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Where are we now and where are we going

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Title: Where are we now and where are we going


1
Where are we now and where are we going?
  • in every grain of sand there is the story of
    the earth.
  • Rachel Carson

2
A Troubled River Mirrors Chinas Path to
Modernity By JIM YARDLEYThe polluted Yellow
River is being sucked dry by factories, growing
cities and farming with still more growth
planned.
NY Times Environmental Headlines, Yesterday and
Today
For Clues on Climate, Seeing What Packrats Kept
By ELIZABETH SVOBODA Published November 14,
2006 Geoffrey Spaulding and Kenneth L. Cole
lifted off from a high plateau in the Grand
Canyon, their helicopter laden with so many
packrat nests that it could barely climb.
  • Annan Faults Frightening Lack of Leadership for
    Global Warming
  • By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
  • U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan also said the
    poorest people in the world bear the brunt of
    rising temperatures.

Chemical Burns By ARLENE BLUM Published
November 19, 2006 THIRTY years ago, as a
researcher at the University of California,
Berkeley, I published papers in Science magazine
calling for the ban of brominated and chlorinated
Tris, two flame retardants used in childrens
sleepwear.
Reforestation and Deforestation Published
November 20, 2006 Almost anyone who lives in the
rural Northeast can attest that the forest has
expanded its range in the past century. That is
why all those stone walls the edges of cleared
fields once upon a time are now orphaned deep
in the woods. A new study published by the
National Academy of Sciences and based on a
recent international assessment of forests
confirms that reforestation has become a
widespread pattern in well-off countries and also
in a few that are not so well off.
Black Soot and Asthma Published November 19,
2006 New York has some of the worst rates of
asthma in the nation.
3
At the most basic level, humans depend upon the
earth
  • Atmosphere
  • Hydrosphere
  • Lithosphere
  • Biosphere

4
At the most basic level, humans depend upon the
earth
  • Atmosphereair to breathe
  • Hydrosphere
  • Lithosphere
  • Biosphere

5
At the most basic level, humans depend upon the
earth
  • Atmosphereair to breathe
  • Hydrosphere water to drink
  • Lithosphere
  • Biosphere

6
At the most basic level, humans depend upon the
earth
  • Atmosphereair to breathe
  • Hydrosphere water to drink
  • Lithosphere food to eat
  • Biosphere food to eat

7
Short timescale response of the atmosphere
We need to understand and model how we are
transforming the atmosphere
8
We need to understand and model how we are
transforming the oceanic hydrosphere
Observed anthropogenic CO2 in oceans (top
Sarmiento Gruber, 2002)
9
We need to understand and model how we are
transforming the terrestrial hydrosphere
Milly et al., 2005
Percent change in calculated runoff for period
1971-1998 compared to 1900-1970 (calculated in
20C3M experiments)
10
We need to understand and model how we are
transforming the surface lithosphere
"the bottom line is, we move about 10 times as
much sediment as all natural processes put
together," Bruce Wilkinson, U. Michigan, Nov.
2004, GSA Meeting
Slide from M. Hochella
From Hooke, R. LeB., 2000, Geology, Vol. 28, No.
9.
11
We need to understand and model how we are
transforming the surface lithosphere Land use
change from 1700 to 1990
Green primary vegetation, yellow crops, blue
pasture
U.S. land use and total carbon 1700-1990, kg/m2
(SarmientoGruber, 2002)
12
We need to understand and model how we are
transforming the biosphere Human actions have
been a major cause of extinction for one-quarter
of bird species on earth
13
Critical Zone supports all terrestrial life
  • The zone of earth, identified from the outer
    canopy of vegetation down to the lower limits of
    groundwater, that supports all terrestrial life
    on the planet including all human life (NRC, 2001)

14
We need to be able to understand past
transformations and predict future
transformations. If we can forecast weather,
why cant we earthcast changes in the Critical
Zone?
15
Predicted terrestrial carbon uptake till 2100
with various models (IPCC, 2001)
16
Many if not most important environmental
processes are coupled with each other and coupled
with human activities. Earthcasts require
interdisciplinary understanding at a variety of
spatial scales and timescales.
17
Enlarged view of pink box. Soil profiles
on Loess studied from Minn to Louisiana showing
increased soil development to the south After
Muhs er al., 2001
  • Three Genesis GCM simulations for modern, 6ka and
    10ka BP (different orbit, CO2, ice sheets).
  • Calculated annual and seasonal temperatures,
    precipitation, soil moisture fluxes extracted
    over Mississippi Valley transect.

