Ondra Berry named Nevada Guard’s 30th adjutant general

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CARSON CITY — Brig. Gen. Ondra L. Berry, a 32-year veteran of the Nevada Air National Guard, has been named Nevada’s 30th adjutant general and the first African American to hold the position in the state’s 154-year history, Gov. Steve Sisolak announced Monday.

“Brigadier General Berry has served the State of Nevada and his country with distinction as a member and leader of the Nevada Air National Guard,” Sisolak said. “Beyond his exemplary experience in the military, Brig. Gen. Berry’s diverse background in senior leadership roles in local law enforcement and business gives him an invaluable perspective on the qualities and skills necessary to succeed at the highest levels.”

The adjutant general serves as the state’s highest ranking military officer overseeing more than 4,200 Nevada Army and Air Guardsmen. Berry was a longtime Reno police officer and most recently a senior vice president in MGM Resorts International human resources office,

“I am honored and humbled to be selected to lead such a fine organization,” said Berry. “I live by the motto that, ‘to whom much is given, much will be required’ and I am ready to deliver.”

Berry is set to replace retiring Brig. Gen. William Burks on Sept. 1. Burks was appointed adjutant general in 2009 and is the sixth-longest tenured adjutant general in Nevada history. A change of command ceremony is set for 10 a.m. Sept. 7 at the Nevada Air National Guard Base in Reno.

“I know the governor had a very difficult decision to make,” Burks said. “Ondra will do an outstanding job and will take the organization to new heights.”

Berry, 60, of Sparks, enlisted in the Nevada Air National Guard in 1986 and was commissioned in 1990. In 2001, he took command of the 152nd Mission Support Flight. He was named the assistant adjutant general, Nevada Air National Guard, in 2015.

Berry spearheaded numerous initiatives advocating community policing and diversity throughout his career in law enforcement and the military. In the early 2000s, Berry founded Guardian Quest, a diversity and inclusion training company. After leaving RPD in 2005, Berry took a full-time position as the senior vice president of diversity and inclusion at MGM Resorts in Las Vegas.

In 2008, Berry began work as the director of the office of cultural transformation at the National Guard Bureau, his first of several positions working as an adviser to the chief of NGB. Berry was awarded the National Guard Diversity Award in 2008 and the Outstanding Diversity Award by the NAACP in 2012.

Berry, who served 25 years in the Reno Police Department, was named deputy chief of police in 1995. He retired from the department in 2005 as the assistant police chief.

He has worked on various commissions and boards throughout his career, including United Way and the Truckee Meadows Boys and Girls Club. In 1990, along with now-Washoe County School Board Trustee Angie Taylor, Berry founded the Northern Nevada Black Cultural Awareness Society.

A native of Evansville, Indiana, Berry moved to Nevada in 1980. He has a Bachelor’s of Arts, secondary education, from University of Evansville in Indiana where he played running back for the Purple Aces. Berry also has a Masters of Arts, public administration, from the University of Nevada, Reno. He is a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Air War College.

Berry is married to his wife, Margo. They have three children: son, Jarel and daughters Zivy and Dulcenea.

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CARSON CITY — Brig. Gen. Ondra L. Berry, a 32-year veteran of the Nevada Air National Guard, has been named Nevada’s 30th adjutant general and the first African American to hold the position in the state’s 154-year history, Gov. Steve Sisolak announced Monday.

“Brigadier General Berry has served the State of Nevada and his country with distinction as a member and leader of the Nevada Air National Guard,” Sisolak said. “Beyond his exemplary experience in the military, Brig. Gen. Berry’s diverse background in senior leadership roles in local law enforcement and business gives him an invaluable perspective on the qualities and skills necessary to succeed at the highest levels.”

The adjutant general serves as the state’s highest ranking military officer overseeing more than 4,200 Nevada Army and Air Guardsmen. Berry was a longtime Reno police officer and most recently a senior vice president in MGM Resorts International human resources office,

“I am honored and humbled to be selected to lead such a fine organization,” said Berry. “I live by the motto that, ‘to whom much is given, much will be required’ and I am ready to deliver.”

Berry is set to replace retiring Brig. Gen. William Burks on Sept. 1. Burks was appointed adjutant general in 2009 and is the sixth-longest tenured adjutant general in Nevada history. A change of command ceremony is set for 10 a.m. Sept. 7 at the Nevada Air National Guard Base in Reno.

“I know the governor had a very difficult decision to make,” Burks said. “Ondra will do an outstanding job and will take the organization to new heights.”

Berry, 60, of Sparks, enlisted in the Nevada Air National Guard in 1986 and was commissioned in 1990. In 2001, he took command of the 152nd Mission Support Flight. He was named the assistant adjutant general, Nevada Air National Guard, in 2015.

Berry spearheaded numerous initiatives advocating community policing and diversity throughout his career in law enforcement and the military. In the early 2000s, Berry founded Guardian Quest, a diversity and inclusion training company. After leaving RPD in 2005, Berry took a full-time position as the senior vice president of diversity and inclusion at MGM Resorts in Las Vegas.

In 2008, Berry began work as the director of the office of cultural transformation at the National Guard Bureau, his first of several positions working as an adviser to the chief of NGB. Berry was awarded the National Guard Diversity Award in 2008 and the Outstanding Diversity Award by the NAACP in 2012.

Berry, who served 25 years in the Reno Police Department, was named deputy chief of police in 1995. He retired from the department in 2005 as the assistant police chief.

He has worked on various commissions and boards throughout his career, including United Way and the Truckee Meadows Boys and Girls Club. In 1990, along with now-Washoe County School Board Trustee Angie Taylor, Berry founded the Northern Nevada Black Cultural Awareness Society.

A native of Evansville, Indiana, Berry moved to Nevada in 1980. He has a Bachelor’s of Arts, secondary education, from University of Evansville in Indiana where he played running back for the Purple Aces. Berry also has a Masters of Arts, public administration, from the University of Nevada, Reno. He is a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Air War College.

Berry is married to his wife, Margo. They have three children: son, Jarel and daughters Zivy and Dulcenea.