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National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program

A research and implementation partnership

 Advisory Committee on Earthquake Hazards Reduction

Request for Nominations

NIST invites and requests nomination of individuals for appointment to its eight existing Federal Advisory Committees. Nominations will be accepted on an ongoing basis and will be considered as and when vacancies arise. Visit the July 9, 2012 Federal Register Notice (PDF 88KB) for more information.

Members

In August 2006, pursuant to the July 25, 2006 Federal Register Notice (PDF 60KB), the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) concluded an initial 30-day formal solicitation period for nominations for individuals to serve on the Advisory Committee on Earthquake Hazards Reduction (ACEHR). Stakeholders in NEHRP, from around the United States, showed strong interest in and support for NEHRP by submitting over 85 nominees for service on the committee.

ACEHR members serve nominal three-year terms, with a maximum of two consecutive terms of service before having to step off the committee for a minimum of one year. The initial terms for the 15 original members were staggered, with members serving 1, 2, or 3 years, followed by possible full 3-year second terms. As initial terms ended, NIST, in consultation with its NEHRP partner agencies, has appointed new ACEHR members who are nationally prominent earthquake professionals. The ACEHR membership provides balanced representation from the earthquake professional community, including key technical areas, geographical areas across the U.S., practitioners and researchers, state and local governments, and the private sector.

Norman A. Abrahamson
Engineering Seismologist
Pacific Gas & Electric Company, San Francisco, CA
Term Expires: July 11, 2014

Dr. Abrahamson has extensive experience in the practical application of seismology to the development of seismic criteria for engineering design and analysis. As an engineering seismologist at Pacific Gas & Electric Company (PG&E;) and as an engineering seismology consultant with an international practice, he has developed or reviewed ground motions for hundreds of buildings and lifeline facilities ranging from nuclear power plants, dams, and electric substations to ports, pipelines, bridges, and hospitals. At PG&E;, Dr. Abrahamson works on seismic evaluations of company facilities and is responsible for technical management of PG&E;'s seismic research programs, which are conducted in cooperation with the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center and the Southern California Earthquake Center. He serves on the Caltrans Seismic Advisory Board and the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission's Seismic Safety Task Force, and is an adjunct professor at the University of California's Berkeley and Davis campuses and at the Rose School in Italy. He has degrees in geophysics from the University of California, Berkeley.

Craig A. Davis
Manager of Geotechnical Services/Geotechnical Engineering Group
Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, Los Angeles, CA
Term Expires: July 31, 2015

Dr. Davis is a registered civil and geotechnical engineer who has worked for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) since 1987 as an engineer, engineering manager, project manager, and contract manager. He currently manages geotechnical engineering, contract management, and project management groups for LADWP geotechnical projects and oversees the department’s water system seismic improvement program and dam and reservoir development program. He is a member of the executive committee of the ASCE Technical Council on Lifeline Earthquake Engineering, and serves as an adjunct professor at the Beijing Institute of Civil and Architectural Engineering. Dr. Davis has participated in many national and international professional committees and organized numerous international workshops and symposiums related to geotechnical and lifeline earthquake engineering. He has degrees in civil engineering, with emphases in structural and geotechnical earthquake engineering, from California Polytechnic State University and the University of Southern California.

Richard K. Eisner, FAIA
Regional Administrator and Manager (retired), California Integrated Seismic Network and California Earthquake and Tsunami Programs
California Governor's Office of Emergency Services, Oakland, CA
Term Expires: April 30, 2013

An architect, urban planner, and urban designer, Mr. Eisner, for the last 30 years, focused his career on issues of seismic design and urban earthquake hazard reduction, including serving as program manager on a NSF-funded project to develop model hazard reduction and preparedness techniques based on Japanese practice. A key element of his work as director of the Bay Area Regional Earthquake Preparedness Project was the implementation of these models and integration of knowledge from the earth- and social-science communities into mitigation and preparedness programs. In 1993, Eisner joined the team developing HAZUS, FEMA's software for estimating losses from earthquakes. He is a recognized expert in community preparedness and emergency management, and was actively involved in response and recovery operations following the Loma Prieta and Northridge earthquakes. His degrees are from the University of California at Berkeley.

Robert B. Herrmann
Chair of Natural Sciences
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO
Term Expires: July 31, 2015

Dr. Herrmann is the Paul C. Reinert Chair of Natural Sciences in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Saint Louis University (SLU). He has been on the faculty of the SLU Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences since 1975, advancing to full professor of geophysics. In 2004 he was awarded the Otto Nuttli Professorship in Geophysics. In addition to his teaching and research responsibilities, which are focused on earthquake seismology, Dr. Herrmann serves as the director of SLU’s graduate geoscience programs. He has published extensively in scientific journals. Dr. Herrmann has served on the Missouri Seismic Safety Commission, on panels convened by the National Research Council, and on the board of directors (and in other capacities) for the Seismological Society of America, and is currently a member of the AFTAC Seismic Review Panel. He has degrees in physics and geophysics from Xavier University and Saint Louis University, respectively.

