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Policy Director, National Marine Sanctuary Foundation

Website National Marine Sanctuary Foundation

Position Overview

Application Deadline: May 11, 2026

Salary: $95,000 to $110,000 annually

Education Required: Bachelor’s degree

Experience Required: Seven or more years


Description

The Policy Director at the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation leads federal advocacy and government relations from Silver Spring, Maryland, advancing public investment, legislation, and coalition building in support of the National Marine Sanctuaries Act and its 18-site sanctuary system.

The National Marine Sanctuary Foundation is the official non-profit partner of NOAA’s Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, supporting marine environments from Massachusetts to American Samoa and the Great Lakes to the Florida Keys. Through public fundraising and partnerships, the Foundation invests in community stewardship, on-the-water conservation, education, and scientific exploration across more than 629,000 square miles of public waters.

Reporting to the Senior Vice President of External Affairs, the Director oversees a growing team of staff and consultants and works closely with the President and CEO to position the Foundation as a trusted voice on Capitol Hill.


Responsibilities

  • Develop and advance policy agendas and work plans that grow public investment for the National Marine Sanctuary System.
  • Cultivate bipartisan sanctuary champions in Congress and galvanize coastal communities ready to expand the system.
  • Research, analyze, and advocate for legislation and regulatory actions, including the National Marine Sanctuaries Act reauthorization.
  • Plan and drive campaigns that connect Foundation priorities to federal, state, tribal, and local partners.
  • Lead campaigns advocating for increases in sanctuary funding through the President’s Budget and federal appropriations.
  • Engage the Administration and bicameral, bipartisan Member-led efforts to secure robust sanctuary appropriations.
  • Maintain and grow Foundation coalition partner support for sanctuary budget priorities.
  • Explore national policy mechanisms that diversify federal funding beyond base appropriations.
  • Coordinate with the VP of Development on grant writing, state-level opportunities, and policy supporting sanctuary resources.
  • Strengthen and grow the bipartisan House National Marine Sanctuary Caucus.
  • Host regular Hill events and presence in sanctuary communities to deepen Member support.
  • Support constituent engagement with Congress and the Administration to advocate for sanctuary funding.
  • Build external partnerships that leverage resources for sustained policy initiatives.
  • Plan and execute Take Action letter campaigns, briefings, hill days, district visits, Capitol Hill Ocean Week, and the national sanctuary fly-in.
  • Support communities pursuing the growth of the National Marine Sanctuary System through expansions and new designations.
  • Improve the visibility, credibility, and influence of the Foundation among key decision makers.
  • Coordinate with the Communications Team on white papers, communications materials, and outreach products.
  • Manage the annual budget process for the department and support mid-year reviews with the Finance Department.
  • Coordinate with Human Resources on internal communications that reinforce a culture of belonging and excellence.
  • Supervise project employees, consultants, and Program Operations Coordinators across partner agency locations and Foundation HQ.
  • Mentor public policy team members, set SMARTIE goals, monitor progress, and conduct annual performance evaluations.
  • Approve travel requests, timecards, expense reports, and time off requests.

Requirements

  • Bachelor’s degree and seven or more years of professional experience working with the Executive Branch, Congress, or related fields.
  • Proven track record of strategic leadership in public policy or governance campaigns at the national or federal level.
  • Strong relationships and networking experience across Congress, the Administration, academics, NGOs, private businesses, and the general public.
  • Demonstrated leadership and collaboration skills across diverse teams and stakeholders.
  • Proven organization and priority setting with high attention to detail.
  • Ability to balance complex, demanding workloads and concurrent priority tasks.
  • Fluency in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Gmail, Asana, and databases.
  • Strong oral and written communication abilities.
  • Demonstrated commitment to high professional, ethical standards and a diverse workplace.
  • Ability to work in a high-pressure environment with regular attendance.

Preferred Qualifications

  • Experience recruiting and managing a diverse, high-performing team of staff and consultants.
  • Additional experience across international, regional, state, tribal, and local public policy and governance levels.
  • Creative thinking on partnerships and solutions for ocean, coast, and Great Lakes conservation.
  • Strong collaboration with local, state, and federal agencies, NGOs, businesses, academic institutions, and philanthropic funders.
  • Focus in marine and Great Lakes fields and a sincere commitment to the Foundation’s mission.

Additional Notes

  • Location: Silver Spring, Maryland; in-office with regular time on Capitol Hill.
  • Status: Full Time, Exempt; reports to the Senior Vice President of External Affairs.
  • Benefits: Medical with FSA option, dental, vision; Foundation-paid Life and Disability Insurance; 403(b) with employer contribution after one year; commuter benefits; generous leave plus 12 paid holidays and the week between December 25 and January 1.
  • The National Marine Sanctuary Foundation is an equal opportunity employer committed to diversity and inclusion in the workplace.