Can we predict soil development on dust deposited
after the last glaciation? (climate calculations
by D. Pollard, soil calculations by Geosc grad
Jennifer Williams)
18
How is the cryosphere responding to climate
change?
Finite Element grid for Greenland showing the
"fine-ing" of the grid at the coasts, where all
the action is likely to be.  Jakobshavn glacier,
where PSICE is working over the next 3 years is
in the West and has almost doubled in speed over
the past decade -  driven by a smaller ice shelf
in front and more surface melting
19
Mill Dams in Centre County how have they changed
our land surface and how will that surface
respond as we remove the dams?
Dorothy Merritts, Rudy Slingerland, Eric Kirby
Slide and data from Dorothy Merritts
20
EESI and EMS strengths We are one of the only
institutions providing
  • Expertise that spans from meteorology to deep
    earth processes to human processes
  • Expertise in both observational and modeling
    science
  • Expertise in manipulation and visualization of
    large data sets
  • A university context rich in related areas of
    agriculture, engineering, and materials science

21
EESI Mission is to Capitalize on these Strengths
  • To encourage interdisciplinary examination of the
    chemical, physical, biological, and anthropogenic
    processes acting to shape our environment and our
    response to that environment
  • To facilitate the modeling and manipulation of
    environmental data in new and innovative ways
  • To facilitate dissemination of environmental
    research findings
  • To develop innovative, interdisciplinary research
    and education programs in environmental science

22
EESI History
  • Began as the Earth System Science Center (ESSC)
    in 1985 when Eric Barron came to PSU as first
    ESSC director
  • Brought together faculty in the Departments of
    Geosciences, Meteorology, Geography, Energy,
    Environmental, and Mineral Economics
  • ESSC research included global change, the global
    water cycle, biogeochemical cycles, Earth System
    history, human impacts on the Earth system
  • First centers CIRA and CECG in 1998

23
EESI History (Cont)
  • ESSC renamed the Environment Institute in 1999
  • EMS EI mission
  • To enhance the visibility of EMS environmental
    research and educational programs,
  • To create opportunities for collaborative
    research
  • In 1999, computing and outreach components were
    also incorporated
  • EI renamed the Earth and Environmental Systems
    Institute in 2004
  • Currently hosts activity in five Centers

24
EESI by the Numbers
25
People
  • 52 receive salary (either in total or in part)
  • 22 tenure line faculty (Gen funds)
  • 23 research faculty and staff (4 Gen and 19
    extramural)
  • 7 administrative staff
  • 40 EESI associates have offices in the EES Bldg
  • EESI associates from
  • Chemistry
  • Civil Engineering
  • Geography
  • Geosciences
  • Materials Science and Engineering
  • Meteorology
  • Energy and Geoenvironmental Engineering

26
Budget
  • Averaged 4.3/yr for the past three years
  • Total for 05/06 8.2M compared to 4.7M in
    04/05
  • 7M are extramural funds
  • 1.2M provided as general funds
  • General funds expenditures
  • 11 administrative staff support
  • 8 tuition, grad assistantships, and student
    wages
  • 9 supplies, materials, office operations
  • 9 computational staff and system maintenance
  • 7 other research initiatives (includes centers,
    commitments and misc. requests)
  • 10 research faculty and staff salary support
  • 46 tenure line faculty
  • 65,331 RIF in 2005/2006 (this years figures are
    not available)
  • 22 tenure line faculty releasing overhead

