Aurelia Skipwith Giacometto is an American attorney, businesswoman, and biologist who served as the 17th director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service from 2019 to 2021. She was confirmed by the Senate as director on December 12, 2019, by a 52–39 vote, and is the first black director of the Fish and Wildlife Service.[1]
For a period of time, Skipwith worked at Alltech, an organization based in Nicholasville, Kentucky which specializes in animal nutrition and algae production. She later co-founded AVC Global, an agricultural supply blockchain company in early-2016.[6]
From April 2017 to January 2020, Skipwith served as deputy assistant secretary fish, wildlife and parks of the Department of the Interior.
Skipwith served as the director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service starting in January 2020. Her appointment was widely supported by conservatives and opposed by environmentalists due to her ties to the pesticide industry and her support of the Trump administration's efforts to roll back environmental protections.[7] The Center for Biological Diversity stated "Aurelia Skipwith has been working in the Trump administration all along to end protections for billions of migratory birds, gut endangered species safeguards and eviscerate national monuments. Skipwith will always put the interests of her old boss Monsanto and other polluters ahead of America's wildlife and help the most anti-environmental administration in history do even more damage."[8]
Under Skipwith's direction, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service generated controversy by not granting Monarch butterflies protection,[9] requiring entries in the Federal Duck Stamp Contest to include a hunting theme,[10] weakening rules against the killing of birds by oil and gas companies and others,[11] and massively reducing the protected habitat of threatened owls.[12]
She became the Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) in January 2024. [14]
Personal life
Skipwith Giacometto married Leo Giacometto, a former member of the Montana Legislature and chief of staff to former Senator Conrad Burns. Giacometto was a co-founder of AVC Global and who worked as a lobbyist in the agriculture sector.[15]