New CEO at Waste Management, Inc
A. Maurice Myers is stepping down as CEO at Waste Management Inc., but he will remain chairman of the company's board until November. David P. Steiner, who has been executive vice president and chief financial officer, becomes the new CEO immediately, the company said today. Lawrence O'Donnell III also becomes president and chief operating officer of the nation's largest trash company.
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EGMA
The European GeoMembrane Association (EGMA) was formed on the 26th of November, 2003. The president is Stefan Baldauf of GSE Lining Technology GmbH, and it has eight members, two of which are gsa underwriters, Atarfil and Alkor Draka (Solvay). Their web site can be found at the "continued" link below.
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News from Colbond
Please visit Colbond's new and improved, one-week-old web site. Colbond is a gsa underwriter.
IGS Expansion
The Czech Republic now has an IGS Chapter. It is one month old. Congratulations from gsa! Greece will be the next chapter to be added to the IGS. This will make a grand total of 25 chapters. Encourage the growth - contact the IGS for details on how to incude professionals in your country in the Society.
AMCOL International Cetco Lining Technology Group Announces Agreement to Acquire Linteco Geotechnische Systeme GmbH
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, ILL., Mar. 1, 2004. AMCOL International Corporation (NYSE: ACO), today announced it has entered into an agreement to acquire Linteco Geotechnische Systeme GmbH (LGS), a specialized geosynthetic clay liner (GCL) manufacturer headquartered in Linz, Austria. The acquisition will strengthen the Company’s presence in the European lining market and add a highly skilled team of professionals to complement CETCO’s lining technology operations in the U.S., U.K., Poland, Korea and China.
Ryan McKendrick, CETCO president, said, “The acquisition of LGS will bring together two well established companies serving the European lining market today. This combination expands the breadth of our product offerings and provides CETCO with better market penetration in several important market areas. Coupled with the product and technology synergies we can deliver today and in the future, the arrangement will result in benefits to each company’s customers.”
Larry Washow, AMCOL president and chief executive officer, added, “Building on customer relationships is a key component of our strategy for long-term growth. LGS’s European sales and support presence makes it a strong fit for us as we seek to expand distribution of our products into a wider range of market segments throughout Europe."
LGS is a geosynthetic sales and manufacturing company with headquarters and manufacturing facilities located in Linz, Austria. It has sales offices in Spain and Scandinavia. In addition to supplying and manufacturing GCLs for the European market the company sells complimentary products such as drainage composites, nets, geotextiles and geomembranes. The company was incorporated since 1997. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
CETCO Environmental Offshore Services is a division of CETCO, a wholly-owned subsidiary of AMCOL International Corp. AMCOL produces and markets specialty mineral products used for industrial, environmental and consumer-related applications. The company operates in three industry segments, minerals, environmental and transportation. AMCOL’s common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “ACO.” The company’s web site is www.amcol.com.
PGI to Improve PVC Geomembrane Specifications
The PVC Geomembrane Institute (PGI) is pleased to announce that the PGI Specification 1103 has been updated. The index test for Average Plasticizer Molecular Weight has been added to the PGI Specification effective January 1, 2004. This index test is required to be tested once per formulation of material. Increasing the plasticizer molecular weight of the plasticizer increases the amount of plasticizer that is retained over time. Thus, increasing the plasticizer molecular weight increases the long-term flexibility and thus the durability of PVC geomembranes.
The change is important because the requirement of 400 Average Plasticizer Molecular Weight helps further define PVC geomembrane versus PVC sheet not suitable for geomembrane applications. A copy of the PGI specification is available on the PGI website, http://pgi-tp.cee.uicu.edu.
According to Patrick Diebel, President of PGI, this new requirement “is an added measure to ensure only high quality PVC is used. This average plasticizer molecular weight assures that the best ingredients are used in formulating a PVC geomembrane.”
Tim Stark stated that “PGI is committed to consistently improving the methods for defining quality PVC geomembranes. Expect more work of this nature to come from PGI during 2004 including the inclusion of leachate resistance to the PGI 1104 specification”
For more information on PGI, contact Laurie Honnigford, at 651-554-1895.
