"Former Gov.
Kirk Fordice, a former Vicksburg resident, has been mentioned as a possible
pick for the job."
The Vicksburg (Miss.) Post / Weds., April 17, 2002
No quick pick for Corps post, Flowers says
By Mark J. Armstrong / Staff
writer
The chief of engineers of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said it could
be “a while” before someone will be named assistant secretary of the Army for
civil works.
Lt. General Robert Flowers, now based in Washington, D.C., was in Vicksburg
Tuesday touring local Corps facilities. Flowers talked about the position vacant
since Mike Parker was removed from the job March 6.
“Mike Parker’s resignation was a tough, personal blow for me,” Flowers said.
“It was a lot of fun for a while to have a Corps advocate as assistant secretary
of the Army for civil works.”
Parker, former U.S. House member from District 4 and Republican runner-up for
governor in 1999 voting, was fired by President Bush after Parker criticized
Bush’s budget cuts for civil works, including water projects in Mississippi.
Bush had appointed Parker to the post and will name a replacement.
Former Gov. Kirk Fordice, a former Vicksburg resident, has been mentioned as
a possible pick for the job. Flowers said he expected it would be several months
before anyone is confirmed by the Congress.
“I have not had anybody come to me and ask me what I think of this individual
and I think that will happen before anyone is confirmed,” Flowers said.
Flowers, former commander of the Mississippi Valley Division, said he has worked
with Fordice and would have no problem working with him again.
Fordice, 67, served two terms as Mississippi’s first Republican governor since
Reconstruction from 1992 to 2000. He now lives in Madison.
He had been an engineer and owner and operator of a heavy-construction company
in Vicksburg for 40 years before seeking election.
“I think if he was appointed and confirmed to that position we’d work well together,”
Flowers said.
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