Only includes research awards administered by
EESI (424-07).
27
Proposals
  • Averaged 47 proposals/yr for the past three years
  • 22 tenure line EESI faculty experiencing proposal
    success
  • Largest four awards 03-06
  • Northeastern Regional Center of the National
    Institute for Climate Change Research Ken Davis
    David Eissenstat (1.4M)
  • Pennsylvania Space Grant Consortium Lisa Brown
    (1.9M)
  • Center for Environmental Kinetics Analysis
    Susan Brantley (6.8M)
  • Augmentation of the Pennsylvania Map Program
    Management and Administration Todd Bacastow
    Douglas Miller (11M)

28
Centers Receiving Institute Funds
29
Earth System Science Center (ESSC)(22.5K/year)
Michael Mann
  • Approach
  • Multi-tiered approach to climate modeling
  • Long-term, high resolution climate model
    integration experiments
  • Emphasis on "process" to bridge problems on
    multiple timescales
  • Combining Modeling, Empirical Analyses, and
    Fundamental Processes
  • Development of new educational tools

30
Center for Carbon Cycle Science and Management
(CCSM) (4.5K/year)Kenneth J. Davis
  • Formed in 2001
  • Focuses on the science, engineering, economics
    and ethics of the global carbon cycle
  • Collaborators are located primarily in
  • College of Earth and Mineral Sciences
  • College of Agricultural Sciences
  • Interactions with the College of Liberal Arts
    have been initiated
  • Collaboration with the Dickinson School of Law
    being explored.
  • A focus-area within the ESSC to promote
    interaction among carbon cycle scientists and
    those interested in other aspects of the earths
    climate system
  • Northeastern Regional Center for the National
    Institute for Climatic Change Research (DOE, 2
    million/yr)

31
Penn State Ice and Climate Exploration (PSICE)
Center (4.5K/year) S Anandakrishnan/R B Alley
  • Mission is to facilitate interactions between
    geoscientists, meteorologists, and numerical
    modelers
  • Some of the areas of ongoing work include
  • Research into ice sheet stability and mass
    balance.
  • Improved models of rapid change in ice flow.
  • Impacts on sea level interactions with climate.
  • Web portal to Polar studies at Penn State and a
    virtual gathering place for Polar-interested
    researchers
  • Hope to expand research into areas such as
  • Satellite remote sensing
  • Biology and ecology impacts of polar
    environmental chg
  • Policy

32
Center for Environmental Chemistry and
Geochemistry (12.5K/year)Karl T. Mueller
  • Sponsored by EMS and the Eberly College of
    Science
  • Mission
  • Promote research and teaching in environmental
    chemistry and geochemistry
  • Promote the interdisciplinary exchange of ideas
    among chemistry, geochemistry, hydrology,
    meteorology, biology, agronomy, environmental
    engineering, and geology
  • Provide funding for interdisciplinary research in
    environmental chemistry and geochemistry
  • Promote interaction among faculty, staff, and
    students
  • Provide support for environmental speakers and
    sabbatical visitors
  • Center for Environmental Kinetics Analysis (1.7
    million)
  • Cyberinfrastructure grant -

33
Center for Environmental Kinetics Analysis (CEKA)
(two tuition waivers/year)Susan L.
Brantley/James D. Kubicki
  • Brings together chemists, geochemists,
    biochemists, soil scientists and engineers to
  • measure and synthesize kinetic data for
    environmental systems, and
  • promote modeling of the temporal evolution of
    such systems
  • The primary research question is
  • How can we predict geochemical rates in the
    field?
  • Creates broad interdisciplinary educational
    opportunities
  • Incorporates post-doctoral research, graduate and
    undergraduate training, and public outreach
    components

34
Critical Zone Exploration Network (CZEN) (staff
support)Susan L. Brantley
  • Addresses the complex response of the Critical
    Zone to climatic, tectonic, and anthropogenic
    forcings.
  • The idea developed with support from NSF to build
    support for a national initiative.
  • Currently consists of 8 seed sites including
    Shale Hills
  • Current NSF RFO for Critical Zone Observatories
    is related to this effort

