October 2015 |
REGION UPDATE—JULY 2015 BOARD MEETING HIGHLIGHTS Through Strategic Discussions, ASCE Board Takes On the Future F. Jay Burress, P.E., M. ASCE, your Region 7, Director, is a member of the Kansas City Section. Jay represented you at the Oct. 10-11 Board meeting in New York City, held in conjunction with the new ASCE 2015 Convention. The Convention featured a new format – an array of tours, courses, sessions, and speakers focused on key themes vital to today’s civil engineer. The excitement of Times Square as well as the chance to see the many marvels of civil engineering achievement in the New York area made for a great week and further inspired the Board members’ work in guiding ASCE and the profession. ASCE’s incoming officers participated in the meeting as observers and were formally installed Oct. 13 at the annual business meeting. Among the many issues discussed at the October Board meeting, the Task Committee on Governance Activity Review recommended and received approval on several actions aimed at improving and assisting ASCE’s work at the Region level.
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 Jay. |
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 October If you live adjacent to a Section in a different Region, or are merely interested in the other Region reports for October, 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 7 update? See the September edition of News Around Region 7 Share this page via social media and email: |
IN ASCE’s CIVIL ENGINEERING ONLINE MAGAZINE Study of nation's growing traffic congestion suggests solutions The 2015 Urban Mobility Scorecard has crunched the numbers to determine just how bad traffic congestion has become across the nation, and while the numbers are sobering, the report offers five potential solutions. See what's being lost in time and fuel in an exclusive article for ASCE’s Civil Engineering online. |
IN ASCE’s CIVIL ENGINEERING ONLINE MAGAZINE Good STEM jobs are indeed growing, researchers find The U.S. economy created a surprisingly high number of good jobs between 2010 and 2014, many in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields, a Georgetown University research team finds. Delve into the positive findings in an exclusive article for ASCE’s Civil Engineering online. |
IN ASCE’s CIVIL ENGINEERING ONLINE MAGAZINE In a first, China overtakes United States in value of built assets According to an Arcadis analysis, decades of underinvestment in infrastructure in the United States have resulted in a net depreciation of built assets, suggesting weaker economic growth prospects. Explore the report's conclusions in an exclusive article for ASCE’s Civil Engineering online. |
REGION 7 NEWS Region 7 represents at ASCE 2015 Convention Photos: David Hathcox for ASCE The ASCE 2015 Convention gathered civil engineers from around the world in New York City, Oct. 11-14, for a new format of sessions, tours, courses and networking events. Region 7 was well-represented, including South Dakota State University Student Member Deidre Beck, pictured above with Jimmy Bennett of the Minnesota Section, and Alysen Abel of the Kansas Section, pictured below on the right with Reuben Hull of Schenectady, NY, and Danielle Welborn of Baton Rouge, LA. Read more about the Convention in ASCE News. |
EASTERN IOWA YOUNGER MEMBER GROUP Bridging the gap Courtesy Eastern Iowa Younger Member Group The ASCE Eastern Iowa Younger Member Group recently visited three bridges as part of the Highway 100 Extension Bridge Tour near Grand Rapids, IA. |
COLORADO SECTION Colorado Life Member earns Fellow status Ranvir Singh, P.E., F.ASCE, a multidiscipline engineer with the Department of the Interior, has been elected to the status of Fellow by the ASCE Board of Direction. Singh has been an active member of ASCE committees since joining the Society in 1964 and is a Life Member. He was secretary, vice chair, and twice chair of the Watershed Management Technical Committee, and most recently served as secretary and vice chair of the Watershed Council. Learn more about what made him worthy of this honor. |