- Jerome Ringo
Jerome C. Ringo (b. born on
March 2 ,1955 ) , anadvocate forenvironmental justice ,clean energy , and quality jobs, is the immediate past chairman of theNational Wildlife Federation (NWF), and an associate research scholar and McCluskey Fellow for Conservation atYale University .In assuming the reins of the NWF in
2005 , he became the firstAfrican American in history to chair a major conservation advocacy organization. Ringo is also president of theApollo Alliance , a coalition oforganized labor ,environmentalist , business andcivil rights leaders dedicated to freeing theUnited States of dependence on foreign oil.Early life
Jerome Ringo was the third of six children born to Earl Ringo, a retired postal worker, and Nellie Ringo, a nurse. Ringo grew up in
Bayous of SouthernLouisiana during the height of the Americancivil rights movement , during which time Earl worked to racially integrate public schools in Louisiana.His father would often play recordings of speeches by the Reverend
Martin Luther King, Jr. When he was thirteen, he and his brothers prepared to become the first black students to enroll in previously segregated schools inLake Charles, Louisiana . In the middle of the night, their father awakened the boys, telling them to crawl up to the front window. When the boys looked out, they witnessed a posse ofKu Klux Klan smen, who were burning a cross in their front yard.He was the first and only African-American working as ranger at the world's largest Scout camp, in
Cimarron, New Mexico .Ringo attended college, planning to major in education at both Louisiana Technical University and
McNeese State University . Before earning a degree, however, he decided to take a job in the petrochemical industry in1975 , lured by a high salary.Career
After college, Ringo worked in the
petrochemical industry for 22 years, over half of that time as a union leader. Many of his relatives lived just beyond the fence from these industries, so he saw the impacts of pollution from refineries first hand. He noted that employees at the refinery wore masks and protective clothing, but that the neighbors across the fence, who were predominantly poor and black, received no such protection, and suffered disproportionately high levels ofcancer s andrespiratory disease s.Eventually, Ringo decided to help educate the people in communities affected by petrochemical pollution, teaching them how to effectively stop the discharge of chemicals into neighborhoods around refineries, leading to the beginning of his
environmental activism . Ringo began his environmental activism in1991 , by becoming member of the Calcasieu League for Environmental Action Now (CLEAN), an affiliate of theLouisiana Wildlife Federation . Among the 20,000 members of the statewide group, he was the first black ever to join.Rather than trying to shut refineries and chemical plants down, he advocated the
lobbying of state legislators on environmental laws, and encouraged citizens to show up at public hearings, where as a community they could express their fears and concerns and speak truth to power.Ringo was transferred to
Malaysia , and during one of his return trips to the United States in 1994, he was offered early retirement. After accepting the offer, he committed his life to full time work on behalf of people beyond the refinery fences lines.In
1998 , he was the sole African-American delegate at the Global Warming Treaty negotiations inKyoto ,Japan , where he delivered an address. He also has spoken at the Central American conference on sustainable development inBelize City ,Belize . He has addressed many historically-Black colleges and other universities, including theUniversity of Michigan School of Natural Resources and Environment and at theUniversity of Oregon 'sPublic Interest Environmental Law Conference .Apollo Alliance
As president of the Apollo Alliance, Ringo is working to educate the public and lobby in
Washington, D.C. about the need to invest in alternative clean-energy sources, energy-efficient technology and jobs by building diverse coalitions. The Apollo Alliance seeks to reinvest in the competitiveness of American industry, rebuild cities, create good jobs, and ensure good stewardship of the economy and natural environment. "We are an organization that looks like the face of America," Ringo has said.The name of the alliance was chosen to pay homage to
John F. Kennedy 's Apollo program, which successfully put a man on the moon in 1969. The Apollo Alliance has been endorsed by leaders of theAFL-CIO , theSierra Club , Greenpeace USA, the National Wildlife Federation, theUnion of Concerned Scientists , theNAACP and other activist groups.National Wildlife Federation
In
1996 , Ringo was elected to serve on the board of directors of theNational Wildlife Federation , a seventy year old conservation organization which comprising 4.5 million members and over 700 employees. Since becoming chairman of the board the in 2005, Ringo has sought to further the NWF's partnerships with other organizations, particularly those involved with combating ecologocial dangers in poor and minority neighborhoods. He spearheads programs that reach into urban and minority communities, including schoolyard habitat programs such asEarth Tomorrow , which focuses on minority kids in elementary, middle, and high schools."The single greatest issue for me as an environmentalist is climate change," Ringo told Mother Jones in 2005. [http://www.motherjones.com/news/qa/2005/05/jerome_ringo.html]
Ringo envisions a new movement in
environmentalism , where everyone becomes involved in planning for the future together. He believes that real success, in energy security,public health ,environmental protection andsocial justice , will come when environmentalists are united and empowered to meet as equals with corporate interests.External links
* [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jerome-ringo/ HuffingtonPost.com] - Jerome Ringo blog,
Huffington Post
* [http://www.apolloalliance.org/about_the_alliance/jeromeringo.cfm ApolloAlliance.org] - 'Jerome Ringo, President of theApollo Alliance '
* [http://www.motherjones.com/news/qa/2005/05/jerome_ringo.html MotherJones.com] - 'The Pioneer: The new head of theNational Wildlife Federation has always been a pathbreaker.' Interview by Erik Kancler, "Mother Jones " (April 25, 2005)
* [http://www.umich.edu/~meldi/4_profiles_minprof.html#JR1955 UMich.edu] - 'Jerome Ringo, Chair of the Board, National Wildlife Federation'
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