Jeffrey W. Talley: Difference between revisions
Updated info |
m signature |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox officeholder |
{{Infobox officeholder |
||
| office = 32nd Chief of Army Reserve and Commander, United States Army Reserve Command |
| office = 32nd Chief of Army Reserve and Commander, United States Army Reserve Command |
||
| rank = [[File:US-O9 insignia.svg|23px]] [[Lieutenant general (United States)|Lieutenant General]] |
| rank = [[File:US-O9 insignia.svg|23px]] [[Lieutenant general (United States)|Lieutenant General]] |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | | |
||
⚫ | | awards = [[Image:Distinguished Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Distinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army)|Army Dist. Service Medal]] (2)<br>[[Image:Legion of Merit ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Legion of Merit]]<br>[[Image:Bronze Star ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Bronze Star Medal]] (3)<br>[[Image:Meritorious Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Meritorious Service Medal (United States)|Meritorious Svc Med]] (4)<br>[[Image:Joint Service Commendation Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Joint Service Commendation Medal]]<br>[[Image:Army Commendation Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Commendation Medal|Army Commendation Med]] (2)<br>[[Image:Army Achievement Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Army Achievement Medal|Army Achievement Med]] (4)<br>[[Image:Meritorious Unit Commendation ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Meritorious Unit Commendation|Army Meritorious Unit Commendation]]<br>[[Image:U.S. Army Reserve Components Achievement Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Reserve Good Conduct Medal|Reserve Component Achievement Med]] (5)<br>[[Image:National Defense Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[National Defense Service Medal]] (2)<br>[[Image:Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal]]<br>[[Image:Iraq Campaign Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Iraq Campaign Medal]]<br>[[Image:Global War on Terrorism Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Global War on Terrorism Service Medal]]<br>[[Image:Korea Defense Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Korea Defense Service Medal]]<br>[[Image:Armed forces reserve ribbon.jpg|30px]] [[Armed Forces Reserve Medal]] (2)<br>[[Image:Army Service Ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Army Service Ribbon]]<br>[[Image:Army Overseas Service Ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Overseas Service Ribbon]] (3)<br>[[Image:Army Reserve Overseas Training Ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Overseas Service Ribbon|Army Reserve Overseas Training Ribbon]] (2)<br>[[De Fleury Medal]] (2)<br> |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | | awards = [[Image:Distinguished Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Distinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army)|Army Dist. Service Medal]] (2)<br>[[Image:Legion of Merit ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Legion of Merit]]<br>[[Image:Bronze Star ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Bronze Star Medal]] (3)<br>[[Image:Meritorious Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Meritorious Service Medal (United States)|Meritorious Svc Med]] (4)<br>[[Image:Joint Service Commendation Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Joint Service Commendation Medal]]<br>[[Image:Army Commendation Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Commendation Medal|Army Commendation Med]] (2)<br>[[Image:Army Achievement Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Army Achievement Medal|Army Achievement Med]] (4)<br>[[Image:Meritorious Unit Commendation ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Meritorious Unit Commendation|Army Meritorious Unit Commendation]]<br>[[Image:U.S. Army Reserve Components Achievement Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Reserve Good Conduct Medal|Reserve Component Achievement Med]] (5)<br>[[Image:National Defense Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[National Defense Service Medal]] (2)<br>[[Image:Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal]]<br>[[Image:Iraq Campaign Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Iraq Campaign Medal]]<br>[[Image:Global War on Terrorism Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Global War on Terrorism Service Medal]]<br>[[Image:Korea Defense Service Medal ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Korea Defense Service Medal]]<br>[[Image:Armed forces reserve ribbon.jpg|30px]] [[Armed Forces Reserve Medal]] (2)<br>[[Image:Army Service Ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Army Service Ribbon]]<br>[[Image:Army Overseas Service Ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Overseas Service Ribbon]] (3)<br>[[Image:Army Reserve Overseas Training Ribbon.svg|30px]] [[Overseas Service Ribbon|Army Reserve Overseas Training Ribbon]] (2)<br>[[De Fleury Medal]] (2)<br> |
