ASBPA's 2011 National Coastal Conference: TIME TO REGISTER!!!!!

Let Me Count the Ways…

By Kate and Ken Gooderham, Executive Director

How do you value a conference?  
By the strength of the plenary?  We’ll meet Mark Mazzanti who replaced 
Gary Loew as the Director of Civic Works Program Integration Division.  
We’ll ask the question, ” Are the U.S. Academic Training Programs for 
Coastal Engineers Second Rate?”  We’ll look at lessons learned from the 
Tohoku Oki Tsunami and get some back ground into the design and 
construction of the Lake Borgne Surge Barrier in Response to Hurricane 
Katrina.
By number of sessions?  Right now we have a day and a half of four 
concurrent sessions every 20 minutes.  Between sessions you attend, and 
your access to the virtual conference – you’ll have over 80 opportunities.
By variety of sessions?  Sessions include, coastal policy, regional 
sediment management, modeling, CWPPRA policy, beach nourishment, sea level 
rise, biological monitoring, LACES, shoreline restoration, adaptive 
management, Mississippi barrier island restoration, wetlands, coastal 
structures, remote sensing, diversion, ecology, funding, sand resources, 
LCA, regional sediment management, beach morphology and FEMA modeling.
By the networking? Because ASBPA is multi-disciplinary, you have variety 
in the types of people as well as the opportunities.  Mayors, federal 
agency people, coastal engineers, geologists, local and state government 
people, professors and many more are there to discuss the issues of the 
day.   In addition to the four networking breaks, you’ll also have 
breakfast on Thursday and Friday, lunch on Thursday, and a Wednesday 
evening social hour.
By the pre-conference professional development opportunities?  We have a 
pre-conference short course AND a pre-conference workshop.  A Tuesday 
afternoon short course, “The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Engineer 
Research and Development Center's Coastal Storm Modeling System (CSTORM-
MS) is a physics-based modeling capability for simulating tropical and 
extra-tropical storm, wind, wave, water level and coastal response 
(erosion, breaching, and accretion). The workshop is “Introduction to U.S. 
Army Corps of Engineers Coastal Project Planning and Implementation" is 
the title, and it will be presented by the Corps' National Planning Center 
of Expertise for Coastal Storm Damage Reduction. It will consist of 
several modules addressing different aspects of the coastal planning 
process. We also provide certificates for professional development hours.
By the quality of the field trip?  Following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita 
is 2005, the Corps began to design and construct the Hurricane and Storm 
Damage Risk Reduction System (HSDRRS) for Southeast Louisiana. A key 
feature of the HSDRRS is the Inner Harbor Navigation Canal (IHNC) Lake 
Borgne Surge Barrier. The surge barrier is part of the program to provide 
a 100-year level of protection for New Orleans.

No matter how you count it, ASBPA’s 2011 National Coastal 
Conference, “Expanding Coastal Horizons,” has the value you look for in a 
coastal conference.  We urge you to register today at www.asbpa.org. 
                                    

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