How to Apply

Apply through the Foundation’s online portal on ADP Workforce Now. Applications received by May 11, 2026 will be preferred.

Required application materials:

  • Cover letter addressing your fit for the role.
  • Current resume.
  • Three professional references.

Apply here: National Marine Sanctuary Foundation: Policy Director application portal.

To apply for this job please visit workforcenow.adp.com.

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Issue 132 - May 2026

SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine — No. 132 May 2026

Issue No. 132 of SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine, May 2026. Twelve stories on coral recovery, polystyrene-free marinas, UNESCO biosphere reserves, ocean acoustics, Peace Boat at sea, the Edges of Earth expedition, and a Brazilian campaign asking what a flag looks like without blue or green.

SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine cover for issue No. 132, May 2026, featuring Vanuatu and the lead stories of the issue

Welcome to issue No. 132 of SEVENSEAS Travel Magazine. This month we follow recovery on a Caribbean reef, a marina trial that could end polystyrene in our harbours, and a UNESCO report reframing 2,260 protected places as one planetary network. We sit with the Director of Peace Boat US, return to the Edges of Earth expedition after three years at sea, listen to the ocean through hydrophones, and meet a campaign in São Paulo asking what a Brazilian flag looks like without blue or green.


The SEVENSEAS Mentor Network: Build Your Community

SEVENSEAS Mentor Network, connecting marine professionals across generations

A new initiative connecting marine professionals across generations, pairing emerging conservationists with seasoned mentors to build the kind of community many wished they had at the start of their careers. [Read more]

Three Years on Earth’s Edges, an Expedition Reflects

Andi Cross meets Marie Rite on the shore of Little Bay, an Edges of Earth expedition portrait

After three years circumnavigating the planet’s most remote coastal communities, Andi Cross reflects on what an expedition teaches you about belonging, the people you meet, and the edges where the ocean still feels wild. [Read more]

No Blue, No Green: Droga5 Reframes the Ocean Crisis

No Blue No Green campaign by Droga5 Sao Paulo for SOS Oceano Marinho, the Brazilian flag stripped of blue and green

Droga5 São Paulo and SOS Oceano Marinho launch a campaign that strips the blue and green from the Brazilian flag, making the disappearance of healthy oceans impossible to look away from. [Read more]

Sounds of the Ocean: From Inspiration to a Movement

A swimmer suspended in a halo of bubbles beneath the ocean surface

A yoga teacher’s encounter with sound becomes a project mapping the acoustic life of the ocean, weaving hydrophone recordings, music, and listening practice into a tool for ocean awareness. [Read more]

King of the Seaducks, Enduring Sign of Chesapeake Winter

Biologist Donald Webster watches the crimson-headed canvasback return to the Chesapeake, the largest estuary in the United States, asking each winter whether the king of seaducks will keep its court on the Bay. A field portrait of an iconic wintering species and the seagrass that sustains it. [Read more]

What HungerMap LIVE Reveals About World Fisheries

Boys preparing fishing nets in Butre, Ghana

A close look at the World Food Programme’s real-time hunger dashboard, what fisheries data is missing, why coastal communities slip between the cracks of food security tracking, and what better signal would look like. [Read more]

SeaKeepers Names Dr. Mark Luther Scientist Chairman

Jay Wade and Dr. Mark Luther of The International SeaKeepers Society

The International SeaKeepers Society opens a new chapter in ocean research leadership, with Dr. Mark Luther of the University of South Florida joining as its first Scientist Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Council. [Read more]

Salone del Mobile 2026 Stakes a Claim on Sustainability

A Matter of Matter installation at Salone del Mobile 2026, Milan

Milan’s design week leans into sustainability with A Matter of Matter, an installation that asks the design industry to take material accountability as seriously as form. [Read more]

After Bleaching, Little Cayman Shows Early Recovery

A butterflyfish swims above living staghorn coral on a Caribbean reef

Two years after the most extreme coral bleaching event on record, CCMI’s 2025 Healthy Reefs Report Card delivers the first quantitative signs that Little Cayman’s reefs may be turning a corner. [Read more]

UNESCO’s New Report Frames Conservation as a Network

Spreewald, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in Germany, where visitors travel by punted boat through forested waterways

The first cross-network report from UNESCO treats its 2,260 World Heritage Sites, Biosphere Reserves, and Geoparks as one planetary infrastructure for biodiversity, climate stability, and the communities that depend on them. [Read more]

Falmouth Trials the World’s First Concrete Pontoon

Pontoons and yachts moored at Falmouth Marina, Cornwall

Falmouth Harbour partners with Cornish marine engineers ScaffFloat to test what is believed to be the world’s first all-concrete marina pontoon float, a move to phase out polystyrene microplastics from leisure marinas. [Read more]