||
⚫ | | commands = [[United States Army Reserve Command|US Army Res Cmd]] (Fort Bragg, NC)<br>[[84th Division (United States)|84th Division]] (Fort Knox, KY)<br> [[926th Engineer Brigade|926th Engineer Bde, 4th Infantry Div]] (U.S. Forces Iraq)<br> [[926th Engineer Brigade|926th Engineer Group]] (Montgomery, AL)<br>365th Engineer Battalion (Schuylkill Haven, PA)<br>B Company, 44th Engineer Battalion, 8th Army<br>([[United States Forces Korea|U.S. Forces Korea]]) |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | | commands = [[United States Army Reserve Command|US Army Res Cmd]] (Fort Bragg, NC)<br>[[84th Division (United States)|84th Division]] (Fort Knox, KY)<br> [[926th Engineer Brigade|926th Engineer Bde, 4th Infantry Div]] (U.S. Forces Iraq)<br> [[926th Engineer Brigade|926th Engineer Group]] (Montgomery, AL)<br>365th Engineer Battalion (Schuylkill Haven, PA)<br>B Company, 44th Engineer Battalion, 8th Army<br>([[United States Forces Korea|U.S. Forces Korea]]) |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
| termend = June 1, 2016 |
|||
⚫ | |||
| |
| serviceyears = 1981-2016 |
||
| children = (4) |
|||
| serviceyears = 1981-2016 |
|||
⚫ | | education = [[Louisiana State University|Louisiana State Univ.]] <small>([[Bachelor of Science|BS]])</small><br/> [[Assumption College (Worcester)|Assumption College]] <small>([[Master of Arts|MA]])</small><br/>[[Washington University in St. Louis]] <small>([[Master of Liberal Arts|MLA]])</small><br/>[[The Johns Hopkins University|Johns Hopkins Univ]] <small>([[Master of Science in Engineering|MSE]])</small><br/>[[Carnegie Mellon University|Carnegie Mellon Un]] <small>([[Doctor of Philosophy|PhD]])</small><br/>[[U.S. Army War College]]<small> (MSS)</small><br/>[[University of Oxford]] <small>([[Master of Business Administration|EMBA]])</small><br/> |
||
| signature = Jeffrey Talley Signature.png |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
Revision as of 03:43, 9 July 2020
Jeffrey W. Talley (born September 27, 1959) is an American businessman, scholar, and retired three-star general who served as the 32nd Chief of Army Reserve (CAR) and Commanding General of the U.S. Army Reserve Command from 2012-2016. As CAR, he was the senior leader for the Army Reserve, an organization of approximately 215,000 Soldiers and civilians, 134 general officers and senior executives, with an annual operating budget of approximately $9 billion, with activities in all states and territories, and in over 30 countries. His unique military and civilian contributions were recognized by the U.S. Senate with "Tribute to Lieutenant General Talley" on June 28, 2016.[1] After his retirement from the U.S. Army, Talley joined the International Business Machines (IBM) Corporation where he served as Vice President and Global Fellow. In 2020, he left IBM and founded The Public Private Partnership Initiatives (P3i) Group, an advisory services firm. Talley is a member of several corporate and not-for-profit boards.
Early life and education
Talley was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the son of Gloria E. (Genter) and Donald E. Talley. He graduated from Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia in 1977. After spending his freshman year of college at Old Dominion University, he transferred to Louisiana State University (LSU). While at LSU, he was a Cadet of the Ole War Skul and an Army ROTC Scholarship recipient. As a cadet, he graduated from the U.S. Army Airborne School and was Distinguished Honor Graduate from the U.S. Army Air Assault School. His senior year, he was the Commander of Pershing Rifles Company D-16 and an Officer in the Scabbard and Blade. He graduated from LSU in 1981 with an B.S. in Forestry (Natural Resource Management) and was a Distinguished Military Graduate.
While serving on active duty in the military, Talley completed an M.A. in Religious Studies from Assumption College in 1985, and an M.L.A. (History & Philosophy) from Washington University in St. Louis in 1988. Upon leaving the Regular Army in 1992, he enrolled at The Johns Hopkins University where he received his M.S.E. in Environmental Engineering & Science in 1995. In 2000, he earned his Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University. His dissertation research won the U.S. Department of Defense’s Strategic Environmental Research and Development project of the year award.
In 2001, Talley was selected as an Army reservist to attend the U.S. Army War College Distance Education Program. Through a series of distance learning and resident sessions, he completed his studies in 2003 and was awarded an M.S.S. (Military & Strategic Leadership). In 2010, he began an executive graduate program in global business at the University of Oxford. Over the next 22 months he would commute to and from England, graduating from Keble College in 2011 with an Executive MBA. While at Oxford, he would also create a series of tech start-ups with one of his classmates, winning the Saïd Business School Venture Fund Competition for best new start-up.