John Hooper
Director of Earthquake Engineering
Magnusson Klemencic Associates, Seattle, WA
Term Expires: September 14, 2015

Mr. Hooper is a registered civil and structural engineer with 28 years of experience in structural analysis and seismic and renovation engineering. He is chair of the ASCE Seismic Subcommittee and a past chair of the BSSC Technical Subcommittee TS-2, and is very involved with EERI, FEMA, and the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center. Through his project and technical-committee experience, and his role as mentor of the earthquake and wind specialist groups at Magnusson Klemencic Associates, Mr. Hooper remains at the forefront of research and industry advancements, especially in the areas of seismic analysis, design, and retrofitting. As a nationally recognized expert, he is frequently asked to give seminars on the 2006 International Building Code, ASCE Standard 7-05, and performance-based seismic design issues. He has degrees in civil engineering from Seattle University and the University of California at Berkeley.

Laurie A. Johnson
Urban Planner and Principal, Laurie Johnson Consulting | Research
San Francisco, CA
Term Expires: October 25, 2015

Dr. Johnson is an urban planner specializing in disaster recovery and catastrophe risk management. She has been active in research and consulting on recovery planning and management following many of the world’s major urban disasters of the past 20 years. She was a lead author of the recovery plan for the City of New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina, and coauthored Clear as Mud: Planning for the Rebuilding of New Orleans. She serves as a recovery policy advisor for the City of San Francisco’s Recovery and Resilience Initiative and for the San Francisco Lifelines Council. Dr. Johnson is also a policy advisor for tsunami risk management and scenario development in California, and a senior science advisor to AIG/Chartis Insurance. She is on the board of directors of SPUR (San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association) and of the Public Entity Risk Institute, is a past board member of the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute, and is on the steering committee of the Geotechnical Extreme Events Reconnaissance (GEER) Association. She holds a doctorate in informatics from Kyoto University and, from Texas A&M; University, a master’s degree in urban planning and a bachelor of science degree in geophysics.

Michael K. Lindell
Professor, Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning and Adjunct Professor, Psychology
Texas A&M; University, College Station, TX
Term Expires: August 1, 2013

Dr. Lindell has over 30 years of experience in the field of emergency management. He has conducted extensive research on the processes by which individuals and organizations respond to natural and technological hazards. He also has had extensive experience in assisting government agencies, industry groups, and corporations with the development of emergency plans and procedures. In addition to his positions at Texas A&M University, he serves as editor of the International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters. He formerly served as director of the Hazard Reduction and Recovery Center at Texas A&M University, as associate director of the Institute for Crisis and Disaster Management at George Washington University, as a research scientist for the Battelle Human Affairs Research Centers, and as an adjunct faculty member at FEMA's National Emergency Training Center. Dr. Lindell has spoken extensively for conferences, workshops, and short courses, and has authored or coauthored 10 books and some 160 journal articles, book chapters, and technical reports. He has degrees in social/quantitative psychology and psychology from the University of Colorado.

Ronald L. Lynn
Director and Building Official
Clark County Department of Development Services, Las Vegas, NV
Term Expires: August 31, 2015

Mr. Lynn is the director and building official for the Clark County, NV, Department of Development Services, where he has worked since 1981. In addition to directing the building department for this 8,000-square-mile jurisdiction, Mr. Lynn is a frequent speaker on topics related to building codes, building performance standards, construction issues, and building-department administration. He has served on numerous building-safety-related boards, councils, and committees at local, state, and national levels. Formerly president of the board of directors of the International Code Council (ICC), Mr. Lynn now serves on the board of managers of the ICC Evaluation Service and as chairman of the Nevada Organization of Building Officials. Mr. Lynn chairs the Nevada Earthquake Safety Council, the Western States Seismic Policy Council’s Engineering, Construction and Building Codes Committee, and recently was appointed by the National Institute of Building Science to the Board of Directors of the Building Seismic Safety Council.

