. These experiences encouraged her to pursue
an education to ensure the outdoor way of life she enjoyed would
continue to be available for future generations.
She earned a bachelor's degree in marine biology, a master's degree
in fisheries and aquaculture, and led a long career protecting fish and
wildlife and their habitats.
Cindy worked for a private environmental consulting firm and held
positions in several State and Federal agencies before joining the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service in 1993. Prior to her time in the Southeast
Region, Cindy worked with the Service's Division of Fish Hatcheries and
as the branch chief for Recovery and Consultation in Washington, DC.
She moved to Atlanta in 1999 to serve as the assistant regional
director for Ecological Services and later served as deputy regional
director.
For the the last 7 years, Cindy led the Southeast Region in its
mission to make a difference for fish, wildlife, plants, and the people
who live and work in communities across the region. As regional
director, she has provided vision and leadership to more than 1,300
employees in 10 southeastern States, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin
Islands and has positively influenced conservation successes and
solutions nationally.
In Arkansas and throughout the Southeast, Cindy is recognized as an
honest partner and innovative leader. She has worked alongside
Arkansas' fish farmers, cattemen, and local elected officials,
including the Association of Arkansas Counties, to solve complex
conservation challenges in a way that keeps working lands working,
reduces regulatory burden, and helps local economies to thrive. Her
responsiveness to private-sector concerns and willingness to find
creative ways to conserve fish and wildlife resources has made a
difference to wildlife and people alike.
Under her leadership, the Southeast Region has joined forces with
States, private landowners, the Department of Defense and other Federal
agencies, and several sectors of industry and business including
energy, timber and finance among others to find creative ways to
conserve fish and wildlife resources. This collaboration resulted in
notable conservation successes including removing Arkansas Magazine
Mountain shagreen snail and the Louisiana black bear from the
endangered species list and precluding the need to list more than 100
fish, wildlife, and plants petitioned for Federal protection in the
past several years. She and her team worked closely with many partners
to restore more than 1 million acres of bottomland hardwood habitat in
the South that is critical for migratory waterfowl and other wildlife
in decline. Cindy was remarkably effective in large part because she
recognized and emphasized the little things while building
relationships that often had big implications and made conservation
successes possible on larger scales.
I applaud Cindy for her dedication to public service and the lasting
difference that she has made at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. I
am hopeful FWS will continue to build on her cooperative conservation
legacy. I ask that my colleagues join me in expressing our sincere
appreciation and gratitude for her public service and wishing Cindy
success and happiness in her future endeavors.
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