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Charlotte Amalie
Thursday, March 28, 2024
HomeCommunityPeopleInterior Appoints Basil Ottley Jr. as Insular Affairs Policy Director

Interior Appoints Basil Ottley Jr. as Insular Affairs Policy Director

The U.S. Department of the Interior has announced the selection of Basil Ottley Jr. to serve as the new policy director at the headquarters of the Office of Insular Affairs (OIA) in Washington, D.C. Ottley, who also served as OIA’s U.S. Virgin Islands policy desk officer in Washington and as the OIA field representative in the U.S.V.I., begins his first day as policy director immediately.
“I am extremely pleased to have Basil Ottley join our team as policy director,” said Assistant Secretary Esther Kia’aina. “Basil has a wealth of policy experience at the federal and territorial levels of government. While he has a strong background of service to the people of the U.S. Virgin Islands, he also understands the complexities of issues that are facing the U.S. Pacific territories and freely associated states. It strengthens OIA to have a leadership team that reflects the diversity of the regions that fall under our jurisdiction.”
Ottley will be coordinating OIA and federal policies for the territories of American Samoa, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and administering and overseeing U.S. federal assistance provided to the Freely Associated States of the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau under the Compacts of Free Association. Together with OIA’s budget and technical assistance directors, they are responsible for a budget of over $650 million dollars for the insular areas.
During his previous tenure at the OIA, Ottley was instrumental in linking its initiatives to address unsustainable energy cost in the insular areas with the U.S. Department of Energy’s international partnership, Energy Development in Island Nations (EDIN). This linkage has fostered the development of significant public policy and the investment in energy efficiency and renewable energy projects. He also served as a special advisor to the U.S. Department of State on issues involving Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands that were before the United Nations. Ottley joined the Office of Insular Affairs in 2008 as the Virgin Islands desk officer, and he later accepted the assignment of the V.I. field representative in 2010 when Interior decided to reopen a field office in the territory.
Before joining Interior, Ottley had been elected to the 27th Virgin Islands Legislature in November 2006. Ottley identifies his authorship of Act 7027, which required the VI Bureau of Economic Research to develop an economic self-sufficiency standard (living wage), as his most significant accomplishment as a senator.
Ottley earned a Masters of Public Policy with a specialization in International Development from the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy at Duke University and a Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics from the University of the Virgin Islands.
He was born on Puerto Rico, but he was raised in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where his maternal and paternal families have resided for generations. Ottley grew up in the historic neighborhood of Savan on St. Thomas, attended and completed the Virgin Islands Montessori School and graduated from Antilles High School. He is married to the former Kirsten Abrahams of St. Croix, and they have two daughters, Serafina and Zindzhi.
 

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