NEW ORLEANS, LA — Megan Terrell, an attorney in the governor’s office, was honored today with a Coastal Stewardship Award for her years of work on behalf of the people of Louisiana following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana (CRCL) presented the award to Terrell at during the State of the Coast Conference at the Morial Convention Center in New Orleans at noon today.
“Since 2016 Megan has served my administration as chief legal advisor on Coastal Activities, and I have witnessed how driven she is as a staff member and how deeply committed she is to the coastal cause and the people of our state,” said Gov. John Bel Edwards. “She has been a steadfast coastal steward and greatly deserves this recognition.”
Terrell’s leadership resulted in the largest Natural Resources Damage Assessment criminal settlement in history while serving as lead in-house counsel coordinating Louisiana’s legal response to the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill under former Attorney General Buddy Caldwell. She continues to advise the current administration on NRDA and oil-spill settlement issues and is lead counsel for the complex Environmental Impact Study of the Mississippi River Mid-basin sediment diversion program.
In her tenure as […]
Full article: Attorney who won legal battles for Louisiana after Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill receives Coastal Stewardship Award
More about the Coastal Master Plan and Louisiana coastal restoration solutions:
- Explore the Largest Coastal Restoration Project Completed In Louisiana’s History
- Louisiana Legislature Approves 2017 Coastal Master Plan
- Mississippi River Sediment Diversions & Louisiana
- Louisiana floods: Tool Lets You See Flood Risk to Your Home
- How Can We Create a Sustainable Future for South Louisiana, Navigation and Other Industries?
- The Great Barrier Reef of the Americas: Coastal Lessons from the Past
Water Warriors and Other People Stories
- Canadian teen tells UN to ‘warrior up,’ give water same protections as people
- Will Smith, Jaden Smith’s biz will donate water to Flint until lead down in schools
- Lonely Bolivian water frog seeks mate on Match.com to save his species
- Kanas villagers make water safe through simple interventions
- Dayton, Ohio storm drains: murals help keep contaminants out of waterways
- How a Girl Scout inspired a health care giant to ditch plastic straws