Faculty and Staff

CEE Department Faculty

 

William Rahmeyer William Rahmeyer
Division: Water
Email: rahmeyer@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-2938
Office: EL 211

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William Rahmeyer is the Department Head and a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the lead Professor of the Hydraulics and Fluid Mechanics Program for the Civil Engineering Department and the Utah Water Research Laboratory. Areas of specialization include: over-bank flooding, the effects of vegetation on flow resistance, fusegate control structures, model studies of hydraulic structures, sedimentation and erosion studies, basic research in open and closed conduit flow, control valves, cavitation, transients, and Hydro machinery testing. He is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, member of the board of directors for the Utah Floodplain and Storm Water Management Association, and serves on committees for ASME, ISA, AWAA, ASHRAE, and ASEE.

Paul Barr Paul Barr
Division: Structural
Email: pbarr@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-8249
Office: EL 262

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Paul Barr is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering. His research interests have focused on nondestructive evaluation of bridges due to earthquake loads, live loads, changes in temperature, and prestress losses. Recent projects have included a nondestructive evaluation of damage in concrete subjected to cyclic loading, long-term structural health monitoring of a bridge in Salt Lake City by way of modal analysis and long-term instrumentation of a bridge in Logan Canyon to monitor prestress losses.

Luis Bastidas Luis Bastidas
Division: Water
Email: lucho@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-8228
Office: ENGR 228

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Luis Bastidas is an Research Associate Professor of Civil Engineering affiliated also with the Utah Water Research laboratory. His particular areas of interest are in couple and offline land surface and hydrologic integrated catchment modeling, application of system methods for model parameter identification, model performance evaluation, evolutionary multi-objective optimization and sensitivity analysis algorithms. He is interested also in the use and assimilation of remotely sensed information for land surface and hydrologic modeling, the spatial and temporal scaling of different hydrologic processes and its effects in the model parameterizations, with emphasis in semi-arid areas.

James A. Bay James A. Bay
Division: Geotechnical
Email: jim.bay@usu.edu
Phone: 797-2947
Office: EL 266

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James Bay is an Associate Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Department at Utah State University. He has been on the faculty since 1998. He works in geotechnical engineering, specializing in soil dynamics, geophysical site characterization, nondestructive material evaluation, and instrumentation. Dr. Bays research includes work on improving geophysical measurements in noise environments, design of wave sources, site characterization for predicting earthquake response, MSE wall instrumentation, and evaluation of soft clay.

Bruce Bishop Bruce Bishop
Division: Water
Email: abbishop@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-2777
Office: UWRL 201/ENGR 226

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A. Bruce Bishop is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Utah Water Research Laboratory. He has been at Utah State University since 1971. He is Dean Emeritus of the College of Engineering, having served in that position from July 1982 to July 2002. His areas of specialization are water resources planning and management, engineering economics, systems analysis models and optimization applied to water, transportation, energy, and environmental planning. Dr. Bishop has worked on a variety of research and planning projects for agencies such as the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, Idaho Water Resources Board, California Division of Highways, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Utah Division of Water Resources, US Army Corps of Engineering, US Bureau of Reclamation, US Forest Service, US Agency for International Development, and the Asian Development Bank. He has co-authored one book, contributed chapters to eight books, published 38 articles in scientific journals and proceedings, and led 35 major research projects.

David S. Bowles David S. Bowles
Division: Water
Email: david.bowles@usu.edu
Phone: 797-4010
Office: UWRL 244/ENGR 211G

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David Bowles is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and a former Director of the Utah Water Research Laboratory. His research includes dam safety risk management, real-time reservoir flood operations, extreme flood estimation, and water systems security. He teaches graduate courses in risk management and hydrologic modeling. He is a Director of the US Society on Dams and active in the International Commission on Large Dams and Australian National Committee on Large Dams. He is a Professional Engineer and Fellow, American Society of Civil Engineers and American Water Resources Association. He has consulted worldwide including the Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation, California State Water Project, International Atomic Energy Agency, World Bank and numerous dam owners and regulators. He is currently serving as an Independent Technical Reviewer for the Team 9 - Life Loss Modeling and Engineering and Team 10 - Operational Risk and Reliability Analysis of the Corps of Engineers' "Performance Evaluation: New Orleans and S.E. Louisiana Hurricane Protection Projects" Interagency Performance Evaluation Task Force (IPET).

