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 | | P. Lynn Scarlett | | Visiting Scholar and Co-Director, Center for the Management of Ecological Wealth | |
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PROFILE |
Lynn Scarlett has extensive experience in both government and in academia on issues related to effective stewardship of land, water, and wildlife resources. As Deputy Secretary and Chief Operating Officer of the U.S. Department of the Interior from 2005 to 2009, she had broad responsibilities for federal land management, wetlands, and ecosystem oversight.
Scarlett is co-director of RFF's Center for the Management of Ecological Wealth and was Deputy Secretary and Chief Operating Officer of the Interior Department from 2005 to 2009, a post she took on after four years as the Department's Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget. She was named acting secretary of the Department for two months in 2006, and chaired the Department’s Climate Change Task Force.
From 1982 through 2001, she held a variety of positions at the Los Angeles-based Reason Foundation. After leaving government, she was an independent consultant with the Environmental Defense Fund on issues pertaining to climate, ecosystem services, and stewardship of open lands.
She is a member of the national Commission on Climate and Tropical Forests and was chair of the federal Wildland Fire Leadership Council. She serves on the boards of the American Hiking Society and the Continental Divide Trail Alliance and is a trustee emeritus of the Udall Foundation.
To learn more about Scarlett’s work, you can also visit her personal website. |
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| Featured Publications | | Goings On: Highlights of RFF's Recent Contributions to Shaping Environmental Policy | | Kenneth J. Arrow, Sheila M. Olmstead, Dallas Burtraw, Arthur G. Fraas, Margaret A. Walls, Leonard A. Shabman, P. Lynn Scarlett, Ian W.H. Parry, Molly K. Macauley, Roberton C. Williams III, Richard D. Morgenstern, Karen L. Palmer, Allen Blackman, Rebecca Epanchin-Niell, James W. Boyd, Carolyn Fischer | | Resources | 2013 (183) | | | | Inside RFF: A Look at What's Happening | | Timothy J. Brennan, P. Lynn Scarlett, Molly K. Macauley | | Resources | 2013 (183) | | | | Inside RFF | | Jintao Xu, Karen L. Palmer, Sheila M. Olmstead, Richard D. Morgenstern, Allen Blackman, Juha V. Siikamäki, Timothy J. Brennan, P. Lynn Scarlett, James N. Sanchirico, Yusuke Kuwayama , Antung Anthony Liu, C. Boyden Gray | | Resources | 2013 (182) | | | | Goings On | | James Smith, Anthony Paul, Carolyn Fischer, James W. Boyd, Elisheba Beia Spiller, Sheila M. Olmstead, Molly K. Macauley, Phil Sharp, Carolyn Kousky, Raymond J. Kopp, Dallas Burtraw, Alan J. Krupnick, Yusuke Kuwayama , P. Lynn Scarlett, Karen L. Palmer | | Resources | 2012 (181) | | | | Managing Water through Innovative Collaboration | | P. Lynn Scarlett | | Resources | 2012 (181) | | | | Managing Water: Governance Innovations to Enhance Coordination | | P. Lynn Scarlett | | Issue Brief 12-04 | May 2012 | | | | Ecosystem Services: Quantification, Policy Applications, and Current Federal Capabilities | | P. Lynn Scarlett, James W. Boyd | | RFF Discussion Paper 11-13 | March 2011 | | | | Resources Magazine | | Joseph E. Aldy, John W. Anderson, Lynann Butkiewicz, Mark A Cohen, Roger M. Cooke, Arthur G. Fraas, Madeline Gottlieb, Kristin Hayes, Carolyn Kousky, Joshua Linn, Molly K. Macauley, Richard D. Morgenstern, Daniel F. Morris, Timothy Murphy, Nigel Purvis, Leslie Richardson, Nathan Richardson, Heather L. Ross, P. Lynn Scarlett, Adam Stern, Andrew R Stevenson | | Resources | Winter/Spring 2011 (177) | | | | Managing Environmental, Health, and Safety Risks: A Closer Look at how Three Federal Agencies Respond | | P. Lynn Scarlett, Arthur G. Fraas, Richard D. Morgenstern, Timothy Murphy | | Resources | Winter/Spring 2011 (177) | | | | Risk Management Practices: Cross-Agency Comparisons with Minerals Management Service | | P. Lynn Scarlett, Igor Linkov, Carolyn Kousky | | RFF Discussion Paper 10-67 | January 2011 | | | | View All Related Publications |
