U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS: BUILDING STRONG 2020 Edition

Page 111

PHOTO COURTESY OF LT. COL. DAVID KAULFERS

The group of hikers reaches the John Muir Memorial Shelter, aka Muir Hut.

SHORELINE PROJECT MANAGER FINDS LEADERSHIP ALONG THE TRAIL BY NICK SIMEONE, San Francisco District

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t’s a subject that has launched countless books: What is it that best prepares someone for leadership and success and the ability to inspire others? For Lt. Col. David Kaulfers, who has managed the San Francisco District’s highest-priority project for the past three years, leading a hike through several hundred miles in the wilderness has had as much to do with unlocking that secret as commanding troops in battle. After seven years with the district, Kaulfers is preparing for his next assignment with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, overseeing military construction in Afghanistan, and looking back on his time in California, “living the dream,” as all those who bump into him in the district’s hallways of 450 Golden Gate know he is fond of saying. Part of that dream, and part of what has helped him develop the skills he believes are necessary to lead and motivate others on critical projects, didn’t come about on the job, but through another more personal goal that had long been on his bucket list: hiking California’s John Muir Trail, a more than 200-mile trek through the Sierra Nevadas beginning at Yosemite National Park and ending at Mount Whitney, the highest peak in the continental United States. “Putting together a plan to hike the trail is just like being a project manager. It’s all about scope, schedule, and budget,” said Kaulfers, who has led the district’s South San Francisco Bay Shoreline Project, a massive undertaking designed to protect some of California’s most valuable real estate from flooding and predicted sea level rise. It is also the largest wetland restoration project west of the Mississippi River. Last year, he led several adults and five Boy Scouts on a path that covered 243 miles in 21 days, over areas so remote that the group,

at times, went for days without seeing anyone else. It’s a journey that required a tremendous amount of planning, organizing, training, and preparing for a multitude of unpredictable contingencies, from bad weather to sickness to injury. Cellphones were useless. Great training, he found, for leading a multimillion-dollar project for the district that, when completed, will affect the lives of millions of Bay Area residents. “You had to look at each portion of the trail and plan for every possible scenario and in locations where it could take days to return to civilization,” Kaulfers said. “What would you do if you needed to get assistance? How would you resupply? Where were you going to sleep, get water, what would you do in the event of an emergency?” It was an experience he likens to his time as a company commander when his National Guard unit was activated and sent to Iraq at the height of the war in 2004. “A deployment gives people an opportunity to really show who they are because you’re under a microscope. The same thing with the John Muir Trail,” said Kaulfers. “Whether it’s an Army deployment or a long backpacking trip, those things are personality amplifiers and you really get to see who’s who.” It’s those characteristics, he said, that led to success on the Shoreline Project. “If you don’t have the right people to deliver a project, you’re not going to get it off the ground, and if you don’t have the right people to do a backpacking trip like this, you’re not going to be successful.” So don’t be afraid, the engineer in him tells others, to attempt what might seem like a bridge too far. “Do things that other people don’t want to do, but also take advantage of opportunities, because they might not be presented to you again.” n 1 07


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TRANSATLANTIC DIVISION

4min
pages 124-126

INTERVIEW LT. GEN. TODD SEMONITE ON ENGINEERING REVOLUTIONARY CHANGE IN THE U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS

15min
pages 14-21

MANAGING THE 2019 FLOOD EVENTS: DIVISION HIGHLIGHTS

13min
pages 22-31

MOSUL DAM TASK FORCE DECLARES “MISSION COMPLETE,” DEPARTS IRAQ

8min
pages 32-37

A FACILITY FOR A DYNAMIC FUTURE

5min
pages 39-40

EUROPE DISTRICT DELIVERS FIRST MILCON EDI PROJECT IN ESTONIA

3min
pages 41-42

DISTRICT, CONTRACTOR COMPLETE REPAIR WORK TO SCITUATE HARBOR JETTY

2min
page 43

System Management Engineering Facility Project Progressing at Hansom Air Force Base

2min
pages 43-44

New York District Collaborates with New York Department of Parks and Recreation

3min
pages 44-45

USACE, PORT OF VIRGINIA RAMP UP NORFOLK HARBOR DEEPENING EFFORTS

4min
pages 45-46

USACE TEAM MEMBERS PARTICIPATE IN WATER SECURITY MISSION IN AFRICA

2min
page 47

GREAT LAKES AND OHIO RIVER DIVISION

4min
pages 48-49

COASTAL RESILIENCY CONCEPTS: AN ONGOING PRACTICE FOR USACE BUFFALO DISTRICT

2min
pages 49-50

A FRESH LOOK AT THE CHICAGO RIVER

2min
pages 50-52

NEW SOO LOCK INDUSTRY DAYS

1min
page 53

BLUESTONE DAM EDGES CLOSER TO COMPLETION

2min
pages 54, 56

LOUISVILLE DISTRICT FURNISHES DODEA SCHOOLS AROUND THE GLOBE

3min
pages 55-57

PARTNERSHIP WITH CONTRACTOR FURTHERS JOINT RISK REGISTER USAGE

2min
pages 57-58

PITTSBURGH DISTRICT REDEFINES STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT

2min
page 59

MISSISSIPPI VALLEY DIVISION

4min
pages 60-61

MEMPHIS DISTRICT SHARES FLOOD-FIGHT EXPERIENCE WITH DUTCH VISITORS

2min
page 62

AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS VISIT LOCK AND DAM 11

3min
pages 63-65

THE ST. LOUIS DISTRICT K-12 STEM OUTREACH PROGRAM

1min
pages 65-66

ARMOR 1: DESIGN TO CONSTRUCTION IN 2019

4min
pages 66-67

MARINE DESIGN CENTER STEERS “ARMOR 1” FORWARD ALONG MULTIPLE TRACKS

3min
page 69

SOUTH ATLANTIC DIVISION

1min
page 70

NORTH ATLANTIC DIVISION

1min
page 38

USACE JOINS FORCES WITH NATIONAL GUARD IN RESPONSE TO FLORENCE

1min
pages 71-72

CHARLESTON HARBOR ENTRANCE CHANNEL GETTING DEEPER

1min
page 73

TEAM DIGS IN TO REDUCE STORM FLOOD RISKS

4min
pages 73-74

A TALE OF SURVIVAL, COURAGE

3min
pages 74-75

USACE MOBILE DISTRICT, NASA CELEBRATE CONSTRUCTION COMPLETION

3min
pages 75-77

USACE MOBILE DISTRICT, NASA CELEBRATE CONSTRUCTION COMPLETION

3min
pages 75-77

AIRBORNE DOZERS PUT THE JAB IN ENGINEERS’ KNOCKOUT

8min
pages 78-79

SOUTHWESTERN DIVISION

2min
page 80

PROTECTING THE TEXAS COAST

5min
pages 81-84

PARTNERSHIP ON THE MKARNS IDENTIFIES SOLUTION TO PREVENT LONG-TERM LOST NAVIGATION

2min
pages 84-85

USACE PROVIDES TECHNICAL CONSULTATION TO OFFICIALS DURING MAY FLOOD

4min
pages 85-87

DISTRICT LIAISON OFFICERS ENHANCE FLOOD-FIGHT EFFORTS

2min
pages 87-88

BIPARTISAN ROUNDTABLE FOR STORMWATER INFRASTRUCTURE

2min
pages 88-89

NORTHWESTERN DIVISION

3min
page 90

NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT BENEFITS SPILL OVER INTO RECREATION

5min
pages 91-93

USACE LEVERAGES DRONE TECHNOLOGY TO CAPTURE IMAGERY AFTER FLOODING IN MIDWEST

3min
page 94

COMPLEX SYSTEM OF DAMS TURNS 50, SAVES OREGON $1 BILLION ANNUALLY

2min
pages 95-96

PARTNERSHIPS KEY TO REACHING GOALS

2min
pages 97-98

INDUSTRY DAYS PROVIDE OPPORTUNITIES FOR BUSINESSES LARGE AND SMALL

2min
pages 98-99

STILLING BASIN AT JOHN MARTIN DAM GETS FIRST FULL INSPECTION IN MORE THAN 75 YEARS

5min
pages 101-103

SOUTH PACIFIC DIVISION

2min
page 100

LOS ANGELES DISTRICT TAKES PROACTIVE APPROACH IN PRIORITIZING HIGH-RISK DAMS

6min
pages 105-107

FLOOD MANAGEMENT AND ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION

3min
page 108

MOVING DIRT FOR THE SHORELINE

1min
pages 109-110

SHORELINE PROJECT MANAGER FINDS LEADERSHIP ALONG THE TRAIL

3min
page 111

PACIFIC OCEAN DIVISION

5min
pages 112-114

ALASKA DISTRICT SPRINGS INTO ACTION AFTER EARTHQUAKE RATTLES ANCHORAGE

7min
pages 115-117

PARTNERING FOR A SUCCESSFUL FUTURE

9min
pages 118-121

ALA WAI FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT PROJECT

2min
pages 121-122

ENGINEERS DESIGNING THE FUTURE

2min
page 123

THE TRANSATLANTIC DIVISION: THE "DOOR TO THE CORPS" ACROSS THE MIDDLE EAST

4min
pages 124-126

AFGHANISTAN DISTRICT COLLABORATES WITH COALITION PARTNERS TO IMPROVE SECURITY IN KABUL

2min
page 127

TAD REWRITES “SAND BOOK” OUTLINING DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION CRITERIA FOR CENTCOM

2min
page 128

Shield 5 Program Critical to Enhancing U.S Foreign Policy, Qatari National Security

3min
pages 129-130

USACE FIRE PROTECTION EXPERTISE USED WORLDWIDE

2min
pages 129-130

TFE PARTNERS WITH AAFES TO BRING A "TASTE OF HOME" TO COALITION FORCES IN IRAQ

2min
pages 75, 131

U.S. ARMY ENGINEER RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER

1min
pages 132-133

MULTIFUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT RECONNAISSANCE VESSEL ALLOWS FOR REMOTE SURVEY OF MARINE STRUCTURES

4min
pages 133-136

ENGINEERED RESILIENT SYSTEMS

3min
pages 137-139

DEVELOPING INSTALLATION ENERGY AND WATER RESILIENCE

4min
pages 139-141

HUNTSVILLE CENTER

17min
pages 142-147

BY THE NUMBERS

4min
pages 148-149

U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS INSTITUTE FOR WATER RESOURCES

4min
pages 150-153

249th ENGINEER BATTALION (PRIME POWER)

3min
pages 154-155

412th THEATER ENGINEER COMMAND

4min
pages 156-157

416th THEATER ENGINEER COMMAND

5min
pages 158-160
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