Who is he?
William Doyle Ruckelshaus built America’s
Environmental Protection Agency against a backdrop
of smog. He took on automakers and slashed car
emissions. He banned DDT, a contentious decision
to this day. President Nixon convinced him to head
the FBI where Ruckelshaus oversaw the Watergate
investigation. As Deputy Attorney General, he
refused to carry out the President’s order to fire
Archibald Cox, the Watergate Special Prosecutor. His
resignation triggered nearly 2,000 letters, telegrams
and cards from admirers applauding his character and
courage.
Ruckelshaus later returned to a broken EPA and
energized demoralized employees. When the agency
called for new emissions standards threatening the
future of a Tacoma smelter in 1983, Ruckelshaus made
national news for allowing the public to weigh in on
its fate.
The Weyerhaeuser Company made him a senior vice
president in 1976. The now longtime Washingtonian
chaired the Salmon Recovery Board and co-chaired
the Puget Sound Partnership. In 1997, President
Clinton named Ruckelshaus as U.S. envoy in the
implementation of the Pacific Salmon Treaty. In 2001,
President Bush appointed Ruckelshaus to the U.S.
Commission on Ocean Policy.
In our state, Ruckelshaus leaves a strong legacy of
civility in problem solving. He is the inspiration
behind the William D. Ruckelshaus Center, a UW-WSU
collaboration, that focuses on complex public
policy.