Dear all,
Please spread the email/attachment from Zoongee Leith//about a forest
pest coordinator position in the upper Mid-West USA to potential
applicants.
Thank-you, Dave
--
Dave L. Mausel, Ph.D
Forest Entomologist
Menominee Tribal Enterprises
PO Box 10, Neopit, WI 54150
Phone: 715-799-3896 ext. 2246, Fax: 715-799-4323
email: davidm(a)mtewood.com <mailto:davidm@mtewood.com>
http://www.mtewood.com/Forestry/Forest%20Overview/Forest%20Background.html
Adjunct Natural Resources Faculty, College of Menominee Nation
email: dmausel(a)menominee.edu <mailto:dmausel@menominee.edu>
http://www.menominee.edu/
Good morning,
I would like to inform you of a vacancy announcement for a Project
Coordinator for a new Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) and Forest Pest
Environmental Regulatory Project with Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife
Commission. Please see attached file for more information regarding the
position.
The Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission is commonly known by
its acronym, GLIFWC. Formed in 1984, GLIFWC represents eleven Ojibwe
tribes in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan who reserved hunting,
fishing and gathering rights in the 1837, 1842, and 1854 Treaties with
the United States government. GLIFWC provides natural resource
management expertise, conservation enforcement, legal and policy
analysis, and public information services in support of the exercise of
treaty rights during well-regulated, off-reservation seasons throughout
the treaty ceded territories. To assist with the implementation and
protection of its member tribes’ treaty rights, GLIFWC provides services
in the areas of biology/resource management; enforcement; policy/legal;
public information/outreach; and resource development/marketing. GLIFWC
employs about 65 full-time staff, hiring seasonal employees during peak
harvesting or field seasons. GLIFWC is one of four similar intertribal
commissions nationwide. GLIFWC is actively involved in a broad spectrum
of resource related activities aimed at protecting and enhancing the
natural resources and habitat in the treaty-ceded territories while also
infusing an Ojibwe perspective into its work. GLIFWC’s main office is
located on the Bad River reservation, just east of Ashland, Wisconsin.
If you could please pass this information to any and all individuals
that you think may be interested, it would be appreciated.
Thank you,
/Zoongee Leith/
/ANA/Planning & Development Administrative Assistant/
/Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission/
/715-682-6619 ext. 2138/
/zleith(a)glifwc.org <mailto:zleith@glifwc.org>/