Jack P. Moehle
Professor, Structural Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of California, Berkeley, CA
Term Expires: November 8, 2013

Dr. Moehle has been active in both teaching and research since joining the Berkeley faculty in 1980. His main technical interests are reinforced concrete construction and earthquake engineering. He has played a leading role in the development of building codes and professional engineering guidelines for the design of new construction and for the assessment and rehabilitation of seismically vulnerable existing construction. A licensed civil engineer in California, he is regularly engaged in professional engineering activities. His recent work has included seismic consulting and design reviews for high-rise buildings, the Bay Area Rapid Transit System, the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission Hetch Hetchy water system, and the Transbay Transit Center. His work has been recognized through awards from the American Concrete Institute, the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute, and the Structural Engineers Association of California. Dr. Moehle has degrees in civil engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Chris D. Poland (ACEHR Chairperson)
Chairman and Senior Principal
Degenkolb Engineers, Oakland, CA
Term Expires: April 30, 2013

Mr. Poland, a registered civil and structural engineer, has worked as an advisor on government programs for earthquake hazard mitigation and as an effective leader in related professional activities for more than 30 years. His professional experience includes projects of all construction types, ranging from new design to seismic retrofit and rehabilitation and historic preservation. Through his personal advocacy and leadership skills, Mr. Poland has promoted and advanced earthquake hazard reduction in California and nationwide. In 2006, he was awarded the California Earthquake Safety Foundation's Alquist Medal for his significant contributions to earthquake safety in California and in other earthquake-prone areas of the United States. Mr. Poland has also made substantial contributions in the advancement of structural and earthquake engineering practice. He served as a founding co-chair of the NEHRP Coalition for Seismic Safety and chaired the ASCE Standards Committee on Seismic Rehabilitation and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Advisory Committee on Structural Safety. He has degrees from Stanford University and the University of Redlands.

Kenneth H. Stokoe
Professor and GEC Director
Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering
University of Texas at Austin
Term Expires: November 16, 2015

Professor Stokoe holds the Jennie C. and Milton T. Graves Chair in Engineering and directs the Geotechnical Engineering Center at the University of Texas at Austin. Since joining the UT faculty nearly four decades ago, Dr. Stokoe has become an accomplished teacher, researcher, author, and speaker in the field of geotechnical engineering. His research has focused on field seismic testing of geotechnical systems and pavements and on laboratory evaluations of soil stiffness under cyclic and dynamic loading. He has played instrumental roles in the development of innovative geotechnical testing methods and equipment that have since become widely used, including the crosshole seismic method, a combined resonant column and torsional shear (RCTS) system, the spectral-analysis-of-surface-waves (SASW) method, and the Rolling Dynamic Deflectometer (RDD). Dr. Stokoe has also led the development and use of NEES large-scale mobile field equipment based at the University of Texas at Austin. He has received numerous honors for his teaching and research accomplishments and has lectured widely in the United States and abroad. Dr. Stokoe has degrees in civil engineering from the University of Michigan.

Brent H. Woodworth
President and CEO
Global Crisis Services, Inc., Calabasas, CA
Term Expires: June 15, 2014

Mr. Woodworth is president and CEO of Global Crisis Services, Inc. He is the founder of "The Crisis Response Team," an international disaster preparedness and response team that has responded to over 70 major natural and man-made crisis events in 49 countries. Mr. Woodworth consults on a global basis with business leaders, elected officials, and heads of state on comprehensive risk and disaster preparedness, mitigation, response, and recovery operations. He has placed a special focus on building collaborative support for global humanitarian relief operations and has coordinated efforts with United Nations organizations, nongovernmental organizations, academic institutions, private-sector businesses, and government leaders. Mr. Woodworth is chairman of the Disaster Recovery Institute and the Multihazard Mitigation Council. He is also on the board of the National Institute of Building Sciences.

Mary Lou Zoback
Consulting Professor
Department of Environmental Earth System Science
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Term Expires: July 31, 2015

Dr. Zoback is a seismologist and a consulting professor in Stanford University’s Department of Environmental Earth System Science. She was vice president for earthquake risk applications at Risk Management Solutions (RMS) from 2006 to 2011, where she used the company's commercial risk models to explore the societal role of earthquake insurance and to quantify the costs and benefits of disaster management and risk reduction activities. Before joining RMS, Dr. Zoback worked for USGS for 28 years as a research geophysicist and senior research scientist, as chief scientist for the agency's Earthquake Hazards Team, and as senior research scientist and program coordinator for the Northern California Earthquake Hazards Program. She is a member of the Disasters Roundtable at the National Academy of Sciences and of the National Research Council panel on "Increasing the Nation's Resilience to Natural and Man-Made Disasters." Dr. Zoback is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, past president of the Geological Society of America and has served on many professional committees, boards, and advisory groups. She received her BS, MS, and PhD in geophysics from Stanford University.

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