Acting Assistant Administrator of the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research: Who Is Craig McLean?

Monday, April 04, 2011
Since April 2010, Craig N. McLean has served as Acting Assistant Administrator of the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR), which is an arm of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
 
McLean grew up on the Passaic River in Rutherford, New Jersey, at a time when the Passaic was too polluted to swim in. He began taking diving lessons at the age of 14 and soon performed decompression diving in order to explore deep-ocean shipwrecks. He worked on dive boats on weekends and when one client filmed the dumping of sewage, McLean took an underwater camera swam recorded a sewage barge as it dumped a load on top of him.
 
He earned a B.A. degree in Zoology in 1979 from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. While at Rutgers, he gained his first experience with the NOAA, sailing on a ship that was investigating sludge dumping and its effect on public health.
 
After college, McLean worked for a diving company for two years and then joined the NOAA Commissioned Corps. He began what was to become his almost 25-year association with the Corps as a deck officer and diving officer on a hydrographic survey ship, mapping nautical charts. He then worked at the National Marine Fisheries Service, specializing in developing sustainable fish harvesting strategies. He was executive officer on the Albatross and captain of the NOAA’s largest fisheries ship, the 225-foot Gordon Gunter.
 
McLean returned school to become a lawyer, earning his Juris Doctor from the Quinnipiac College School of Law in Hamden, Connecticut, and did additional studying at George Washington University, the University of Maryland, and Georgetown University Law Center.
 
As an attorney, McLean practiced marine resource law for NOAA, and provided legal advice in the NOAA General Counsel’s office. He prosecuted violations of the Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Endangered Species Act. He was also the lawyer and deputy for the National Marine Sanctuary System.
 
In 2001, McLean was chosen to be the founding Director of the NOAA’s Office of Ocean Exploration. In 2003 and 2004, he directed NOAA expeditions to study the sunken remains of the R.S.S. Titanic.
 
In 2006, McLean was named Deputy Assistant Administrator for Programs and Administration of NOAA’s OAR. He subsequently served in NOAA as Executive Officer of the National Ocean Service.
 
McLean had been Chairman of the Board of the Sea-Space Symposium. He is a Fellow in the Explorer’s Club and the Marine Technology Society (MTS), and Chairman of MTS’s Marine Law and Policy Committee.
                                                                        -David Wallechinsky, Danny Biederman
 

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