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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dale Hall
Biography
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Director Dale Hall Photos

Director's   Priorities
graphic of TV screen shot of USFWS Director Dale Hall
Director Dale Hall
Employee Broadcast
January 30, 2006 - 90 minutes

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Director's Column

Fish and Wildlife News Column

Refuge Update Column
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Interviews
Director Dale Hall in camouflage hunting grear.
Field & Stream imagazine exclusive interview of Dale Hall, Director, USFWS.
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Message From The Director

The Fish and Wildlife Service is a world leader and trusted partner in conservation and a family of professionals who share a deep commitment to our country’s natural resources. Regardless of the challenge—whether it’s managing for climate change or connecting people with the outdoors—we can be proud of our role in conserving the nature of America.

This year we celebrate two milestones in our history. Seventy-five years ago, Jay Norwood “Ding” Darling, Director of the U.S. Biological Survey, the forerunner of today’s Fish and Wildlife Service, designed the first Duck Stamp—two mallards landing in a marsh pond. Since then, Federal Duck Stamp sales have generated more than $700 million to help purchase or lease more than 5.2 million acres of waterfowl habitat in the United States.

In August the Small Wetlands Program will celebrate half a century of conserving wetlands and grasslands in the Prairie Pothole Region, a 300,000-square mile area in the Upper Midwest and adjacent Canadian provinces that contains some of the most important waterfowl and grassland bird species habitat on the continent. Since the program’s inception, the Service has purchased more than 36,000 separate fee and permanent easement tracts that make up the lands administered as Waterfowl Production Areas, part of the National Wildlife Refuge System.

We’ve had great success in our past, but as American humorist Will Rogers said, “Even if you're on the right track you'll get run over if you just sit there.” I believe the greatest days of this agency lie ahead, which is why we must continue adapting to a changing world and reaching out to children—the next generation of conservationists.

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Around The Regions

Director Dale Hall Speaks at the Wonders of Wildlife Museum (c) Video Courtesy of Bass Pro ShopsThe Legacy of Conservation National Hunting and Fishing Day 2006 was celebrated at the Wonders of Wildlife Museum and Aquarium in Springfield, Missouri. FWS Director Dale Hall thanked hunters and anglers for their contributions to wildlife conservation and spoke of the importance of involving children in nature. Wonders of Wildlife Museum, Springfield, Mo.
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Wonders of Wildlife Museum
Children and Nature

Dale Hall visit to Region 2Director Hall visited Chicago to present a $750,000 Coastal Wetlands Conservation Grant to partners of the Hegewisch Marsh Progect. Partners in the project included the State of Illinois, the City of Chicago and the Chicago Field Museum and the Conservation Fund.
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Testimonies

Director's H.R. 2801, the Izembek and Alaska Peninsula Refuge and Wilderness Enhancement and King Cove Safe Access Act Testimony (new)

Key Issues

Principles and Priorties (new)

Renewable Energy (new)

Children and Nature Logo

Avian Influenza

Workforce Planning (coming soon)

Wetlands Restoration (coming soon)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
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Last updated: February 4, 2008
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