He married his wife Linda in 1981. They have three sons and a daughter - Christopher, Joshua, Matthew, and Ashley.
Military career
The Regular Army (1981-1992)
Upon graduation from LSU in December of 1981, Talley received a Regular Army commission as a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. After completing the Engineer Officers Basic Course at Ft. Belvoir, Virginia, and the U.S. Army Ranger School at Ft. Benning, Georgia, he reported to his first permanent duty assignment at Ft. Devens, Massachusetts. He was assigned to the 39th Engineer Battalion where he served as 1st Platoon Leader, Alpha Company, and later as Battalion Adjutant (S-1). In August of 1985, he was promoted to Captain enroute to the St. Louis District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers where he worked in Construction Division on Lock & Dam 26 (Replacement), the largest civil works project in the U.S. at that time. He would later serve in both Engineering and Planning Divisions.
Following his assignment in St. Louis, Talley returned to Ft. Belvoir for the Engineer Officers Advance Course. Upon graduation, he volunteered to go to the Republic of Korea for an unaccompanied assignment with the 44th Engineer Battalion, Eight U.S. Army. After a short stint as Assistant Battalion Operations Officer (Assistant S-3) at Camp Mercer (vicinity Seoul), he took command of Bravo Company and Camp Nimble (Dongducheon), in support of 2nd Infantry Division and its demilitarized zone (DMZ) mission. After two years in Korea, he returned to the U.S. for Combined Arms Service Staff (CAS3) School at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas.
Upon graduation from CAS3, Talley was assigned to the Baltimore District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, where he worked in the Hazardous Toxic Radiological Waste Branch of Engineering Division. There he supported the design and remediation of contaminated sites around the country, including the Times Beach Superfund project in Missouri, considered by many to be the most toxic site in America. In April of 1992, Talley resigned his Regular Army commission, leaving active duty as a senior Captain, and transferring to the U.S. Army Reserve.
The Army Reserve (1992-2012)
Talley’s first assignment in the Army Reserve was Assistant Operations Officer (Assistant S-3), 315th Engineer Group (motto - “Building the Way”), New Cumberland Army Depot, New Cumberland, Pennsylvania. In December of 1993, he was promoted to Major and subsequently serve as the Group’s Operations Officer (S-3). Following his assignment at the Group, he was assigned to the 365th Engineer Battalion (motto - “Fast-Rugged”) in Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvania, where he served as the Battalion Operations Officer (S-3). While at the 365th, he also graduated from the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College (CGSC).
Talley relocated in April of 1996 to Vicksburg, Mississippi, to join the 412th Engineer Command (motto - “Build to Serve”). While at the 412th, he served as the Commanding General’s personal Plans Officer, and later as Commandant. After two years in command, he returned to the 365th Engineer Battalion to be the Battalion Executive Officer (XO), only to return to the 412th Engineer Command a year later to serve as its Secretary General Staff (SGS). Selected early for battalion command, Major Talley left the 412th Engineer Command in February of 1999 to take command of the 365th Engineer Battalion. He was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in April of 2000.
While in battalion command, Talley was selected for Senior Service College, which he began through the U.S. Army War College’s (USAWC) Distance Education Program. Upon completion of command in February of 2002, Talley became the Deputy Operations Officer (Deputy G-3) at the 416th Engineer Command (motto - “Serving by Building”) in Darien, Illinois. In December 2002, he was called to active duty and in February of 2003, he mobilized and deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraq Freedom as Chief of Operations (CHOPS), 416th Engineer Command, Coalition Joint Forces Land Component Command (CJFLCC). While in theater, Talley served as a critical staff officer for the planning and execution of hundreds of combat and construction missions throughout Kuwait and Iraq. He was awarded the Bronze Star. Upon his return, he resumed his studies at the U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, receiving his diploma and Master of Strategic Studies (MSS) degree in July 2003.
