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Continuing Legal Education (CLE) - 1 CLE credit. Click the link below and complete the form as accurately as possible. If you complete the form incorrectly (e.g. incorrect UT Bar number, YouTube title, number or type of CLE credit, etc.) you risk your credits not being counted on your transcript. https://forms.gle/Z2ovSjtgxPHrJovG6 PLEASE NOTE: YouTube’s “suggested videos” often are from other sources, and don’t qualify for CLE. Originally aired October 3, 2024 A Wallace Stegner Center Green Bag John Ruple, research professor of law and director of the Wallace Stegner Center’s Law and Policy Program at the University of Utah S.J Quinney College of Law, has spent the past two years serving as Senior Counsel in the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) where he provided legal advice on a range of issues involving federal public land management and preservation, mining law and critical mineral supply chain reform, transnational water pollution control, and National Environmental Policy Act review implementation. Professor Ruple will provide a short overview of the Executive Office of the President (EOP) and the CEQ, and then take a closer look at the process for designating the Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley National Monument. ABOUT THE SPEAKER: John Ruple is a Research Professor of Law at the University of Utah’s S.J. Quinney College of Law, and Director of the Wallace Stegner Center for Land, Resources & the Environment’s Law and Policy Program. He returns to the College of Law after serving as Senior Counsel in the White House Council on Environmental Quality where he provided legal advice on a range of issues involving federal public land management and preservation, mining law and critical mineral supply chain reform, transnational water pollution control, and National Environmental Policy Act review implementation. John has published widely on topics including permitting reform and national monument protection, and his work appears in leading academic journals including the Harvard Environmental Law Review, Columbia Journal of Environmental Law, and U.C. Berkeley’s Ecology Law Quarterly. He has served in federal and state government, worked in private practice, and volunteered on non-profit boards. He is committed to bringing his diverse experiences to bear in finding practical and balanced solutions to seemingly intractable natural resource management problems. When not working, you can find him recreating in the mountains of Utah and Idaho, and (still) trying to teach his 12-year old dog to swim.