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Election of Chairperson for Great Lakes Beach Association: PLEASE VOTE




We are pleased to announce the slate of candidates for Chairperson of the Great Lakes Beach Association.  This person will serve as Chairperson for two years and will also remain on the GLBA as a board member for an additional two years.   The candidates are:

Sheridan Haack, Ph.D.
Julie Kinzelman, Ph.D.
Greg Kleinheinz, Ph.D.

Each of their biosketches are below.  Each biossketch contains a bios and their reason for wanting to serve.

It is VERY important that we have good voter participation.  It is important to our organization's future and to assure that members are well represented by its leadership.   Please vote by April 3, 2006.  Vote for only one candidate and send that name to:

chandly@usgs.gov

Thanks you,
 
Richard Whitman

Biosketches

Sheridan Haack
Brief Bio:
Sheridan Haack received her PhD in Environmental Microbiology from Michigan State University, and her MS in Environmental Engineering Sciences from the University of Florida.  She has worked for the US Geological Survey at the Michigan Water Science Center for the past 12 years.  During her career, she has studied the roles of microorganisms in rivers, lakes, wetlands and groundwater.  Her recent research addresses 1) the influence of ground water on microbiology, habitat, and water quality at the Great Lakes coastline; and 2) application of DNA-based methods to detect bacterial pathogens and antibiotic-resistant bacteria in water.  She has authored over 30 publications on aquatic microbiology and ecology, including several papers on beach water microbiology in the Great Lakes.  She is the USGS representative to the Great Lakes Human Health Network, a member of the USGS Human Health Committee on Pathogens in Recreational Waters, and a founding Board member of the Great Lakes Beach Association.   Sheridan has moderated several of the technical sessions at recent Great Lakes Beach Association meetings.  Sheridan is a longtime member of both the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Society for Microbiology.

Why interested in serving as the GLBA President?
As President, Sheridan would seek to continue and extend the outstanding contributions and recognition the GLBA has developed under the guidance of Richard Whitman and Shannon Briggs.  Sheridan has always viewed the GLBA as a unique opportunity for scientists and practitioners to share their insights and data needs in order to achieve successful beach management, and she would seek to continue the role of GLBA as an interface between scientific research and application.  At the 2005 Beach Health Research Needs Workshop (held on Friday following the regular GLBA meeting), a number of recommendations were made regarding improved communication and engagement with public health and natural resources professional organizations, and this is a direction Sheridan would actively pursue.  In addition, it was clear that GLBA could undertake a role in development of educational tools, and, under Shannon Briggs' leadership, USEPA and GLBA have already made significant strides in this direction.  Sheridan would seek to continue this role for GLBA, fostering the development of documents, videos, etc. describing, for example, beach best management practices.  Finally, following her personal research interests, Sheridan would hope to see GLBA interact more actively with the coastal management community, to achieve better understanding of the role of shoreline processes (ground water inputs, sand, shoreline transport) in beach water quality.


Greg Kleinheinz
Brief Bio:
Greg Kleinheinz has a B.S. in Biology and Chemistry from Northern Michigan University, a Ph.D. in Environmental Microbiology from Michigan Tech University and has over 10 years of experience working on water and wastewater issues.  Dr. Kleinheinz is currently an Associate Professor of Environmental Microbiology and Director, of the Environmental Microbiology Laboratory (locations in Ashland, Eagle River, Oshkosh, and Sturgeon Bay, WI) at the University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh.  Dr. Kleinheinz has a background in microbiology, analytical chemistry, and environmental engineering.  Dr. Kleinheinz, and the beach group, currently conduct beach research in 9 Wisconsin counties and 3 in Michigan, with a summer sampling group of over 20 students working at 75+ beaches.  Their research interests include investigations into novel sampling techniques, rainfall effects on E.coli, pathogens and viruses in recreational water, and a variety of source-tracking methods (including repPCR, antibiotic sensitivity, and spatial distributions) to aid in fecal input mitigation and beach management practices.

Why interested in serving as the GLBA President?
The Great Lakes Beach Association is a rare group that provides and invaluable interface between academics, local health officials, state and federal regulatory officials, and citizens.  This interface has allowed for the rapid dissemination of great ideas and work throughout the Great Lakes region.  I have found the group to be invaluable as a tool to help us all move forward as we all work to understand a variety of recreational water issues with the overarching goal of protecting public health.  It would be an honor to serve the many great members of this group.

Julie Kinzelman
Brief Bio:
Julie Kinzelman--I have a BS from the University of Wisconsin – Parkside in Medical Technology with a minor in Biological Sciences, a MS from the University of Wisconsin -Milwaukee, College of Health Sciences, and a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of Surrey, Robens Centre for Public & Environmental Health, Guildford, UK.  For the past 15 years I have been the microbiologist for the City of Racine Health Department laboratory, providing diagnostic services for both clinical and environmental clients and conducting recreational water quality monitoring and research.  As a function of my employment I have been the principal investigator or associate investigator on recreational water quality focused research initiatives funded by the USEPA, WI Department of Natural Resources, Root-Pike Watershed Initiative Network, National Institutes of Health, S. C. Johnson Fund, WI DHFS, and the WI Coastal Management Program.  My current research interests include the validation of real-time test methods for fecal indicator bacteria in surface water and waste water effluent, the determination of pathogen presence from non-human sources such as algae and gulls, the promotion of remediation tactics to improve surface water quality, and the development of a standardized sanitary survey tool and beach classification system to enhance beach management.  Published articles relating to recreational water quality research conducted in Racine have appeared in for Applied & Environmental Microbiology, Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management, Journal of Water & Health, and Lake & Reservoir Management.

Why interested in serving as the GLBA President?
The Great Lakes Beach Association (GLBA) is a voluntary, multidisciplinary group of individuals working together to improve recreational water quality at Great Lakes beaches through the development of collaborations. As an organization we gather and disseminate results of current Great Lakes research studies to scientists but also serve as a conduit for useful information to all interested parties including beach managers at all levels. As I participated in the writing of the Great Lakes Regional Collaboration (GLRC) Coastal Health Chapter it really struck home how important it is to have the interest and participation of a wide range of individuals, from politicians to scientists, from representatives of environmental agencies to the private citizen.  The GLRC process invigorated these people and allowed for the sharing of ideas which in turn created a vision to preserve and protect the Great Lakes.  It is my belief that the Great Lakes Beach Associations serves in much the same manner, drawing on the multidisciplinary knowledge of and passion for the Great Lakes of its members.  As a scientist I am aware of the incredible wealth of knowledge we possess.  As an employee of local government I am equally aware of the challenges presented in translating the scientific knowledge into tools which can be implemented to improve beach management and enhance the protection of public health.  As president I would continue in the spirit of the GLBA and GLRC, disseminating information and fostering collaboration between academic, federal, state, and local agencies to maximize our available resources (knowledge and dollars) and create a roadmap for the improvement of recreational water quality and the protection of the Great Lakes.