Richard Dove
A former Riverkeeper, Rick spends much of his
time training new Waterkeeper programs. He also
works alongside Jeff Odefey on the Alliance’s
Pure Farms, Pure Waters campaign. Before
serving as the southeastern representative for
Waterkeeper Alliance, Rick enjoyed a varied
career that began with two tours in Vietnam
with the United States Marine Corps. He later
served as a military courts-martial judge,
Congressional Liaison and Provost-Marshal.
After retiring from the military, Rick
commercially fished the Neuse River and owned
and operated a wholesale fish store until 1991.
He then practiced civilian law until becoming
the Neuse Riverkeeper in 1993, a post he held
until the year 2000. As the river’s
spokesperson, Rick has been in more than 4000
news stories in both major and local media. His
work was detailed in a chapter of the 1997
Simon and Schuster book, "And the Waters Turned
to Blood." From 1996-1998, Rick was the
Governor’s appointee to the Neuse River Basin
Advisory Council, during which time he was
asked to testify before the U.S. Congress on
the microorganism Pfiesteria Piscidia and its
effects on the river.
In 1999, Rick was
named one of the “100 People Who Have Shaped
the North Carolina in the past Century” by the
Raleigh News and Observer, and in 2000 he
received the Environmental Protection Agency’s
IV Merit Award. In 2001, Rick received an
Appreciation Award from the Alliance for a
Responsible Swine Industry, and later that year
he was given the Nancy Susan Reynolds Award for
Advocacy. In 2002 he again testified before the
U.S. Senate on pollution from industrial animal
factories. Rick graduated from the Baltimore
School of Law in 1962, and from the National
War College in 1980.