Swank reception honors notable federal executives

Winners of Presidential Rank Award recognized for career achievements.

Barry L. Carpenter William J. Hudnall Jr. Gregory L. Parham Ronald Fayer Preston J. Waite William D. Phillips Richard P. Burke Phyllis C. Campbell Douglas M. Englund Deidre A. Lee Anthony S. Montemarano Mary E. Tompkey James O. Smyser Robert J. Conner William A. Davidson James G. Clark Kathryn A. Condon James R. Houston Janet C. Menig Paul C. Hubbell Bhakta B. Rath Sue E. Betka James T. Campbell Mary H. Egger Richard F. Moorer Susan B. Hazen E. Timothy Oppelt Edward A. Feiner William H. Gimson Michael R. McMullan Jayson P. Ahern Connie L. Patrick Gregory D. Rothwell Mark J. Sullivan Robert E. Kopp Carol A. De Deo Edward C. Hugler William H. Gerstenmaier Ralph R. Roe, Jr. Edward J. Weiler Heinz Erzberger Jarvis L. Moyers Daniel Doyle Campbell Arthur G. Fraas Herbert Mitchell Paul D. Barnes Beatrice M. Disman Charles Thomas Fingar James E. Caponiti James H. Fall III Richard L. Gregg Deborah M. Nolan James E. Painter William F. Feeley Michael Walcoff

Fifty-five senior federal employees were honored Thursday night beneath chandeliers in the State Department's diplomatic reception rooms for achievements that saved the government more than $50 billion.

The Senior Executives Association and its Professional Development League hosted the annual event, where the executives, surrounded by colleagues from their agencies, received Presidential Rank Awards. Winners, who must be longtime civil servants, are nominated by their agency and evaluated by a panel of private citizens before being approved by the president. The award comes with a cash prize of more than $35,000.

SEA president Carol Bonosaro highlighted some of winners' accomplishments, including those of James Falls, deputy assistant secretary for technical assistance policy at the Treasury Department, who played "a critical role in introducing a new Iraqi currency and in ensuring the successful opening of the Trade Bank of Iraq and the issuance of the first letters of credit there in over 13 years."

Bonosaro also applauded Commerce Department employee William Phillips, a fellow at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, who coordinated "a major international effort … exploring the possibility of using neutral atoms to build a quantum computer," and won a Nobel Prize in physics.

Winners also included Deborah Nolan, a commissioner at the Internal Revenue Service, who created an office to curb corporations' abuse of tax shelters, which helped reclaim more than $6 billion of understated tax revenue.

Environmental Protection Agency administrator Stephen Johnson delivered the keynote speech, in which he encouraged senior federal employees to serve as mentors.

"As leaders, the best of the best, we need to take advantage of the opportunities that have been given to us and take somebody with you," Johnson said.

The winners were:

Agriculture Department






Commerce Department



Defense Department
















Education Department


Energy Department




Environmental Protection Agency



General Services Administration


Health and Human Services Department



Homeland Security Department





Justice Department


Labor Department



National Aeronautics and Space Administration





National Science Foundation


National Transportation Safety Board


Office of Management and Budget


Small Business Administration


Social Security Administration



State Department


Transportation Department


Treasury Department




U.S. Agency for International Development


Veterans Affairs Department