Joseph A. Caliendo Joseph A. Caliendo
Division: Geotechnical
Email: joe@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-2896
Office: EL 274

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Joe Caliendo is an Associate Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. He is also the Geotechnical Engineering Division Head. His research and teaching interests are in geotechnical engineering with specific emphasis on Deep Foundation systems. He organizes an annual five day workshop for Geotechnical teaching faculty which is sponsored by the Pile Driving Contractors Association (PDCA). Dr. Caliendo teaches several short courses on Deep Foundations for the national Highway Institute (NHI) and the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). He was a co-chair of the organizing committee for GeoLogan97, the first national conference of the ASCE Geo-Institute.

Sanjay S. Chauhan Sanjay S. Chauhan
Division: Water
Email: sanjay.chauhan@usu.edu
Phone: 797-3202
Office: UWRL 246, EL 211G

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Sanjay Chauhan is a Research Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering. His research interests include dam safety risk assessment, hydrologic modeling, dam breach modeling, real-time reservoir operation, and application of uncertainty analysis to dam safety risk assessment.

Anthony Chen

Anthony Chen
Division: Transportation
Email: achen@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-7109
Office: ENGR 231

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Anthony Chen is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Head of the Transportation Systems Engineering Program. The major portion of his research focuses on modeling and analysis of transportation systems, network equilibrium models and solution algorithm development, meta-heuristics for discrete network location and network design problems, and transportation network reliability analysis. He received a Faculty Early Career Development Program grant from the National Science Foundation in 2002 and was named the Researcher of the Year for 2002-2003 by the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department.

William J. Doucette William J. Doucette
Division: Environmental
Email: doucette@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3178
Office: ENGR 218

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Bill Doucette is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, the Utah Water Research Laboratory, and the interdisciplinary Environmental Toxicology Program. His research interests have focused on the fate and behavior of organic contaminants in the environment, with emphasis on phytoremediation, the uptake of industrial chemicals into edible plants, the measurement and prediction of physical-chemical properties using Quantitative Structure Property Relationships (QSPRs), and the environmental fate of pharmaceuticals. He teaches courses in Environmental Organic Chemistry, Aquatic Chemistry, and Hazardous Chemical Safety and is an Environmental Chemistry Editor for Journal of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

Ryan Dupont Ryan Dupont
Division: Environmental
Email: rdupo@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3227
Office: ENGR 216

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Ryan Dupont is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, a Research Associate at the Utah Water Research Laboratory, and the Head of the Division of Environmental Engineering. His research interests focus on the bioremediation of petroleum and chlorinated solved contaminated soil and groundwater. He has recently been heavily involved in the use of natural attenuation and bioaugmentation for site remediation, and in the use of DNA probes for describing microbial community response to engineering management controls applied for site remediation. Ryan also has interests and expertise in soil vapor extraction and soil gas monitoring, pollution prevention and life-cycle analysis, and municipal solid waste management issues.

Marvin W. Halling Marvin W. Halling
Division: Structural
Email: halling@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3179
Office: EL 264

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Marv Halling is an Associate Professor and Division Head of Structural Engineering within the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. He teaches undergraduate and graduate design and analysis courses. He is very active in Earthquake Engineering and has been involved in several post earthquake reconnaissance investigations. He is currently working in the areas of structural health monitoring and damage detection. He is a member of the ASCE seismic Effects Committee as well as the Structural Health Monitoring Committee. Marv is also involved with the design communities in the area and holds PE’s in the states of California and Utah.