35
Environmental Computing Facility (ECF)John Miley
  • A new model for HPC EESI partners with PIs to
    fund HPC units and EESI personnel buy in for
    5k/y for access
  • 5k/y pays John Miley or Dave Pollard to assist
    each PI in getting science going on HPC clusters
  • http//www.eesi.psu.edu/centers/ecf.php

36
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Further HPC and data storage capabilities
  • Reach out to students with visualization tools
  • Bridge Life and Earth Sciences to engage students
  • Grow a relationship between EESI and UPR
  • Provide competitive support of EESI centers
  • Improve the grant-writing process
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

37
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Reach out to students with visualization tools
  • Bridge Life and Earth Sciences to engage students
  • Grow a relationship between EESI and UPR
  • Provide competitive support of EESI centers
  • Improve the grant-writing process
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

38
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Bridge Life and Earth Sciences to engage students
  • Grow a relationship between EESI and UPR
  • Provide competitive support of EESI centers
  • Improve the grant-writing process
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

39
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Grow a relationship between EESI and UPR
  • Provide competitive support of EESI centers
  • Improve the grant-writing process
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

40
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Promoting 2 proposals with UPR/PSU, REU ongoing
  • Provide competitive support of EESI centers
  • Improve the grant-writing process
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

41
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Promoting 2 proposals with UPR/PSU, REU ongoing
  • Competitively chose 5 centers to receive funds
  • Improve the grant-writing process
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

42
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Promoting 2 proposals with UPR/PSU, REU ongoing
  • Competitively chose 5 centers to receive funds
  • Promoted Denise Kowalski to facilitate grant
    writing
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

43
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Promoting 2 proposals with UPR/PSU, REU ongoing
  • Competitively chose 5 centers to receive funds
  • Promoted Denise Kowalski to facilitate grant
    writing
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Develop the human-environment curriculum
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

44
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Promoting 2 proposals with UPR/PSU, REU ongoing
  • Competitively chose 5 centers to receive funds
  • Promoted Denise Kowalski to facilitate grant
    writing
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Facilitated committee on Human-Environment issues
  • Promote observational environmental science
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

45
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Promoting 2 proposals with UPR/PSU, REU ongoing
  • Competitively chose 5 centers to receive funds
  • Promoted Denise Kowalski to facilitate grant
    writing
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Facilitated committee on Human-Environment issues
  • Funded activities in Shavers Creek watershed
  • Promote a small seminar series on the environment

46
EESI Strategic Plan 2005-2008 (written
1/6/2005)
  • Established new model for HPC and data storage
  • Established GeoWall in EMS museum
  • Initiating Earth Systems Ecology Search led by
    Taylor
  • Promoting 2 proposals with UPR/PSU, REU ongoing
  • Competitively chose 5 centers to receive funds
  • Promoted Denise Kowalski to facilitate grant
    writing
  • Provide video conferencing facility in EES
    Building
  • Facilitated committee on Human-Environment issues
  • Funded activities in Shavers Creek watershed
  • Established EarthTalks seminar series on Mondays

47
The Big EESI ProblemsWe need to
  • Improve budget and funding success
  • Increase quality of life for EESI folks
  • Improve communication
  • Increase participation in and diversity of the
    Institute
  • Clarify vision

48
The Big EESI ProblemsWe need to
  • Improve budget and funding success
  • Increase quality of life for EESI folks
  • Improve communication
  • Increase participation in and diversity of the
    Institute
  • Clarify vision

