Deanna Moran Named MA Chief Coastal Resilience Officer

July 12, 2024

Deanna Moran, AICP (MPP/MCRP ’16) was named the Chief Coastal Resilience Officer by the Healey-Driscoll Administration to address climate change impacts along Massachusetts’ coastline.

Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) Secretary Rebecca Tepper announced Deanna Moran’s appointment as Chief Coastal Resilience Officer within the Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) in May 2024. In this position, she will lead the state’s new ResilientCoasts initiative, a holistic and proactive strategy to guide state and local coastal resiliency policy and action.

Moran joins CZM from Conservation Law Foundation (CLF), where she currently serves as Vice President for Healthy and Resilient Communities, working to leverage law, planning, policy, research, and finance to address New England’s urgent climate challenges. Previously, she was CLF’s Director of Environmental Planning and was responsible for climate resilience advocacy across New England and the Boston Harbor Public Access Initiative. Before CLF, Moran worked for a community development financial institution assisting local governments in devising and implementing neighborhood revitalization strategies, including the reclamation of vacant and abandoned properties. She has consulted on a number of planning and policy-based projects for organizations including the Southern Coalition for Social Justice and the New Jersey Climate Adaptation Alliance. Moran earned a law degree from Suffolk University Law School, a Master’s of City and Regional Planning and a Master’s of Public Policy from Rutgers University, and an undergraduate degree in Environmental Design from the University at Buffalo. She started on June 3.

The Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) is the lead policy and planning agency on coastal and ocean issues within the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs. Through planning, technical and grant assistance, and public information programs, CZM seeks to balance the impacts of human activity with the protection of coastal and marine resources. The agency’s work includes helping coastal communities address the challenges of storms, sea level rise, and other effects of climate change; working with state, regional, and federal partners to balance current and new uses of ocean waters while protecting ocean habitats and promoting sustainable economic development; and partnering with communities and other organizations to protect and restore coastal water quality and habitats.

Read Original Press Release

Recent Posts

EJB Talks: Beyond “Does It Work?”

Beyond “Does It Work?”: Laura Peck on Policy, Evidence, and Impact EJB Talks returns for Season 14 with Dean Stuart Shapiro speaking with Laura Peck, one of our newest Public Policy Associate Professors and a Principal Faculty Fellow with the Heldrich Center for...

Heldrich Center: Motivational Texts and Unemployment

Original post from the Daily Targum By Akash Nattamai Researchers at the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development recently published a report regarding the effectiveness of motivational text messaging on reintroducing people in the statewide Reemployment...

Guest Speaker Lerrel Pinto: Robot Data is Not Enough Data

How can robots make physical labor easier for humans? This past week, Prof. Lerrel Pinto gave a talk at the Bloustein School titled "Robot Data is Not Enough Data." Lerrel Pinto is the co-founder of Assured Robot Intelligence (ARI) and an Assistant Professor of...

State Planning Commission Adopts NJ State Plan, Needs Assessments

State Planning Commission Adopts New Jersey State Plan, Impact Assessment, and Infrastructure Needs Assessment New Jersey State Development and Redevelopment Plan On December 17, 2025, the New Jersey State Planning Commission (SPC) adopted an updated New Jersey State...