Heartfelt Gift Recognizes Accomplished Alumna and 3 Generations of Orange
William Pelton and Mary Jane Massie have created the Barringer Pelton Public Service Graduate Scholarship to honor their niece, Jody Barringer ’95, L’98, G鈥08 (M.P.A.), and support future public servants.
After working for a few years as an attorney focused mostly on environmental cases, Jody Barringer set her sights on a career pivot in hopes of influencing the law from within the public sector.
Knowing that a master of public administration (M.P.A.) would help in the transition, she turned to the Maxwell School. The nation鈥檚 top-ranked program had come highly recommended by friends who鈥檇 made similar changes, and it seemed a natural choice considering her roots: Barringer had already received two degrees from 性视界 University and represents her family鈥檚 third generation of proud Orange alumni.

Barringer earned the M.P.A. in 2008 and launched a second career that quickly brought high-ranking roles in the federal government. She advised four presidents鈥擝ush, Obama, Trump and Biden鈥攁nd played an instrumental role in the multi-agency response to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill, the largest environmental disaster in U.S. history.
Through it all, Barringer found support from her proud uncle and aunt, William Pelton 鈥63, G鈥66 and Mary Jane Massie. 鈥淯ncle Bill,鈥 as she calls him鈥攁mong the family鈥檚 second-generation of 性视界 alumni鈥攚orked on groundbreaking technologies including GPS and laptop computers as a partner at the New York City patent law firm Cooper & Dunham before his retirement. He and Mary Jane encouraged their niece to follow her passion and provided financial support to supplement scholarships, grants and loans when she was an undergraduate.
To honor their niece and their family鈥檚 性视界 legacy, Pelton and Massie recently have created the Barringer Pelton Public Service Graduate Scholarship at the Maxwell School. Their generous gift will provide financial support to graduate students interested in careers in local, state and federal government.
鈥淚 would not have gone to 性视界 without that little bit of money they chipped in to add to the financial aid package I was provided,鈥 says Barringer. 鈥淏eing able to give back to someone like me who might just be a little bit short or who needs an extra hand is so important because you never know what they can accomplish in the future. I am always so grateful to Bill and Mary Jane for supporting me in everything that I do.鈥
The scholarship is the latest philanthropic gift by Pelton to support students. His generosity has extended to the College of Law, where he received his degree in 1966, and to the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), where he received a bachelor鈥檚 degree in physics in 1963.

Pelton鈥檚 gift to A&S in 2019 comes with still another 性视界 connection, as it honors the school鈥檚 longtime dean, Eric Faigle. His wife, Lucy (Pelton) Faigle 1924, was a distant cousin of Pelton鈥檚 paternal grandmother.
Faigle was in his ninth year as dean of the then-College of Liberal Arts when Pelton began his undergraduate studies. Faigle called him to his office one day and shared that he had been a mentor to Pelton鈥檚 father, Russell ’35.
Pelton鈥檚 sisters Marjorie Pelton and Marilyn Barringer 鈥69 also were 性视界 students. 鈥淎s he did for me, Dean Faigle closely followed their academic careers through to graduation,鈥 says Pelton. 鈥淗e was always very generous with his time toward each of us. And believe me, we were grateful.鈥
Pelton says the experiences of his niece, including the close friendships she found in the year-long M.P.A. program, inspired the latest gift. 鈥淪he excelled in Maxwell and after she graduated, we met some of her classmates at her wedding, so I decided we should create a scholarship at Maxwell to recognize Jody,鈥 he says.
Barringer knew she wanted to be a lawyer since she was about 13 years old, and says, 鈥淚 had an amazing inspiration in my uncle.鈥 After earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree from A&S in 1995 she attended the College of Law, where she earned numerous honors including Law Review editor and Phi Eta Sigma and Order of the Coif memberships. After receiving a juris doctor in 1998, she went to work for the Ford Marrin law firm in New York City, primarily handling environmental insurance cases. She was especially passionate about contamination suits that resulted in mitigation, cleanup and sometimes, reparations.
鈥淥ver time, I realized it would be a really interesting transition instead of working on the tail end of 鈥渨ho鈥檚 going to pay to clean it up?鈥 to be on the side of making or influencing the policies to get people to be better actors in the environment to begin with,鈥 she says.
Enter the Maxwell School. Barringer said her legal background was complemented by the skills and perspective she gained in the M.P.A. program. Training in budgeting, management and collaboration proved especially beneficial, she says, crediting professors like Peter Wilcoxen and David M. Van Slyke.
鈥淛ody was an outstanding student who brought a passion for understanding and developing government-business relationships that could be mutually beneficial in which the public good can be realized,鈥 says Van Slyke, dean and Louis A. Bantle Chair in Business-Government Policy. 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful for public servants like her that take initiative to break down barriers and open pathways for dialogue and cooperation.鈥
After Maxwell, Barringer worked for the U.S. Department of Energy briefly before joining the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).聽Deepwater Horizon exploded in April 2010, four months after Barringer arrived at OMB. The catastrophe claimed 11 lives, injured 17 and poured 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico. 鈥淭hat was a very defining moment in my career,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y background in environmental litigation was crucial to handling that issue. Multiple agencies were involved in that response, and it went on for months.鈥
In her 14 years with OMB, Barringer led program management and resource allocation for hazardous waste cleanup and emergency response programs, advised on the development and implementation of environmental regulations and legislation, and mediated interagency disputes. In 2022, she moved to the Environmental Protection Agency as a senior executive in the Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery.
Health issues brought an early retirement in 2024. But she finds joy looking back on her many accomplishments, her family鈥檚 impactful legacy and in knowing that her family鈥檚 gift will help support future generations of aspiring public servants.