About Peter Jutro
Peter Jutro, PhD, is an experienced Environmental Policy and National Security professional with over 35 years of public service to his name. Most recently, he served as the Acting Associate Administrator for Homeland Security. He has since retired from public service, and has been using this time to write and consult, as well as advise on issues in the scientific, environmental policy, and national security arenas.
Dr. Jutro received his PhD from Cornell University for research in natural resource conservation, the geography of infectious disease and natural pharmaceuticals, and chemical ecology. He later joined the faculty as an Adjunct Associate Professor of Public Policy and Management as well as Applied Mathematics. His research work dealt primarily with quantitative risk assessment methodology, however, he also taught courses in public policy, as well as environmental law and policy.
Peter Jutro’s career in Federal service began as a participant in the U.S. Congressional Fellows science and environmental program. Additionally, he served on the professional staff of the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Public Works (now known as the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure) for several years. During this time, Dr. Jutro specialized in environmental matters, and was heavily involved in the development of the Clean Water Act and in a number of natural disaster issues.
Peter Jutro joined the EPA in 1983, first serving as a special assistant to the Deputy Administrator, and special assistant to the Assistant Administrator for Research and Development.
Later, Jutro organized the EPA Global Change Research Program, where he served for several years as its Director. He served as a U.S. negotiator for the United Nations Convention on the Conservation of Biological Diversity. Beginning in the mid-1990s, Peter also served as Counselor to the Administrator for Environment and Security, a position that he held for nine years.
Furthermore, Peter served as a member of the Executive Committee of the State Department’s U.S. Man and the Biosphere Program (MAB), which aims to establish a scientific basis for the improvement of relationships between people and their environment. In his time at the EPA he was representative for the agency in a number of countries around the world, and worked with several international organizations in the development of environmental research, monitoring, and environmental protection programs.
In 2002, Peter Jutro was appointed as Deputy Director for Science and Policy of the National Homeland Security Research Center (NHSRC) - EPA’s Homeland Security S&T Organization - which he had helped organize. He held this position for more than a decade. The NHSRC focuses on scientific issues associated with decontamination, water supply protection, and risk assessment — the areas in which EPA had the lead Federal homeland security responsibilities.
Outside federal service, Peter Jutro served as a member of the Board of Directors of the Center for Native Lands from 1996-2002, and as Chairman of the Board for two years. This non-governmental organization helped indigenous people across the globe protect their cultural and biological heritage. He has been devoted to writing, teaching, mentoring, and advising throughout the length of his professional career, and that passion continues.
Environmental Awareness
Peter Jutro was enlisted to conduct research and risk assessments on everything from global climate change to chemical contaminants.
International Travel Blog
After traveling extensively over the past 50 years, Peter has learned that the more traveling you, the better you understand how big the world really is.
What NOT To Do Following A Disaster
In the aftermath of virtually any major disaster, the internet overflows with haunting images of what were, only days before, whole communities. Homes are gone; in their place, shattered debris sits strewn across the streets. Newsreels flash with the hunched profiles...
How To Minimize The Risk of Cyber Threats
To the generations raised in a digital era, exchanging personal information online might feel as natural as breathing. But no matter how consciously one acknowledges the intrusion of cyberspace into our lives, doing so involves accepting another fact: the internet is...
The Dangers of Cyber Threats
For good or ill, cyberspace has evolved into a prime medium for activity and interaction. Shopping, socializing, work, recreation--so many actions that once required physical travel can now be done with the touch on a keyboard or the swipe of a finger. But like any...
Deadliest Natural Disasters in the US
Winds that shred houses to splinters, floods that destroy a city, clouds of crop-choking dust that circulate for years, tremors that topple skyscrapers and split the earth miles deep: these events--and the thousands of lives torn apart in their wake—have been some of...
Walls and Fences
“Something there is that doesn’t love a wall” The ongoing political debate of the two or so years since the most recent presidential election campaign began regularly brings to mind one of the first poems I remember learning as a child: Robert Frost’s Mending Wall. As...
The Dangers of Impervious Surfaces (And How Poor City Planning Leads To Stronger Disasters)
Just last year, in late August of 2017, Hurricane Harvey tore through the Houston metropolitan area. Its winds ripped apart anything in its path not bolted to the ground, then drenched what was left in sheet after solid sheet of pouring rain. Roads overflowed and...
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