A Satellite AI Maps Ocean Currents Like Never Before

GOFLOW satellite-derived temperature gradient map of ocean surface currents

A new satellite-based AI from a University of Rhode Island team led by Dr. Nick Pizzo reveals ocean surface currents in unprecedented detail, sharpening our picture of how heat, nutrients, and plastics travel. [Read more]

Peace Boat US Director Emilie McGlone, In Her Words

MV Pacific World, Peace Boat’s flagship for global voyages and ocean action

On the MV Pacific World, training young leaders at sea, and how a global voyage becomes a platform for ocean conservation and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. [Read more]

[Contact Us Today — SEVENSEAS Media]

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Issue 132 - May 2026

Falmouth Harbour Trials the World’s First All-Concrete Pontoon Float to Replace EPS in Marinas

Falmouth Harbour is trialling the world’s first all-concrete marina pontoon, designed by Cornwall-based ScaffFloat, as a recyclable alternative to Expanded Polystyrene floats and a step toward cutting marine microplastic pollution.

Falmouth, Cornwall, UK. Falmouth Harbour is trialling the world’s first all-concrete marina pontoon float, designed and built by the team at ScaffFloat in neighbouring Penryn, in a first step to removing all Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) floats from its leisure and commercial operations.

The Harbour has pledged to move away from EPS products in the light of mounting evidence that polystyrene microplastics in the world’s oceans inflict serious damage on the marine environment and life within it. Polystyrene, globally used for its lightness and buoyancy, is made from fossil fuels, is virtually un-decomposable, and when it breaks down into microplastics can be ingested by marine life with devastating consequences.

“The amount of broken-up polystyrene around our creeks and rivers, particularly after this year’s storms, is awful to see and very hard to clean up without damaging the delicate ecology of our shorelines. Expanded Polystyrene fragments in the marine environment pose a serious ecological concern, as seabirds, fish, turtles and other fauna mistake EPS beads for food, which can cause internal injuries or death; entering the food chain poses health risks to humans as well.”

Vicki Spooner, Environment Manager, Falmouth Harbour

Inside the Reef Float: an inert, recyclable alternative to EPS

Penryn marine company ScaffFloat Ltd has tackled the challenge of finding alternatives to traditional pontoons by inventing the “Reef Float.” Their first commercial prototype, made entirely from concrete, has been undergoing trials beneath a Falmouth Harbour pontoon. ScaffFloat developed the new product as part of a business development project that received £284,787 from the UK Government through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund as part of Cornwall’s Good Growth Programme.

The Reef Float’s buoyant core is made using ultra-low-density waterproof concrete, instead of EPS foam, and the core is then cast inside a high-strength engineered concrete skin. In the highly unlikely event that a Reef Float ever failed, the materials would simply sit inertly as stone in the marine environment, whereas a cracked-open EPS float exposes its polystyrene foam core to the marine elements.

“We replaced a failing EPS pontoon float at Falmouth Harbour with a Reef Float, where it survived all that this January’s storms could throw at it. It’s what we would expect, of course, as we’ve designed it to be strong with an ultra-long life. But it’s also completely inert in the marine environment and 100 percent recyclable, so a game-changing alternative to the EPS floats currently used all over the world.”

Toby Budd, Founder and Managing Director, ScaffFloat

Local innovation, global stage

Local MP Jayne Kirkham, checking out the new Reef Float in Falmouth, called it “exactly the kind of innovation we want to see in Cornwall: local businesses developing practical but cutting-edge solutions to global environmental challenges. Cutting polystyrene pollution from our waters while creating skilled jobs is a win for our marine environment and our economy. I’m proud to see government funding helping projects like this lead the way.”

“Falmouth Harbour has made the conscious decision to move away from EPS foam pontoons in all our operations, and it’s fantastic that our neighbours at ScaffFloat are the first company to offer a plastic-free alternative. Reef Floats are easily installed, in situ, on a rolling basis, as and when we need to replace old EPS floats, and they have a zero-cost, 100 percent recyclable end-of-life disposal. It’s another tremendous example of Cornish ingenuity, and we look forward to working with them into the future.”

Miles Carden, CEO, Falmouth Harbour

The Reef Float team has been shortlisted for the Innovation Award at Marina26 in Australia this May, with an invitation to attend and present at the biggest marina conference in the world, demonstrating what a major issue EPS has become for the marina industry and legislative authorities alike.

Australia itself lost more than 1,000 pontoons in the 2022 Queensland floods, where they broke up and created an environmental disaster known as the “White Spill,” with the ocean and beaches covered with EPS balls that were almost impossible to clear up.


Learn more. For more information on Reef Float and parent company ScaffFloat, visit scafffloat.co.uk/reeffloat. For more on Falmouth Harbour, including its wide-ranging environmental initiatives, see falmouthharbour.co.uk.

