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New Institute, New Leader
Timothy Profeta, J.D. '97, M.E.M. '97, counsel
for the environment to U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman, will be the
first director of Duke's new Nicholas Institute for Environmental
Policy Solutions. Officials say that the Nicholas Institute will
have a global reach and will marshal the broad resources of the
university to help set a national environmental agenda.
William K. Reilly, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency administrator
under President George H.W. Bush and the current president and
CEO of Aqua International Partners, will be senior adviser and
chair of the board of advisers for the Nicholas Institute. Together,
Profeta and Reilly will bring to the Nicholas Institute "unparalleled
leadership," says President Richard H. Brodhead.
As Lieberman's counsel, Profeta was a principal architect of the
Lieberman-McCain Climate Stewardship Act in 2003. He also oversaw
all activities of the Senate Subcommittee on Clean Air, Wetlands,
and Climate Change during Lieberman's term as committee chair in
the 107th Congress. Profeta has represented Lieberman in legislative
negotiations pertaining to environmental and energy issues and
coordinated the senator's energy and environmental portfolio during
his runs for national office.
"By the end of the decade, I want the Nicholas Institute to
be on the 'first-call-made list' by a wide range of groups interested
in environmental issues," Profeta says. "It should be
a resource for businesses seeking to craft strategies to address
environmental problems, policymakers seeking to draft effective
solutions, advocates seeking credible insight into environmental
challenges, and reporters and the public seeking objective analysis."
Profeta, who will start his new job June 1, earned his bachelor's
degree in political science from Yale University in 1992 before
enrolling in Duke's Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth
Sciences and the law school. He was a visiting lecturer at the
law school, where he taught a weekly seminar on the evolution of
environmental law and on the Endangered Species Act. Before joining
Lieberman's staff, he was a law clerk for Judge Paul L. Friedman,
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.
Duke plans to build Nicholas Hall, a free-standing new "green" building
on West Campus to house the school, the Nicholas Institute, and
all related centers, programs, and faculty that address environmental
issues at Duke. The institute is made possible through a gift from
Duke's board of trustees chair Peter M. Nicholas '64 and his wife,
Virginia Lilly Nicholas '64, of Boston. The couple gave $70 million
in December 2003 to the school that bears their name to push ahead
with the new institute.
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