Upon graduation from the U.S. Army War College, Talley served in the Pentagon as a Strategic Planner in the Deputy Directorate for the War on Terrorism, Strategic Plans & Policy Directorate (J-5), Joint Chiefs of Staff. Promoted to Colonel in February of 2005, he was subsequently reassigned to command the 926th Engineer Group (motto - “Mission Above All”) in Montgomery, Alabama. The 926th was the largest engineer group in the Total Army, with over 7,000 Soldiers scattered across multiple states. As part of an Army force structure change, the group was selected to reorganize and re-designate as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 926th Engineer Brigade. At that time, reserve brigades were one-star commands. Talley was selected to be its first General Officer and was promoted to Brigadier General in August of 2007. In January 2008, Talley was called to active duty in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom as Commander, 926th Engineer Brigade, 4th Infantry Division (motto - “Steadfast and Loyal), Multi-National Division - Baghdad and the Baghdad Provincial Engineer. While in Iraq, Talley is credited with developing a military and policy strategy widely referred to as “Engineering the Peace” that aimed to reduce violence in destabilized communities by rapidly rebuilding infrastructure, schools and hospitals. His work is credited with reducing violence and terrorism in the militia stronghold of Sadr City in Baghdad, and he was awarded two Bronze Stars - one for his efforts in rebuilding Baghdad, and the other for meritorious achievement in combat during the January 2009 planning and execution of security operations for the Baghdad provincial elections.
Upon return from Iraq, Talley assumed command of the 84th Training Command (motto - “Strike Hard”) at Ft. Knox, Kentucky in June of 2009 and was promoted to Major General. At the 84th, he was responsible for training and assessing the readiness of units through Combat Training Center-like exercises in preparation for their upcoming combat deployments. While in command, he also served on the Secretary of Defense's Reserve Forces Policy Board. On March 20, 2012, President Obama nominated Talley to be the Chief of Army Reserve and Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command. Talley relinquished command of the 84th Training Command in April of 2012 and was awarded the Army Distinguished Service Medal. He was subsequently reassigned to the Office of Chief of Army Reserve (OCAR) at Ft. Belvoir, Virginia. On May 3, 2012, Talley was confirmed by the Senate for appointment to the rank of Lieutenant General and assignment as the Chief of the Army Reserve and Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command.
Chief of Army Reserve and Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command (2012-2016)
President Obama nominated Talley to be the Chief of Army Reserve and Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command on March 20, 2012. The U.S. Senate confirmed the nomination on May 3, 2012. Talley was appointed to the rank of Lieutenant General in the Regular Army on June 9, 2012, at a ceremony at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina. Immediately after his appointment, he assumed command of the U.S. Army Reserve Command (USARC) and was sworn in as the 32nd Chief of Army Reserve. General Raymond T. Odierno, 38th Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army, officiated the appointment, the change of command, and the swearing-in ceremonies.
As the Chief of the Army Reserve, Talley was the principal staff adviser to the Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army on all Army Reserve Affairs. He developed Army Reserve budgets, training programs and policy decisions; managed the Army Reserve troop program units, individual mobilization augmentees, and the active guard/reserve program; and served as the appropriation director of all Army Reserve funds. As the Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command, Talley commanded all Army Reserve troops in the Continental U.S. and had administrative control over the Army Reserve troops overseas, with a total end strength of 205,000 Soldiers and over 12,000 civilians.
During Talley’s tenure, the Army Reserve mobilized over 62,000 Soldiers to over 30 countries, including continued support to operations in Iraq and Afghanistan; all while overcoming unprecedented challenges including the first reduction to the Reserve force since the end of the Korean War, severe budget cuts known as sequestration and a government shutdown. To improve the Army Reserve’s support to the Total Force, he developed the “Plan, Prepare and Provide” readiness model that placed Army Reserve Engagement Cells and Teams into every Army service component command and combatant command around the world. He also created the Reserve's Private Public Partnership program, which built partnerships with civilian companies and organizations and helps Soldiers and their families find employment or advance their civilian careers.
Talley relinquished command of the Army Reserve to General Robert B. "Abe" Abrams, the commanding general of U.S. Army Forces Command, on June 1, 2016, at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina. Concurrently, he ended his statutory appointment as the Chief of Army Reserve.
Retirement from the U.S. Army
Talley retired from the U.S. Army on June 30, 2016 at the rank of Lieutenant General, having served almost 35 years in active and reserve assignments. Talley and his wife Linda were honored at a Special Retirement Review at Conmy Hall at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, Virginia. The ceremony was conducted by the 3rd U.S. Infantry (The Old Guard) and hosted by General Mark A. Milley, 39th Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army. Talley was awarded the Army Distinguished Service Medal (2nd award).