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Conservation Photography

Little Cayman Hope Spot Shows Early Signs of Reef Recovery After the World’s Most Extreme Coral Bleaching Event

CCMI’s 2025 Healthy Reefs Report Card shows Little Cayman’s coral cover edging back to 13.4 percent, an early but unmistakable sign that the island’s reefs are beginning to recover from the world’s most extreme coral bleaching event.

Little Cayman, Cayman Islands. Marking Earth Day 2026, the Central Caribbean Marine Institute (CCMI) released its 2025 Healthy Reefs Report Card, revealing early signs of recovery and renewed hope for Little Cayman’s reefs after the most extreme coral bleaching event on record in 2023.

The summer of 2023 was the hottest ever measured, and it brought with it one of the most extensive global coral bleaching events in modern history, decimating reefs from the Caribbean to the Indo-Pacific and casting their future in doubt. CCMI’s Healthy Reefs campaign has tracked Little Cayman’s reefs since 1998, and the 2024 surveys delivered the bleakest numbers in the program’s history: coral cover had collapsed to 9.8 percent, down from 26 percent before the marine heatwave.

This year’s data tells a different story. The 2025 surveys, summarized in the new Report Card, show coral cover edging back up to 13.4 percent. The shift is not yet statistically significant, but the direction is unmistakable: recovery in Little Cayman has begun.

A site-by-site picture

Zoom in from the island-wide average and the recovery looks more layered. Twenty percent of surveyed sites posted a significant increase in coral cover between 2024 and 2025. One site, Coral City, held the line entirely through the bleaching, exhibiting no significant loss. In total, 30 percent of sites have either maintained pre-bleaching coral levels or demonstrated significant recovery this year. The remaining 70 percent show either minor, non-significant recovery or no recovery at all.

Reef recovery is rarely visible on a 12 to 24 month horizon. Corals are slow-growing animals, and even after a disturbance ends, biologists typically expect at least three years before measurable rebound, and a minimum of seven years (sometimes nearly thirty) for a reef to return to pre-bleaching baselines. Against that timeline, what CCMI is recording in 2025 is striking: the resilience built into Little Cayman, with strong protections and minimal local disturbance, appears to be doing exactly what reef science predicts it should do.

Fish populations holding the line

While coral cover is still climbing back, fish populations have continued to thrive. CCMI has documented consistent increases in fish density since 2016, with a dramatic jump in density and biomass in 2024 that held through 2025. That matters more than it might sound: herbivorous fish keep macro-algae in check, and when algae is left unchecked it can smother corals and block new recruits from settling. A healthy reef-fish community is, in many ways, what makes coral recovery possible at all.

A Hope Spot earning its name

Little Cayman is a Mission Blue Hope Spot, a designation that frames the island as a small-but-mighty example of what marine protection can look like when conservation is prioritized. Under the pressures the ocean is now under, that framing reads less like marketing copy and more like a working hypothesis the reef is steadily proving out.

The island has form here. Little Cayman’s Nassau grouper spawning aggregation rebounded from roughly 1,000 individuals to nearly 9,000 over a decade, one of the most cited recovery stories in the Caribbean. The early coral signal in the 2025 Report Card could become another chapter in that record.

The nursery, and three resilient genotypes

CCMI’s coral nursery was hit hard during the 2023 bleaching, losing close to 90 percent of its stock. Genetic work in the aftermath identified three staghorn coral genotypes that survived nearly 20 degree-heating weeks. Since 2023, those three genotypes have rebuilt the nursery from just 17 fragments to nearly 300 as of March 2026. CCMI’s nursery likely represents one of the last remaining populations of the critically endangered staghorn coral, Acropora cervicornis, in Little Cayman.

Why this matters beyond Little Cayman

Hope Spots like Little Cayman do not just protect their own waters. They function as larval source populations, exporting recruits along ocean currents to less resilient reefs downstream. In a warming ocean where many sites have lost their capacity to bounce back unaided, these pockets of resilience are increasingly the difference between regional collapse and regional recovery.

The 2025 numbers do not erase what 2023 took. Coral cover is still well below pre-heatwave levels, and the recovery is partial, uneven, and fragile. But for the first time since the bleaching, the trendline is pointing in the right direction. As CCMI puts it, research and science-based actions are critical right now to understand the ecological processes driving this resilience and to translate that understanding into management and protection.

Acknowledgments

CCMI thanks this year’s Healthy Reefs sponsors: Wheaton Precious Metals International, Foster’s Supermarket, Cayman Water, and Ugland Properties; and the Restoration program sponsors who made the work possible: The Ernest Kleinwort Charitable Trust, Artex Cayman Islands, Walkers, and Marfire.

Read the full 2025 Healthy Reefs Report Card at tinyurl.com/CCMI-25HRR and learn more about the Healthy Reefs campaign at reefresearch.org/our-work/research/healthy-reefs/.


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