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Awards

USGS Team Receives Service to America Medal


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Charles R. Demas, P. Patrick Leahy, Thomas J. Casadevall, James B. Johnston, George J. Arcement, Garron B. Ross, and Benton D. McGee, Gaye S. Farris, Craig Conzelmann, Gregory J. Smith, Deborah A. Norling, Wayne Norling, William R. Jones, and Robert E. Doyle
Above: Representing the USGS at the Service to America Medal award ceremony on September 27, 2006, in Washington, D.C., were: front row, from left, Charles R. Demas, P. Patrick Leahy, Thomas J. Casadevall, James B. Johnston, George J. Arcement, Garron B. Ross, and Benton D. McGee; back row, from left, Gaye S. Farris, Craig Conzelmann, Gregory J. Smith, Deborah A. Norling, Wayne Norling, William R. Jones, and Robert E. Doyle. [larger version]

A team of U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) scientists has received a 2006 Service to America Medal for their search-and-rescue work in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

The scientists, led by Thomas Casadevall, USGS regional director in Denver, Colo., are from the USGS National Wetlands Research Center in Lafayette, La., and the USGS Louisiana Water Science Center in Baton Rouge, La.

Casadevall and representatives of the team received the medal in Washington, D.C., on September 27, in recognition of both their humanitarian and their scientific work immediately after Hurricane Katrina hit the Louisiana coast on Aug. 29, 2005.

Among team representatives at the awards ceremony were Gregory J. Smith, director of the National Wetlands Research Center; Charles Demas, director of the Louisiana Water Science Center; James B. Johnston, Spatial Analysis Branch Chief at the National Wetlands Research Center; and Wayne Norling, safety officer at the National Wetlands Research Center.

Also attending as a guest at the event was USGS employee Debbie Norling, who spearheaded the National Wetlands Research Center's donations of food, water, clothing, and blood and coordinated evacuee-shelter volunteers in Lafayette. (See related Sound Waves article, "Debbie Norling Honored with Excellence Award.")

The team is one of eight recipients of Service to America Medals, sponsored by the Atlantic Media Co. and the nonprofit, nonpartisan Partnership for Public Service to recognize the accomplishments of America's public servants. Medals are given for significant contributions by Federal employees, based on their commitment and innovation as well as the impact of their work on addressing the needs of the Nation. Though not trained in search and rescue, 25 USGS employees put to use their knowledge of boats and flood waters acquired during research when they answered a call for help from the State of Louisiana. They joined a multiagency State and Federal team in navigating the flooded streets of New Orleans and rescuing stranded citizens from rooftops and porches. The group directly rescued approximately 600 people and provided food, water, and other assistance to about 2,000 more, from August 31 to September 5.

The group had the immediate support of Casadevall, who was the first U.S. Department of the Interior senior executive to reach Louisiana after the storm. He was aware of the importance of senior-leadership support during a crisis because he himself began his career in 1980 with another natural disaster, the eruption of Mount St. Helens volcano.

Not only did USGS scientists perform boat rescues, but they also used their spatial-technology skills to help locate more than 8,000 callers to 911 from August 30 to September 27, when flooded streets and responders unfamiliar with the New Orleans area made locating some victims impossible by normal means. The USGS team was able to convert street addresses to latitude and longitude and produce maps for boat and helicopter rescuers with Global Positioning System (GPS) equipment. For those without GPS access, scientists provided maps with geographic coordinates overlaid on street grids. More than 600 maps and other information products were produced daily.

In addition to the immediate "geoaddressing" of 911 calls, the USGS produced maps and data for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)'s Urban Search and Rescue Incident Support Team. To do this, the USGS team worked in shifts 24 hours a day, from 3 days after the storm hit until the end of October. They produced detailed street maps for ground searches that included such information as search intensities, open roads, boat-access points, and 911 call data.

The USGS team also supplied the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers with maps of the city's levee system and pumping stations. At the Corps' request, the USGS team installed temporary real-time water-level gauges in Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard Parishes, as well as Lake Pontchartrain, to measure dewatering of the metropolitan New Orleans area.

The spatial-analysis team helped 15 other government teams in mapping work, including the Louisiana Governor's Office of Emergency Preparedness, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, the Louisiana Geological Survey, the Louisiana State Police, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The USGS team has previously received recognition for its efforts from the Department of the Interior, the Louisiana House of Representatives, FEMA, and ESRI (formerly known as the Environmental Systems Research Institute).

Another USGS employee, Emily H. Majcher, a hydrologist at the Maryland-Delaware- D.C. Water Science Center, was a finalist for the Service to America Medal for her work in developing new technology to treat contaminated wetlands without disturbing the surrounding ecosystem.

Department of the Interior senior advisor Robert J. Lamb was a finalist for his work in pioneering new conservation strategies built on cooperation among government citizens, environmental groups, and the private sector. Finalists were honored in June in Washington, D.C.

To learn more about the Service to America medals, visit Service to America Medals.


Related Sound Waves Stories
Debbie Norling Honored with Excellence Award
October 2006
USGS Center in Lafayette, LA, Provides Aid in the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
September 2005

Related Web Sites
Service to America Medals
Government Executive and Partnership for Public Service

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Fieldwork
cover story:
Satellites Help Scientists Track Migratory Birds

Effects of Urbanization on Nearshore Ecosystems in Puget Sound

Studying the Elwha River in Preparation for Dam Removal

Sea-Floor Mapping Project Expands to South Shore and Cape Cod Bay

Outreach Earth Science Week Celebration in Menlo Park, CA

Google Maps View of Western Coastal and Marine Geology Projects

Meetings Community Forum on Red Tide

Benthic Sponge Taxonomy Course at Mote Marine Laboratory

Awards USGS Team Receives Service to America Medal

Staff In Memoriam: Terry Bruns, 1946-2006

Publications Release of DVD "Bedforms and Cross-Bedding in Animation"

November 2006 Publications List


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Updated April 06, 2007 @ 03:14 PM (JSS)