Dates of rank
Rank | Date |
---|---|
Second Lieutenant | December 19, 1981 |
First Lieutenant | June 19, 1983 |
Captain | August 1, 1985 |
Major | December 18, 1993 |
Lieutenant Colonel | April 12, 2000 |
Colonel | February 17, 2005 |
Brigadier General | August 13, 2007 |
Major General | June 19, 2009 |
Lieutenant General | June 9, 2012 |
Medals and ribbons
Civilian career
U.S. Army Corps of Engineer (1992-2001)
Talley began his civilian career upon leaving the Regular Army (active duty) in 1992. His initial work was as an Engineering Technician in the Hazardous Toxic Radiological Waste (HTRW) Branch of Engineering Division, Baltimore District. Upon completion of his engineering degree from The Johns Hopkins University in 1995, he was promoted to Environmental Engineer. Working with multiple government organizations and Architect Engineering (AE) firms, he directly supported the assessment and remediation of hundreds of hazardous waste sites. His activities ranged from field sampling, site characterization, remediation design, and the application of innovative technologies.
In 1996, Talley left the Baltimore District for a Research Environmental Engineer position at the Waterways Experiment Station (WES) in Vicksburg, Mississippi. At the time, WES was considered the largest research and development (R&D) engineering center in the nation. As the Bioremediation Team Leader, he created a competitive externally-funded R&D program focused on remediation of soil, sediment, surface water, and ground water. He also served as principle investigator (PI) on multiple projects, while advising numerous graduate students and post-doctorate fellows from various academic institutions. While at WES, he completed his Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University.[citation needed]
University of Notre Dame (2001-2009)
In 2001, Talley accepted an Assistant Professor (tenure-track) appointment at the University of Notre Dame in Notre Dame, Indiana. He taught undergraduate/graduate courses in engineering and science, while developing a very competitive externally-funded basic/applied research program focused on the characterization and remediation of contaminated soil, sediment, surface water, and ground water. He also served as principle [sic] advisor to multiple undergraduate/graduate students and post-doctorate fellows. After 5 years, including one year deployed to Kuwait/Southern Iraq as an Army Reservist, he was selected early for tenure and promoted to Associate Professor in 2006. He continued to advance his academic reputation, establishing himself as an excellent teacher and scholar.[citation needed] In 2008, he was deployed to Iraq to rebuild Baghdad as its first Provincial Engineer. In both deployments, he was able to directly apply his Notre Dame work in the area of environmental restoration.
Malcolm Pirnie (2005-2009)
To gain business experience in the practice of engineering and science, Talley began working part-time as an Associate at Malcolm Pirnie, while working full-time at Notre Dame. At that time, Malcom Pirnie was the largest privately-owned water/wastewater company in the U.S., with its corporate office in White Plains, New York. While at Pirnie, he provided environmental engineering and science consulting support to clients and projects nationwide, with emphasis on water and soil remediation. He was also able to receive support from Pirnie for his academic research. This allowed students to work with samples from real contaminated sites, while testing new and innovative technologies developed at Notre Dame.
Southern Methodist University (2009-2011)
In 2009, Talley continued his academic pursuits at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. He held appointments as Professor (with tenure) and Chair, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Bobby B. Lyle Professor (endowed chair) of Leadership and Global Entrepreneurship and Founding Director of the Hunter and Stephanie Hunt Institute for Engineering and Humanity. As a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, he taught and conducted research on the characterization and remediation of pollutants. As Chair of the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, he led significant growth and reorganized the department with emphasis on advancing scholarship and teaching.[citation needed] As the Bobby B. Lyle Chair of Leadership and Global Entrepreneurship, he taught seminars, lectures, and executed projects emphasizing leadership and entrepreneurship skills. As the Director of the Hunt Institute, he named and directed the first institute of its kind where engineering and humanities were integrated in theory and practice to address the issue of the global poor. He also served as principle [sic] advisor on multiple research projects while advising multiple undergraduate/graduate students and post-doctorate fellows.
Environmental Technology Solutions (2011-2014)
In 2011,Talley received a unique opportunity to create a series of startups companies organized around technologies he had developed with others. Leaving his full-time career in academia, he co-founded Environmental Technology Solutions (ETS) in Phoenix, Arizona. ETS was an engineering, research and services company that developed and commercialized innovative technologies to benefit society and the environment. As President & CEO, he provided leadership to position the firm, its subsidiaries, and associated partners, at the forefront of their respective industries. [citation needed]
Under his leadership, they developed multiple technologies: Green & Grow, soil conditioners that multiply favorable plant characteristics; SafeWaters, a real-time pathogen sensing for water; Nereus, a series of heavy metal remediation products for water, soil, and sediment; and SecureNet, a land-based change detection product that aids in locating improvised explosive devices and improving border security by pinpointing human and drug crossing sites. Green & Grow, developed in partnership with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, won numerous awards for best new and green technology.[citation needed] It also won University of Oxford’s Saïd Business School Venture Fund competition for best new startup.[citation needed] While at ETS, Talley completed his Executive MBA from the University of Oxford.