Thomas B. Hardy Thomas B. Hardy
Division: Environmental
Email: hardy@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-2824
Office: UWRL 125

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Thomas Hardy is a Professor with joint appointments in the Biological and Irrigation Department, the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Utah Water Research Laboratory. He is also the Associate Director of the Utah Water Research Laboratory. He has accumulated extensive research and consulting experience involving the development and testing of multidisciplinary approaches to instream flow modeling techniques, impact assessments of altered habitat and flow regimes on aquatic species and riparian communities, the application and testing of remote sensing systems with linkages to GIS modeling in natural resource applications, and watershed assessments.

Kevin P. Heaslip
Division: Transportation
Email: kevin.heaslip@usu.edu
Phone: 797-8289
Office: ENGR 233

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Kevin Heaslip is an assistant professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering specializing in Transportation Engineering. He received his PhD from University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2007. Prior to that, he received his Master of Science degree in Civil Engineering (Transportation) in 2003 and a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering in 2001 from Virginia Tech. Dr. Heaslip has won several paper awards and honors including: the 2005 ITS America student paper award and a 2005 Dwight David Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship. His research interests include sustainable and resilient transportation infrastructures, traffic operations, transit operations, and intelligent transportation systems. In addition, his research involves design and operations of work zones on freeways and arterials in addition to the driver’s response to those design elements. Dr. Heaslip has completed research for several major organizations including: The U.S. Department of Transportation, the U.S. Department of Defense, the National Cooperative Highway Research Program, the Massachusetts Governors Highway Safety Bureau, the Massachusetts Highway Department, and the Florida Department of Transportation. His future research interests include the development, design, and operation of transportation systems that are sustainable and resilient to forces of climate change, fuel market instability, and limited capital funding. He is involved actively at the national level with the Institute of Transportation Engineers, the Intelligent Transportation Society of America’s Research, Integration, Training, and Education forum, and several committees in the Transportation Research Board.

Michael C. Johnson

Michael C. Johnson
Division: Water
Email: mikejnsn@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3176
Office: EL 211E

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Michael Johnson is a Research Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and at the Utah Water Research Laboratory. His research includes physical hydraulic modeling and analysis of dams, spillways, stilling basins, energy dissipators, outlet works, channels, intakes, and flow regulating structures. In addition, his research also includes valve performance investigation, flow meter performance evaluation, pump performance verification, and the development of an innovative energy dissipating hood. He received the Outstanding Teacher Award for the College of Engineering for the 2002-03 academic year.

Jagath J. Kaluarachchi Jagath J. Kaluarachchi
Division: Water
Email: jkalu@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3918
Office: UWRL 248 / ENGR 227

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Jagath Kaluarachchi is a Associate Dean of the College of Engineering as well as Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Utah Water Research Laboratory. He has been with Utah State University since 1990 and he is the Head of the Water Engineering Program. His areas of specialization are ground water hydrology, contaminant hydrogeology, and decision analysis and management issues related to water resources assessment and planning. He is a fellow of the American Society of Civil Engineers, vice-chair of the Watershed Council of Environmental and Water Resources Institute of ASCE, and Associate Editor of the Journal of Hydrologic Engineering. He has published over 50 journal publications in reputed scientific journals and has been active in international water education and consulting for UNDP, US State Department, and in many foreign academic institutions.

Sonia Manuel-Dupont Sonia Manuel-Dupont
Division: Environmental
Email: sonia@cc.usu.edu
Phone: 797-1340
Office: ENGR 215

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Sonia Manuel-Dupont is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Communicative Disorders and Deaf Education, and English. In Engineering her area of research is technical writing and communication and the gendered use of language in the workplace. She is interested in writing across the curriculum and linked engineering and communication courses. She is a faculty advisor for the Society of Women Engineers and the Society of Environmental Engineering Students. She has received numerous teaching awards including Professor of the Year for Utah State University and the Carnegie Foundation Teacher of the Year for the State of Utah.

