A former Huntington Ingalls Industries executive and a retired U.S. Army brigadier general have been elected to the Board of Directors to Oak Ridge, Tenn.-based Professional Project Services (Pro2Serve).
In a Tuesday press release, the Energy Department contractor announced the shareholder selection of Gerald Boyd, who retired from Huntington Ingalls last year, and former Brig. Gen. C. David Turner.
Boyd spent 21 years in the management ranks at DOE’s Office of Environmental Management, and is a former vice president of strategic business development, Nuclear and Environmental Group, in Huntington Ingalls’ Technical Solutions division.
Prior to joining the shipbuilder in 2011, Boyd managed DOE’s Oak Ridge Operations Office for eight years. He held a variety of management jobs during his Energy Department tenure, including a stint as deputy assistant secretary for science and technology for the nuclear cleanup office.
Turner, currently a senior adviser to Pro2Serve, spent 33 years with the U.S. Army, including periods as commanding general of the Corps of Engineers South Atlantic and San Francisco District.
He is also currently listed on LinkedIn as a vice president of MacDonald-Bedford, a management and consulting firm with architectural, engineering, and environmental services expertise.
Pro2Serve Chairman and CEO Barry Goss called the two new board members recognized leaders in the energy, environment, and national security fields. “Their knowledge and experience will be invaluable to our employee-owned company as we continue to support the critical missions of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Department of Energy,” he said in the release.
Pro2Serve is an employee-owned company. A Pro2Serve subsidiary, Enterprise Technical Assistance Services (E-TAS), in August won a $137 million technical services contract for the Energy Department’s Portsmouth/Paducah Project Office. The company subsequently in December prevailed in a bid protest brought by a rival for the business. Pro2Serve already holds a technical services contract at the Paducah Site in Kentucky that is set to expire in March.