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DISCUSSION PAPERS | | Ecosystem Services: Quantification, Policy Applications, and Current Federal Capabilities | | P. Lynn Scarlett, James W. Boyd | | RFF Discussion Paper 11-13 | March 2011 | Abstract: The study describes existing federal policies that permit or promote ecosystem services analysis, management, investments, and markets. Our survey discusses: 1) current programs that stimulate or support the measurement of ecosystem services; 2) existing federal drivers of ecosystem services analysis; and 3) programs that stimulate investment in ecosystem services. Understanding existing capacity is important to federal and other leaders who see opportunities for environmental policy innovations—such as payments, markets, and management practices—based on ecological wealth and services. | | | | Risk Management Practices: Cross-Agency Comparisons with Minerals Management Service | | P. Lynn Scarlett, Igor Linkov, Carolyn Kousky | | RFF Discussion Paper 10-67 | January 2011 | Abstract: This paper reviews implementation of the risk management frameworks used by eight federal and foreign agencies—including the Minerals Management Service (MMS, now the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement, or BOEMRE)—and summarizes the features of a robust tolerable risk (TR) framework. A TR framework conceptually breaks risk into three categories—acceptable, unacceptable, and tolerable—separated by numerical boundaries. Most of the agencies surveyed in this review have adopted a TR or modified TR framework, but MMS (BOEMRE) generallyhas not (although the agency does use an Oil Spill Risk Model to assess spill probabilities and possible trajectories). The study argues that while numerical thresholds are not essential to risk management, theyprovide a transparent goal against which to benchmark practices, equipment, standards, and facilities, and would be a valuable tool for BOEMRE. We also recommend that BOEMRE develop better risk assessment and management guidance; identify and more systematically collect information for understanding and evaluating risks and safety performance; and strengthen performance-based risk management by adopting proven approaches, such as those used in Norway and the United Kingdom for offshore oil and gas development. | | | | Managing Environmental, Health, and Safety Risks | | P. Lynn Scarlett, Arthur G. Fraas, Richard D. Morgenstern, Timothy Murphy | | RFF Discussion Paper 10-64 | January 2011 | Abstract: This study compares and contrasts regulatory and related practices—in particular, regulatory decisionmaking, risk assessment and planning processes, inspection and compliance, and organization structure, budgets, and training—of the Minerals Management Service (MMS, now the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement, or BOEMRE) with those of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Comparing MMS practices withthose of other federal agencies that also manage low-probability but high-consequence environmental risks provides a basis for identifying opportunities for enhancing regulatory capacity and safety performance in managing deepwater energy exploration and production. Our research finds important differences in processes for setting standards; peer review contribution to the rulemaking process; establishment of tolerable risk thresholds; and training of key staff. The paper concludes with several recommendations for how various EPA and FAA practices might be modified and used at BOEMRE to strengthen its regulatory and risk management processes. | | | |
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| EVENTS | | The Media, Science, and Cognition: How We Shape Our Understanding of Environmental Issues | | Wednesday, February 06, 2013 | | Green Infrastructure: Using Natural Landscapes for Flood Mitigation and Water Quality Improvements | | Wednesday, April 04, 2012 | | Deepwater Drilling: Recommendations for a Safer Future | | Wednesday, April 06, 2011 | | Water Conflicts and Resolution: Economy vs. Environment? | | Wednesday, March 02, 2011 | | View All Related Events |
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