Randy Martin Randy Martin
Division: Environmental
Email: rmartin@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-1585
Office: ENGR 219

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Randy Martin is an Research Associate Professor of Environmental Engineering. His research interests center around the measurement and analysis of atmospheric trace species, most notably reactive hydrocarbons and related oxidation products. Recently, Dr. Martin had been involved with characterization and behavior of ambient fine particulate (PM2.5c and PM10) and visibility research. Other areas of research have included mechanisms of advance oxidation for gas-phase pollutant control and aerosol generation and measurement.

Michael J. McFarland Michael J. McFarland
Division:
Email: farlandm@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3196
Office: ENGR 221

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Michael McFarland is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering. His research interests are focused in the areas of air quality, biosolids engineering, industrial waste and risk management. He has served on numerous federal, state, and local environmental engineering and public health advisory committees. Dr. McFarland has authored or co-authored over 65 publications in the field of environmental engineering including the textbook Biosolids Engineering (McGraw-Hill copyright 2001), numerous research journal articles, conference proceedings, and professional engineering licensing workbooks. He is a registered professional engineer in Utah, and holds Grade IV operator certifications for both wastewater and water treatment. Dr. McFarland is a member of the US EPA Science Advisory Board where he currently chairs the Environmental Engineering Committee (EEC) and serves on the executive board. Dr. McFarland is a diplomat in the American Academy of Environmental Engineers (AAEE) and serves on numerous federal, state and local environmental science and engineering committees.

Mac McKee Mac McKee
Division: Water
Email: mmckee@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3188
Office: UWRL 103 / ENGR 232

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Mac McKee is the Director of the Utah Water Research Laboratory. Dr. McKee specializes in water resources engineering and has diverse experience in flood control, water supply, irrigation and drainage, and water quality management. His current research focuses on quantifying and managing uncertainty in the design and operation of large-scale water supply systems and on the application of intelligent systems approaches in water resources management problems. Dr. McKee has worked on numerous water resources planning and management problems in the US and several foreign countries.

Laurie McNeill Laurie McNeill
Division: Environmental
Email: laurie.mcneill@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-1522
Office: ENGR 220

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Laurie McNeill is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and also has a joint appointment at the Utah Water Research Laboratory. Her research is focused on drinking water issues. Recent projects include: modeling an intermittent-supply water distribution network, and wastewater treatment and reuse in developing countries.  She is a faculty co-advisor for the USU Chapter of Engineers Without Borders, and was chosen as the USU Teacher of the Year in 2007.

Robert T. Pack Robert T. Pack
Division: Geotechnical
Email: rtpack@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-7049
Office: EL 241

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Robert Pack is a Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering. He specializes in geological and geomatics engineering. He is currently Director of the Center for Advanced Imaging Ladar and conducts research in lidar/ladar systems and phenomenology, GPS/INS navigation systems, terrain surface topology and steep slope processes such as rock fall and landslides. His expertise includes remote sensing, photogrammetry, geographic information systems, optoelectronics, lidar sensor systems engineering, navigation systems engineering, geotechnical engineering, highway engineering, engineering geology, survey engineering, and computer-aided design. Faculty and students working on research projects, for which he is principal investigator, spans four departments in the College of Engineering.

John D. Rice John D. Rice
Division: Geotechnical
Email: jdrice@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-8611
Office: EL 268

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John Rice is an Assistant Professor in the Geotechnical Division of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Dr. Rice received his Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering with emphasis in Geotechnical Engineering from the Virginia Tech in 2007. Prior earning his Ph.D., he worked 17 years as a geotechnical engineering consultant for Kleinfelder and Woodward-Clyde Consultants in California. As a consultant, his specialties were in the areas of landslide mitigation and levees. His primary research interests include slope stability and seepage related to earth structures (dams and levees) and stability of natural slopes.

