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GLIN==> Top hydrologist joins Great Lakes Commission staff
- Subject: GLIN==> Top hydrologist joins Great Lakes Commission staff
- From: Kirk Haverkamp <kirkh@glc.org>
- Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2002 15:25:08 -0400
- Delivered-To: glin-announce-archive@glc.org
- Delivered-To: glin-announce@great-lakes.net
- List-Name: GLIN-Announce
- Organization: Great Lakes Commission
- User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:0.9.4) Gecko/20011128 Netscape6/6.2.1
Roger Gauthier to lead new program
Top hydrologist joins Great Lakes Commission staff
The Great Lakes Commission is pleased to announce that Roger Gauthier, a
longtime hydrologist with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers – Detroit District,
is joining the Commission as manager of its newly established Data and Information
Management Program.
Gauthier, a widely respected expert on Great Lakes levels and flows, is joining
the Commission through a multiyear interagency personnel agreement with the
Corps. He will oversee the Commission’s data collection, analysis and management
activities, which include geographic information systems (GIS), the Great
Lakes Regional Air Toxic Emissions Inventory, the development of data management
tools and a range of related activities. He will also bring additional expertise
to bear on the Commission’s work in the area of decision support for regional
water management programs.
“We’re delighted to have someone of Roger’s experience and stature join the
Commission,” said Nat Robinson, chairman of the Great Lakes Commission. “His
addition to our staff will help enhance the Commission’s status as a leading
regional institution providing scientific and technical support for resource
management and policy initiatives.
Lt. Col. Thomas Magness IV, commander of the Corps’ Detroit District, congratulated
Gauthier on his new position.
“Roger has been a great asset to the Corps during his 25 years here,” Magness
said. “With his knowledge and expertise in hydrology, data systems and Great
Lakes issues, this is a tremendous opportunity to strengthen our working
relationship with the Commission as we jointly pursue projects that benefit
our region.”
The program area Gauthier will head, Data and Information Management, is
a newly established program area that grew out of the Commission’s rapid
growth in providing technical and scientific support for regional policy
leaders.
“As the Commission continues to grow and gain new responsibilities, it makes
sense to restructure our program areas so they can remain focused on clearly
defined core missions,” said Mike Donahue, Commission president/CEO. “Our
staffing levels have expanded and will continue to do so as needed to meet
the growing challenges of serving our state and provincial members, and the
entire Great Lakes-St. Lawrence community.”
Gauthier’s experience with the Corps includes managing operations dealing
with Great Lakes water level forecasting, lakes Superior and Ontario outflow
regulation studies, GIS development and remote sensing analyses. He is the
U.S. lead for an International Joint Commission (IJC) task force dealing
with data collection and information management for Lake Ontario and the
St. Lawrence River.
Gauthier previously served as U.S. chair of an IJC task group on land use
management for the Great Lakes and as chair of a national Corps of Engineers
GIS implementation team, and is a past president of the Michigan Section
of the American Water Resources Association. Until recently, he also chaired
the advisory board of the Great Lakes Information Network (GLIN), a Commission-managed
Internet “gateway” that receives more than four million visits each month.
###
Contact: Mike Donahue, president/CEO
Great Lakes Commission
Argus II Bldg., 400 Fourth St.
Ann Arbor, MI 48103
734-665-9135
mdonahue@glc.org
The Great Lakes Commission, chaired by Nathaniel E. Robinson (Wisconsin),
is a nonpartisan, binational compact agency created by state and U.S. federal
law and dedicated to promoting a strong economy, healthy environment and high
quality of life for the Great LakesSt. Lawrence region and its residents.
The Commission consists of state legislators, agency officials and governors’
appointees from its eight member states. Associate membership for Ontario
and Québec was established through the signing of a “Declaration of Partnership.”
The Commission maintains a formal Observer program involving U.S. and Canadian
federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies and other regional
interests. The Commission offices are located in Ann Arbor, Michigan.