ASCE Press Release
Civil Engineers Define a New Body of Knowledge for the 21st Century. The proposal is the first among engineering disciplines to call for advanced
studies, work experience, in addition to bachelor's degree. WASHINGTON, D.C. - Many Americans would be surprised - if not alarmed -
to learn that the people responsible for designing their roads, bridges,
buildings and drinking water are only required to hold a bachelor's degree
while doctors, lawyers, physical therapists, accountants and even elementary
school teachers are expected to hold professional and graduate degrees.
Despite practicing a profession where technology and techniques are ever- evolving, the educational requirements for today's young engineers are less
than their counterparts' of 150 years ago. The American Society of Civil
Engineers (ASCE) released a report today, Civil Engineering Body of
Knowledge for the 21st Century: Preparing the Civil Engineer for the Future,
outlining a plan to broaden and deepen the "Body Knowledge" required for
future civil engineers. The knowledge, skills and attitudes that will be
required of an individual entering the civil engineering profession in the 21st
century must be broadened emphasizing leadership principles and technical
specialization.
"Civil engineering must restructure its 150-year-old educational model to
meet the challenges of the 21st century," said ASCE President Patricia D.
Galloway, P.E., F.ASCE. "The next generation of civil engineering
professionals will be engaged in increasingly complex work, requiring
knowledge both broader and deeper than the current engineering education
provides."
At the turn of the last century, civil engineering graduates completed 155
credit hours, compared to the 125 credit hours earned by most of today's
students. Civil engineering students take at least 20 fewer credits than did
counterparts in the 1920s and they take a whole semester less of technical
and professional engineering courses at a time when the complexity of civil
engineering is escalating. In comparison, law and medical students at the
turn of the last century had no more than one to four years of training,
compared to the average eight years of undergraduate and graduate work
today.
"Most professions - business, law and medicine - do not consider the
bachelor's degree a professional degree, yet engineering does," said National
Academy of Engineering President William A. Wulf. "With growing global
competition and the explosion of new technology changing the shape of the
profession, we must restructure the way we educate engineers."
The first of any engineering discipline to develop a proposal to elevate
educational prerequisites for future practicing engineers, the report
recommends that a graduate degree, or the equivalent of 30 credits, and
practical experience be required in addition to an undergraduate degree
before a civil engineer can sit for the licensure exam and practice
professionally. The plan will lead to the revision of current undergraduate and
graduate programs to reflect the basic skills and knowledge that will be
expected of professional civil engineers, and may eventually lead to the
creation of new programs. The Body of Knowledge is developed to be flexible
in how future civil engineering students pursue their education. The trend
towards distance learning programs and high-quality corporate and
government agency education will not be ignored and can be cultivated as an
optional to traditional graduate school programs for future civil engineering
student.
"As the steward of the civil engineering profession, ASCE must lead the
development and implementation of this new educational model," said ASCE
Task Committee Chair Jeffrey S. Russell, Ph.D., "The current four-year
bachelor's degree is becoming inadequate formal preparation for the practice
of civil engineering in the 21st century."
ASCE's Committee on the Academic Prerequisites for the Professional Practice
of Civil Engineering developed the recommended new Body of Knowledge that
will serve as the foundation for the education of civil engineers in the future.
Through this new Body of Knowledge, ASCE can influence changes to the civil
engineering curricula, as well as necessary changes in licensure requirements,
to ensure that the profession will meet its obligations to serve public health
and safety in the increasingly complex technological world of the future.
Knowledge, skills and attitudes that comprise the Body of Knowledge include
the abilities to:
1) Apply knowledge of math, science and engineering;
2) Design and conduct experiments as well as to analyze and interpret data;
3) Design a system, component or process to meet desired needs;
4) Function on multidisplinary teams;
5) Identify, formulate and solve engineering problems;
6) Understand of professional and ethical responsibility;
7) Communicate effectively;
8) Understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal
context;
9) Recognize the need for and engage in lifelong learning;
10) Know contemporary issues;
11) Use techniques, skills and modern engineering tools necessary for
engineering practice;
12) Apply knowledge in a specialized area related to civil engineering;
13) Understand the elements of project, construction and asset management;
14) Understand business, public policy and administration fundamentals; and
15) Understand the role of a leader and leadership principles and attitudes.
For Additional Information Contact:
Norida Torriente
202-326-5129 (office)
202-253-5058 (cell)
ntorriente@asce.org
GSI Newsletter
A link to the latest newsletter (December 2003) from the Geosynthetic Institute.
Learn more here.;