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With
over 35 years experience as an environmental engineer, Dr.
Jackson provides technical and managerial leadership on a wide variety
of water and wastewater engineering projects. His experience includes
the design and operation of advanced technology water and wastewater
treatment facilities, and the
use of innovative low-technology solutions for low-cost sustainable
applications. Dr. Jackson's responsibilities range from giving expert
testimony in civil lawsuits to providing program management and
technical direction on major
projects, including those for large corporations and the Department of
Defense.
Complementing his consulting assignments, Dr. Jackson also teaches
graduate course work at the University of California, San Diego, in
water and wastewater treatment. In addition, he has lectured
internationally with the Air and Waste
Management Association, and with the American Society of Civil
Engineers. Dr. Jackson has testified before Congress on environmental
issues, and has traveled with the US Secretary of Commerce on
international trade missions representing
the US environmental industry.
Dr. Jackson's technical papers have included many innovative water
and wastewater treatment processes; examples are: Treating Industrial
Wastewaters Using Artificial Wetlands, presented in Denver (2008),
Treatment of Arsenic Contaminated
Water Using Aquatic Macrophytes presented in New Delhi, India (2006),
Industrial Wastewater Reuse Using Soft Technology, presented in Florida
(2001), and Border Environmental Compliance Issues in Mexico, presented
in Arizona (1998). His
master's thesis involved the use of the eurohaline unicellular alga
Platymonas as an indicator of nutrient load in water; his doctoral
dissertation involved the optimization of aquatic macrophytes in the
treatment of wastewater.
Dr. Jackson has been on the faculty of six universities in the
United States and overseas, is a licensed professional civil engineer
in six States, and is an avid runner, surfer, sky diver, and pilot.
Come to the monthly Chapter meeting to also hear about the Marine
Life Protection Act and how it is being implemented in Southern
California . Stefanie Sekich from the Surfrider Foundation HQ will give
a brief overview of what the law
requires and how local citizens can get involved in the process of
identifying special places for inclusion in the statewide network.
The Marine Life Protection Act -- or MLPA -- is a state law that
requires establishing a "network" of marine protected areas in our
near-shore waters from Oregon to the Mexican border. These marine
protected areas offer heightened
protection for special places – much like our National Parks protect
special places on land. Click Here to learn more about the MLPA and the process for implementing this law in Southern California.
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