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U.S. Customs and Border Protection Announces New Assistant Director for Arizona
(Wednesday, August 13, 2008)
contacts for this news releaseTucson, Ariz. – Tom Yearout, who has a federal career spanning more than 30 years, has been selected as a new assistant director for U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s port security operations in the Arizona region.For more information on CBP trusted traveler programs, or for an application to enroll in the Global Entry pilot program, please visit the Travel section of the CBP website. In his new position as the assistant director for mission support, Yearout will be responsible for all logistical requirements and support for the eight ports of entry in Arizona, which process almost 36 million people, nearly 9 million vehicles, 368,000 commercial trucks, and almost $18 billion in international trade every year. He will oversee support functions for facilities, including projects to re-design, expand, and re-construct ports of entry, personnel staffing and human resource support, and manage a budget of more than $56 million.Prior to assuming these duties, Yearout served as a program manager at the Tucson field office, working on facilities issues at the ports of entry. Before joining U.S. Customs and Border Protection in 2007, Yearout spent two and a half years working with the Transportation Security Administration as the deputy assistant federal security director for screening operations at Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix.Yearout spent 30 years in the United States Coast Guard, in a variety of positions of increasing responsibility, retiring with the rank of Captain in 2002. He has had extensive sea duty in seven ships and was Commanding Officer of three of them. He served as chief of operations for Coast Guard Pacific area where he directed the deployment and coordinated the operations of all Coast Guard long range maritime patrol aircraft and major Coast Guard cutters in the Western Hemisphere. Yearout was serving as chief of staff of the 14th Coast Guard District in Honolulu, Hawaii on September 11, 2001. During that period he worked extensively with the Hawaii Emergency Preparedness Executive Council in coordinating federal, state and local resources to ensure the safety of port operations and security of all water side public utilities/commercial facilities. He has extensive experience in emergency management, emergency response and law enforcement to include drug and migrant interdiction operations. His Coast Guard career also provided him with experience in financial management, logistics, acquisition and planning, programming and budgeting. Yearout has a degree in engineering from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, and masters of business administration in financial management from the University of Miami. He and his wife, Wanda, have three grown children. U.S. Customs and Border Protection is the unified border agency within the Department of Homeland Security charged with the management, control and protection of our nation's borders at and between the official ports of entry. CBP is charged with keeping terrorists and terrorist weapons out of the country while enforcing hundreds of U.S. laws. | Contacts For This News Release
| 4740 N. Oracle Road Room 310 Tucson,
AZ
85705 | Brian Levin OFO Office of Public Affairs Liaison
Phone: |
(520) 407-2319 or
(800) 973-2867 |
| | | | CBP Headquarters
Office of Public Affairs
1300 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Room 3.4A
Washington, DC 20229
| Phone: | (202) 344-1770 or (800) 826-1471 | Fax: | (202) 344-1393 |
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