SDSU
Professor Appointed Chair of Federal
U.S.-Mexico Border Environmental Advisory
Board
Upcoming Report from Committee Will
Address Water Quality and Supply
CONTACT: Aaron Hoskins
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Phone (619) 594-1119 Pager (619) 620-3282
ahoskins@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, November 18, 2004 The
federal Environmental Protection Agency has appointed Paul Ganster,
a San Diego State University professor and director of SDSUs
Institute for Regional Studies of the Californias, to chair an independent
federal advisory committee that makes recommendations to the president
and Congress on methods to improve environmental conditions along
the U.S.-Mexico border.
Ganster is the first academic to chair the
committee, known as the Good Neighbor Environmental Board, in the
boards 12-year history. He was first appointed to the board
in 2003 in recognition of his efforts over 20 years to address environmental
and sustainable development issues on the U.S.-Mexico border. Chairs
are appointed for one-year terms, but are generally re-appointed
for up to four years.
The boards advice to the federal and
legislative branches takes the form of yearly reports and occasional
letters containing recommendations for action on a different environmental
subject. Next years report, the eighth, will deal with water
quality and availability.
Ganster, whose term began Nov. 1, is familiar
with water issues through his work for the Tijuana River Watershed
Binational Vision Project. The projects team of researchers,
funded in part by the state of California, the County of San Diego
and SDSU, has recently completed its work to outline an ideal ecological
state for the Tijuana River watershed.
Its important for the federal
board to raise its voice on this issue so the administration and
Congress fully grasp the urgency, Ganster said. Population
growth along the border coupled with the very limited supply of
water means were hitting a bottleneck in terms of sustainable
development for border communities.
Ganster is a social scientist, specializing
in Latin America. He came to SDSU from UCLA in 1984 to direct the
Institute for Regional Studies of the Californias, which conducts
research and outreach on transborder issues and facilitates SDSUs
activity in the region. For the past two decades, Gansters
efforts have been directed toward policy questions of the U.S.-Mexico
border and the comparative study of border regions around the world.
Elaine Koerner, an EPA official servings
as the boards designated federal officer, said Gansters
experience will help the board better navigate the complex environmental
issues related to the border.
The board's diverse membership means that its advice comes
from experts from many fields who have come to consensus on how
best to handle these complicated issues, she said. Dr.
Ganster's leadership will enhance this process.
Koerner said that Ganster already has taken
the lead on finishing preparations for the board's next report,
which is set to be presented in Spring 2005 to President Bush and
Congress. The report will focus on how the federal government can
most effectively support good management of the border region's
precious water resources.
Members of the Good Neighbor Environmental
Board represent public, private and academic sectors as well as
different geographical regions ranging from Southern California
to the upper reaches of the Rio Grande River in Texas. Representatives
from the federal departments of State, Commerce, Interior, Transportation,
Agriculture, Health and Human Services and Housing and Urban Development
also sit on the board. The previous chair was Placido dos Santos,
border environmental manager for the Arizona Department of Environmental
Quality.
In addition to teaching at SDSU, Ganster
has been a visiting professor at the School of Economics at the
Universidad Autonoma de Baja California in Tijuana. He also sits
on the Binational Regional Opportunities Committee of the San Diego
Association of Governments (SANDAG), and is associate director of
SDSUs Office of International Programs, which has established
exchange agreements with hundreds of universities outside the U.S.,
enabling nearly 1,200 SDSU students to study abroad in 2004.
San Diego State University is the oldest
and largest higher education institution in the San Diego region.
Since it was founded in 1897, the university has grown to offer
bachelors degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees in 72
areas and doctorates in 14 areas. SDSUs more than 33,000 students
participate in academic curriculum distinguished by direct contact
with faculty and an increasing international emphasis that prepares
them for a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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