David Rosenberg David Rosenberg
Division: Water
Email: david.rosenberg@usu.edu
Phone: 435-797-8689
Office: ENGR 227 / UWRL 205

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David Rosenberg is an Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and also affiliated with the Utah Water Research Laboratory. His research uses systems analysis—optimization and simulation modeling and data management—for water and resources management, infrastructure expansions, demand management, and conflict resolution at scales ranging from individual users to regional water systems. He is particularly interested to integrate engineering, economic, environmental, uncertainty, and when necessary, social and political considerations into the planning, design, operation, and re-operation of water systems.

Keri Ryan Keri Ryan
Division: Structural
Email: kryan@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-2968
Office: EL 272

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Keri Ryan is an Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering in the Structures Division. Her research interests include developing improved models of structural components, understanding the response of various systems to strong ground motion, and bridging the gap between state-of-the-art research and building code procedures. Recent accomplishments include: (1) development of a design procedure for base-isolated buildings based on nonlinear analysis that improves on code equivalent-linear procedures, and (2) development of an improved model for isolation bearings that includes the interaction between lateral response behavior and vertical loads.

David K. Stevens David K. Stevens
Division: Environmental
Email: David.Stevens@usu.edu
Phone: 797-3229
Office: ENGR 217

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David Stevens is a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and a researcher at the Utah Water Research Laboratory. He teaches undergraduate and graduate Environmental Engineering courses. He is currently working several projects related to modeling of surface water quality for source water protection and total maximum daily load analyses. He has over 40 publications in wastewater treatment, remediation of subsurface environments, water quality modeling, and TMDL assessment. He is also interested in environmental statistics, Bayesian networks, and computer-based decision support systems for environmental management. He consults with the US EPA, Utah Division of Water Quality, and private industry.

David Gavin Tarboton David Gavin Tarboton
Division: Water
Email: dtarb@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3172
Office: ENGR 230

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David Tarboton is a professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Utah Water Research Laboratory and adjunct in the Aquatic Watershed and Earth Resources and Geology departments. Dr. Tarboton coordinates the Utah State University Water Initiative. His research interests include spatially distributed hydrologic modeling, terrain stability mapping and stream sediment inputs, geomorphology, stochastic hydrology, snowmelt hydrology and the application of digital elevation data and Geographic Information Systems in hydrology. He is a Registered Professional Engineer in the State of Utah and is a member of the American Geophysical Union, the American Society of Civil Engineers, and the American Water Resources Association.

Blake P. Tullis Blake P. Tullis
Division: Water
Email: btullis@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3194
Office: ENGR 224

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Blake Tullis is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Utah Water Research Laboratory. His general areas of research interests include hydraulic structures, cavitation, culvert design for environmentally sensitive installations, hydraulic resistance in channels/pipes with composite roughness, and erosion control. He has published two book chapters, three journal publications (with more in the works), and produced over 200 technical reports.

Gilberto E. Urroz Gilberto E. Urroz
Division: Water
Email: gurro@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3379
Office: ENGR 223

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Gilberto Urroz is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and a researcher with the Utah Water Research Laboratory. His areas of interest include computational hydraulics, computer applications in civil engineering, hydraulic system modeling – both numerical and physical, numerical modeling of groundwater flow and contaminant transport, flood plain hydraulics, hydraulic structures, mountain streams, civil engineering fluid mechanics, and erosion control. His research sponsors include the Utah Department of Transportation, the United States Geological Survey, the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory, the Natural Resources Conservation Service, and a number of private hydraulic and erosion control companies. He has served in the Standards Committee for the International Association of Hydraulic Research, and in two technical committees of the Hydraulic Division, American Society of Civil Engineers.

Kevin C. Womack Kevin C. Womack
Division: Structural
Email: kevin.womack@usu.edu
Phone: 797-1144
Office: EL 276

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Kevin Womack a Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, specializing in structural engineering. Research interests include structural dynamics, earthquake engineering, and non-destructive testing of large structures. Dr. Womack has been a Congressional Fellow, serving with the United State Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Works. He currently serves on the Research and Technology Coordinating Committee for the Transportation Research Board of the National Academies and the Transportation Policy Committee of the American Society of Civil Engineers. He is a registered professional engineer in Oregon and Utah.