In the spring of 2012, Talley was nominated by the President and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, to become the 32nd Chief of the Army Reserve and Commanding General, U.S. Army Reserve Command. This required him to return to the Regular Army (active duty) at the appointed rank of Lieutenant General (three-stars) for a four-year term and relocate to Washington, D.C. He resigned as President & CEO in the summer of 2012, but retained co-ownership of ETS, its subsidiaries, and technologies until they were acquired or transferred in 2014. He remained on Green & Grow’s Science Advisory Board until 2016.
The Johns Hopkins University (2011-2012)
To maintain a presence in academia while at ETS, Talley took a part-time appointment at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Working as an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering, he commuted to/from Baltimore, where he taught seminars in environmental engineering, engineering for sustainable development, and entrepreneurship associated with technology. In 2012, he resigned in order to comply with senate confirmation rules for his appointment as Chief of Army Reserve.
Harvard University (2015-2016)
In the fall of 2015, during his last year on active duty as Chief of Army Reserve, Talley accepted an Advanced Leadership Initiative (ALI) Fellowship and appointment as the Cabot House Scholar-in-Residence, at Harvard University. Although initially commuting between Washington, D.C. and Harvard, he eventually moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts upon his retirement from the military in the summer of 2016. As an ALI Fellow, his focus was to learn, lecture, mentor, consult, reflect, and write about the integration of business, technology, and public policy to solve global problems. Specific emphasis was on exploring ways to improve partnerships between the public, private, and academic sectors. He also researched and advanced his understanding and application of principles to promote peace and stability as it relates to the global threats of climate, pollution, security, poverty, and migration. As the Cabot House Scholar-in-Residence, he met regularly with students to discuss current topics of the day and provide advice on careers. He also advised various students and faculty on their respective startup companies. [citation needed]
International Business Machines (IBM) (2016-Present)
In the summer of 2016, while still at Harvard, Talley joined IBM as Vice President, Global Public Sector, and Global Fellow, IBM Center for the Business of Government (a business think tank). Upon completion of his Harvard Fellowship in November of 2016, he relocated to Scottsdale, Arizona. At IBM, he applies thought leadership across a variety of activities ranging from advising on strategic goals and issues to advancing business development. He leads multiple efforts worldwide on delivering solutions[buzzword] sets to clients that utilize big data integration with cognitive analytics for applications in defense and intelligence, cyber security, disaster and complex emergencies, infrastructure resilience, climate change and environment, business and government operations, and improved decision-making. As a Global Fellow, he researches and blogs about climate change, disaster management, veteran’s initiatives, and public private partnerships.[citation needed]
University of Southern California (2017-Present)
Wanting to return to academia in some capacity as an IBMer, Talley accepted a faculty appointment as Professor of the Practice, Price School of Public Policy and Viterbi School of Engineering, and Scholar-in-Residence, Brittingham Social Enterprise Lab, Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California (USC), Los Angeles, California. Commuting to/from Los Angeles, he researches, teaches, and writes about Public Private Partnerships (P3), and the Management of Disasters and Complex Emergencies, with emphasis on the impact technology is having on society, business, and government.[citation needed]
BluMetric Environmental (2019-Present)
In 2019, Talley joined the Board of Directors for BluMetric Environmental, Inc., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, where he serves on the finance committee. BluMetric is a diverse water, earth, and energy company providing solution-oriented[buzzword] consultation, design, products, and construction services to clients with complex environmental issues in more than 60 countries. BluMetric is a publicly traded Canadian company (TSX-V: BLM).[citation needed]
References
- ^ "Tribute to Lieutenant General Jeffrey W. Talley". Congressional Record. June 28, 2016.
Mr. McCain. Mr. President, today I honor a dedicated soldier and business entrepreneur who has demonstrated illustrious service to our Nation while in uniform and in private, public, and academic sectors...
External links
- U.S. Army Senior Leader Bio. "Lieutenant General Jeffrey W. Talley". Archived from the original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2016.