Gregg Renkes Explained

Gregg Renkes
Office:Director of the Department of Interior Office of Policy Analysis
Term Start:September 2018
Term End:January 2021
President:Donald Trump
Office1:Attorney General of Alaska
Termstart1:2002
Termend1:2005
Successor1:David W. Márquez
Predecessor1:Bruce Botelho
Governor1:Frank Murkowski
Party:Republican
Education:Vassar College (BS)
Yale University (MS)
University of Colorado (JD)

Gregg Renkes is an American politician, attorney, and lobbyist who served as the Alaska Attorney General from 2002 to 2005.

Education

Renkes earned a Bachelor of Science degree in environmental science from Vassar College, Master of Science from the Yale School of the Environment, and Juris Doctor from the University of Colorado Law School.[1]

Career

After a judicial clerkship in Alaska, Gregg Renkes served in the U.S. Senate in various capacities including Chief of Staff for Senator Frank Murkowski and Majority Staff Director for the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. Mr. Renkes was Alaska’s fifteenth Attorney General where he increased the focus at the Department of Law on prosecuting crime and protecting and developing the state’s energy resource wealth. He also served as a member of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council and the Alaska Permanent Fund Board. He was appointed Co-Chair of the Alaska Rural Justice and Law Enforcement Commission. His private practice has focused on matters relating to energy, public land, Alaska Native, and Federal Indian law. He has also worked as general counsel for a national commercial real estate and energy development company.

Mr. Renkes most recently was appointed to the Interior Board of Land Appeals (IBLA) where he decided appeals from bureau decisions relating to the use and disposition of public lands and their resources, mineral resources on the Outer Continental Shelf, and the conduct of surface coal mining operations under the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act. Prior to joining the IBLA, he held the positions of Senior Counselor to the Secretary and Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy at the U.S. Department of the Interior where he developed and led the execution of policy priorities and regulatory initiatives through departmental, inter-agency and executive processes and reviewed all matters requiring secretarial action.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2018-09-07. Former Alaska attorney general joins Interior Department ranks in Washington. 2020-08-25. Anchorage Daily News. en-US.