CEE Emeritus Faculty

Loren R. Anderson Loren R. Anderson
Division: Geotechnical
Email: loren@engineering.usu.edu
Phone: 797-2772
Office: EL 280

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Loren Anderson is a Professor Emeritus of Civil and Environmental Engineering. His research and teaching interests are geotechnical engineering with specific emphasis on dam safety risk assessment, MSE walls and earthquake engineering. He has been a State-of-the-Art speaker on Natural Hazards, Reliability, and Risk Assessment at two National Science Foundation international workshops. He is co-author of three geotechnical engineering textbooks. He was chair of the ASCE Technical Committee on Soil Improvement and Geosynthetics and chair of the organizing committee for GeoLogan97, the first national conference of the ASCE Geo-Institute.

Photo not available. Calvin G. Clyde
Email: calclyde@cc.usu.edu
Phone:797-3155
Office: UWRL 216
 

William J. Grenney William J. Grenney
Division: Water
Email: grenney@cc.usu.edu
Phone: 797-3186
Office: ENGR 225

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William Grenney is a Professor emeritus in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Utah Water Research Laboratory. He is a world authority on the use of advanced computer techniques to solve engineering problems in water resources, transportation, and environmental engineering. He has served as principal investigator on numerous research projects, in advisory roles to state and federal agencies, and as consultant to public and private organizations in the US and overseas. He has authored over 160 technical publications and is a registered professional engineer in Utah, Colorado, and Oregon.

Photo not available. Daniel H. Hoggan
Email: danh@cc.usu.edu
Phone:797-3187
Office: UWRL 205
Daniel Hoggan is a Professor in the Utah Water Research Laboratory and the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. His primary area of interest is in Hydrologic and Hydraulic System Modeling related to Flood Control and Storm Drainage. He is the author of two books and numerous publications in this area of interest. He is currently working as a visiting scholar with the Los Angeles District of the US Army Corps of Engineers on a major urban storm drainage system for Las Vegas, Nevada.

J. Derle Thorpe J. Derle Thorpe
Email: derle@cc.usu.edu
Phone:797-2877
Office: EL 125A
 

Reynold K. Watkins Reynold K. Watkins
Email: reynold@engineering.usu.edu
Phone:797-2864
Office: EL 170
 

Muzz Yener Muzz Yener
Division: Structural
Email: myener@cc.usu.edu
Phone:
Office:

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Muzz Yener is a Professor Emeritus of Civil and Environmental Engineering. He has served as Director for the Utah Transportation Transfer (T2) Center and the Advanced Transportation Engineering Center (ATEC). Dr. Yener has conducted research in a wide variety of topics including Constitutive Modeling and Progressive Structural Response of Advanced Composites, and Reinforced Concrete; Microstructural Consititutive Theory of Solid Propellants; Mode-Interactive Analysis of Thin-Walled Structures Under General Loading Conditions; Bridge Dynamic Interaction and Optimum Design; Progressive Finite Element Tunnel Analysis with Soil-Liner Interaction; Inelastic Analysis and Design Criteria for Cold-Formed Steel Structures; Progressive Analysis of Pullout Nondestructive Testing of Concrete; and Reliability Based Optimization of Structures. He has over 100 journal and proceeding papers, along with over 200 technical papers, and he as coauthored one textbook.

CEE Department Staff

Photo not available. Marlo Bailey
Email: marlo@engineering.usu.edu
Phone:797-2783
Office: EL 211
 

Photo not available. Carolyn Benson
Email: carolynb@engineering.usu.edu
Phone:797-2960
Office: EL 211
 

Photo not available. Becky Hansen
Email: beckyjh@engineering.usu.edu
Phone:797-2938
Office: EL 211
 

Photo not available. Kenneth D. Jewkes
Email: kenneth@engineering.usu.edu
Phone:797-2902
Office: El130B
 

Paul Rew Paul Rew
Email: paul.rew@usu.edu
Phone:797-0459
Office: EL 236

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