January 2015    


Great outreach event or other activity? Let the whole Region know!

If you’re a local ASCE leader and your Section, Branch, Younger Member Group, or Student Chapter has staged any special events, engaged in outreach from grade-school kids to lawmakers, done charity work, fund raising or anything of the sort, let ASCEnews Weekly know and we may include it in next month’s Region report. You may already have written about it and posted pictures in your newsletter, website, or social media. Share the details and any photos at asce.org/localnews. Got questions? Write to submissions@asce.org.


See the other Region reports for January
If you live adjacent to a Section in a different Region, or are merely interested in the other Region reports for January, click on each to view them:
 
Region 1   Boston Society of Civil Engineers Section, Buffalo Section, Connecticut Society of Civil Engineers Section, Ithaca Section, Maine Section, Metropolitan Section, Mohawk-Hudson Section, New Hampshire Section, New Jersey Section, Puerto Rico Section, Rhode Island Section, Rochester Section, Syracuse Section, Vermont Section

Region 2   Central Pennsylvania Section, Delaware Section, Lehigh Valley Section, Maryland Section, National Capital Section, Philadelphia Section, Pittsburgh Section

Region 3   Akron-Canton Section, Central Illinois Section, Central Ohio Section, Cincinnati Section, Cleveland Section, Dayton Section, Duluth Section, Illinois Section, Michigan Section, Minnesota Section, North Dakota Section, Quad Cities Section, Toledo Section, Wisconsin Section

Region 4   Arkansas Section, Indiana Section, Kentucky Section, North Carolina Section, South Carolina Section, Tennessee Section, Virginia Section, West Virginia Section

Region 5   Alabama Section, Florida Section, Georgia Section, Louisiana Section, Mississippi Section
 
Region 6   New Mexico Section, Oklahoma Section, Texas Section

Region 7   Colorado Section, Iowa Section, Kansas City Section, Kansas Section, Nebraska Section, South Dakota Section, St. Louis Section, Wyoming Section

Region 8   Alaska Section, Arizona Section, Columbia Section, Hawaii Section, Inland Empire Section, Montana Section, Nevada Section, Oregon Section, Seattle Section, Southern Idaho Section, Tacoma-Olympia Section, Utah Section

Region 9   Los Angeles Section, Sacramento Section, San Diego Section, San Francisco Section

Region 10   All International Sections, Branches, and Groups


Missed last month's Region 1 update?
See the December edition of News Around Region 1


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REGION DIRECTOR'S REPORT
Highlights of January’s ASCE Board of Direction Meeting


Leonard Cilli, EIT, A.M.ASCE, your Region 1 Director, is a member of the New Jersey Section. He President of the Cilli Environmental Group in Lakewood, New Jersey.

Your newly installed board member, Leonard represented you at the ASCE Board of Direction meeting on January 8 in Miami, held in conjunction with the first of three Multi-Region Leadership Conferences. These conferences bring together Section, Branch and Region leaders, along with leaders from student chapters and Younger Member Groups.

Vibrant, sunny Miami proved to be an ideal location for the MRLC, which offered sessions aimed at improving management of ASCE entities and on developing leadership skills for all career phases. Board members appreciated the opportunity to hear firsthand about challenges, concerns and aspirations from so many different ASCE members, and found the conference environment to be energizing.

After welcoming its newest board members, installed at the ASCE business meeting in October, and its new executive director, Tom Smith, the board worked through an agenda that included both business actions and strategic discussions.

Among the business conducted, the board:
  • Approved the establishment of two new ASCE awards honoring achievement in the fields of risk analysis and management and failure and damage prevention

A substantial portion of the board’s agendas have been devoted to strategic discussions with Society Committees. During this meeting, the board heard from the chair of the Committee on Education, Norman D.  Dennis, PhD, P.E., F.ASCE, who identified a number of issues related to the future of engineering education. Most significant were proposed changes to ABET governance that, if approved, could greatly diminish ASCE’s influence on civil engineering program criteria in the future. The board will conduct a more extensive discussion of this issue at an upcoming meeting.

The board also spent some time developing and discussing a set of core values that would guide its interaction as a board. Civil engineering is a profession grounded in ethical practice and professionalism, and ASCE is well-served by its Code of Ethics, vision, and mission. A set of core values would complement these by establishing a common understanding of how the board pledges to function in its work together and with constituents throughout the Society to cultivate a climate of excellence, teamwork and integrity. Based on the positive discussion at this meeting, the board expects to adopt a set of core values at a future meeting.
       

Board members are interested in your views on the issues they are considering. To share your views, or other ideas on how ASCE can better serve its members and the profession, please email Leonard



BOSTON SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS SECTION
University of Massachusetts Lowell civil engineering professor elected ASCE Fellow


Paul D. DeStefano, Ph.D., P.E., SECB, F.ASCE, is a lecturer in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, teaching structural, geotechnical, and engineering management courses. DeStefano has taught more than 25 different courses in civil engineering, engineering management, and quantitative business analysis at well-respected universities and colleges in the U.S. Throughout his career, DeStefano has provided a wide range of geotechnical, structural, and project management services related to assessment, design, and construction of various civil infrastructure components, including bridges, dams and levees, electrical power plants and substations, water and waste-water treatment structures, schools, industrial buildings and utilities, foundations and earth-retaining structures, and ocean/waterfront structures. Discover more about what made DeStefano worthy of election as an ASCE Fellow in ASCE News.
BOSTON SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS SECTION
Could canals prevent climate-change flooding in Boston’s back bay?


Engineers, architects, city planners, and developers recently convened in Boston to discuss ways to fortify the city against rising sea levels. Explore the options being considered in ASCE’s online edition of Civil Engineering magazine.
IN ASCE’s CIVIL ENGINEERING ONLINE MAGAZINE
Engineering executives’ compensation dips since recession


The total compensation package for executives in engineering and construction professions has declined since 2008, in part because of suffering corporate profits. Discover who’s faring better in ASCE’s online edition of Civil Engineering magazine.

IN ASCE’s CIVIL ENGINEERING ONLINE MAGAZINE
EPA pilot program explores risks to water utilities from climate change


Twenty communities facing a wide range of potential climate-change effects are participating in a $600,000 pilot program conducted by the federal Environmental Protection Agency to identify these risks and develop adaptation plans. Explore the program’s benefits in ASCE’s online edition of Civil Engineering magazine.