49
EESI Deficit
50
Grants
  • 05/06 16/53 proposals were funded (30)
  • 04/05 11/45 proposals were funded (24)
  • 03/04 19/43 proposals were funded (44)
  • Average ask constant 29.5 M/yr vs. 24 M/yr
    03/04
  • Awards up from 1.9 M/yr in 03/04 to 5.2 M/yr
  • RIF increased from 39,116 03/04 to 65,331 05/06
  • EESI-administered research expenditures increased
    from 3M/yr 03/04 to 7.06M in 05/06 (58
    increase)
  • EMS-administered research expenditures increased
    from 29M/yr 03/04 to 39.7M in 05/06 (27
    increase)

51
The Big EESI ProblemsWe need to
  • Improve budget and funding success
  • Increase quality of life for EESI folks
  • Improve communication
  • Increase participation in and diversity of the
    Institute
  • Clarify vision

52
Wilson Travel funds
  • Available to EESI Associates
  • Made at the discretion of the Director and on a
    first-come first-served basis
  • Must match the guidelines provided by the Deans
    Office
  • Apply at http//www.eesi.psu.edu/WilsonFunds/W
    ilsonFunds.php

53
Tuition waivers
  • 16 one-semester waivers available per year
  • Allocated as match
  • Allocated for special projects by request to
    Director

54
SIR (Scholars in Residence)
  • Application Deadline Nov. 15
  • http//www.eesi.psu.edu/SIR.pdf
  • EESI offers the dept of the SIR 10k to free the
    recipient from teaching responsibilities for one
    semester
  • Recipient will use office in EESI
  • Recipient will act in some advisory capacity to
    EESI Director

55
Fixed Term and Research Faculty Review Process
  • Instituted policy with respect to review
  • Constituted first review committee, coordinated
    with e-Education and Energy Institutes
  • Promoted several faculty
  • Increased responsibilities, reporting, and
    feedback

56
The Big EESI ProblemsWe need to
  • Improve budget and funding success
  • Increase quality of life for EESI folks
  • Improve communication
  • Increase participation in and diversity of the
    Institute
  • Clarify vision

57
Increase communication
  • Adding info to This Week
  • Email occasional information
  • Strategic Planning workshop held
  • Annual All-Hands meetings
  • Semi-regular coffee hours
  • Regular meetings with Steering committee and
    Center directors

58
EESI Governance Committees
  • EESI Steering Committee (Yaw Yeboah, Bill Brune,
    Tim Bralower, Roger Downs)
  • EESI Center Directors Committee (Doug Miller,
    Karl Mueller, Ken Davis, Michael Mann, Sridhar
    Anandakrishnan)

59
The Big EESI ProblemsWe need to
  • Improve budget and funding success
  • Increase quality of life for EESI folks
  • Improve communication
  • Increase participation in and diversity of the
    Institute
  • Clarify vision

60
Promote biological initiatives (e.g. Earth
Systems Ecology) for the college at least in part
to increase gender diversity
  • For 35 years the number of science,
    mathematics, engineering, and technology
    graduates has oscillated around one-third of the
    total B.A. pool. (Norman Fortenberry, head of
    NSFs undergraduate Programs, as cited in
    Science).

61
To be sure, there have been shifts within the
natural sciences and engineering, as interest in
particular fields have waxed and waned.
Declining interest in fields such as physics
has been more than offset by a spectacular rise
in the life sciences, up 83 in the past decade
after a dip during the 1980s Overall, data from
the National Science Foundation (NSF) show that
the fraction of U.S. undergraduates choosing to
major in science and engineering has stayed
remarkably constantroughly one in threefor more
than a generation (Mervis, J. Science, 2001)
62
(No Transcript)
63
Why has faculty participation in Institute
diminished?
  • Not all EESI associates participate with EESI or
    its centers
  • Money for EESI faculty is partly tied up in
    salary of folks that do not participate because
    they are on to new and better things
  • Hard to initiate new activities to involve new
    people due to lack of funds

64
What should be the rights and responsibilities of
EESI associates? (charge to the SIR committee)
  • Sir Kasting Geosciences (Chair)
  • Richard Alley Geosciences
  • Andrew CarletonGeography
  • Michael MannMeteorology
  • Jenni EvansMeteorology

65
Should EESI privileges be limited in some way to
salaried associates?
66
SIR committee recommendation Some benefits
should be only available to salaried associates
  • Tuition and/or research support for graduate
    students
  • Money for postdocs
  • Eligibility for the Scholars in Residence
    program, whereby faculty members are relieved of
    teaching responsibilities for one semester in
    order to concentrate on their research

67
SIR committee recommendation Some benefits
should be available to both Associates and
Affiliates
  • Access to EESI staff services, e.g., proposal
    preparation.
  • Access to EESI-supported computer facilities,
    especially the PC clusters over at the main
    computer building

68
SIR committee recommendation EESI support for
Research Faculty
  • Support can include space, tuition waivers,
    salary, other funds
  • Limit such support for research faculty to those
    activities that widely involve the greater EMS
    community

Currently, in 05/06, some salary on EESI general
funds is provided to Bacastow, Brown, Pollard,
Miley
69
SIR committee recommendation TERM limits
  • Hire new associates for 7 yr term
  • All EESI associates should be evaluated every 5
    yrs (or 7 as above)
  • Review to be done by Director and Advisory
    Committee
  • Faculty maintaining appropriate ties with
    institute retain salary through institute and
    those that do not return to departmental funding
  • For new hires that do not stay with EESI, funds
    return to EESI
  • For historical hires that do not stay with EESI,
    funds should be traded for another faculty within
    the same dept by negotiation

70
How does PSIE handle review? (info from
Easterling)
  • PSIE requires all department heads of PSIE
    co-funded faculty to put a PSIE/dept-written memo
    on file registering expectations for each
    co-funded faculty.  PSIE co-evaluates each
    faculty member at the beginning of the fifth year
    since appointment (or previous renewal) to
    determine whether to continue co-funding.  All
    PSIE co-funding is managed with the expectation
    that a co-funded faculty member in good standing
    will be supported by the PSIE until they retire
    or leave.  PSIE has had few problems with
    co-funded faculty over the last five or so year
    history of PSIE.

71
How does Huck Institute handle review? (info from
dept head of Biochemistry)
  • Huck funding is for the duration of persons
    tenure.  However, if the person doesn't get
    tenure, funding returns to Huck.  Also, if it is
    determined that the person is no longer
    furthering the mission and goals of the Huck, the
    Huck funding can be terminated and funding goes
    back to Huck.

72
SIR committee description of responsibilities of
EESI Associates
  • An Associate who does not contribute to EESI
    goals and activities may be terminated at the end
    of their 5- or 7-year appointment. It would be up
    to the EESI Director (and Advisory Committee) to
    decide whether an Associate is satisfying their
    part of the bargain. Examples of what might be
    viewed as being meaningful contributions to EESI
    include direction or participation in an
    institute-related research initiative, relevant
    teaching, or supervision of graduate students in
    relevant, cross-disciplinary research.

73
The Big EESI ProblemsWe need to
  • Improve budget and funding success
  • Increase quality of life for EESI folks
  • Improve communication
  • Increase participation in and diversity of the
    Institute
  • Clarify vision

74
SIR Recommendation Establish an Advisory
Committee
  • Chosen by Director and/or voted
  • Would advise on strategic decisions
  • Would advise on evaluation and targeting of EESI
    associates
  • Would advise on funding issues

75
Proposed Constitution of Advisory Committee
  • SIR
  • 1 nontenure-line EESI associate
  • 1 tenure-line EESI associate
  • 1 non-EESI associate
  • 1 member voted at large

76
Advisory Committee
  • To be implemented in spring 07
  • Vote to begin in Jan or Feb 07
  • Committee to consider clarification of vision and
    policy for term limits

77
Conclusions
  • Scientifically interesting time with respect to
    environmental issues
  • EESI experiencing significant change
  • Budget issues are limiting flexibility and
    initiatives
  • Budget issues are moving in right direction
  • Good time for clarification of vision and
    implementation of Advisory Committee activity
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