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  • Future of the Ocean Symposium and Champion of the Ocean Awards Luncheon

    The Urban Coast Institute (UCI) will host its 15th annual Future of the Ocean Symposium and Champion of the Ocean Awards Luncheon on Tuesday, October 22, at Wilson Hall.

    With a theme of An Ocean for All: Ecosystems, Economies & People,  the symposium will assemble nationally recognized experts to share insights on the research, science and technology priorities necessary to ensure our oceans continue to thrive ecologically while serving an expanding cross-section of users.

    Monmouth University President Emeritus and UCI Ocean Policy Fellow Paul G. Gaffney II will moderate a panel discussion with perspectives from the ports/maritime, offshore wind, ocean sciences and marine conservation communities. Rear Admiral Timothy Gallaudet, deputy director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), will deliver plenary remarks. The panel will include Bradley Campbell, Conservation Law Foundation executive director and former New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection commissioner; Scott Glenn, distinguished professor in the Rutgers University Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences and co-director of the Center for Ocean Observing Leadership; David Hang, Ørsted U.S. Offshore Wind president; and Bethann Rooney, deputy director, Port Department, Port Authority of New York & New Jersey.

    At the subsequent luncheon, the UCI will honor three symposium speakers with Champion of the Ocean Awards. The UCI will present its highest honor, the National Champion of the Ocean Award, to Gallaudet; the Regional Champion of the Ocean Award to Campbell; and the Coastal and Ocean Leadership Award to Glenn.

    The symposium will take place from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. in the Wilson Hall Auditorium. The luncheon will directly follow the symposium from noon to 2 p.m. in the Wilson Hall Versailles and Pompeii rooms.

    Tickets are required for the luncheon, with proceeds supporting student research activities through the UCI Scholars Program.

    For additional information, contact Karl Vilacoba at 732-571-3688 or kvilacob@monmouth.edu.

  • Blood Drive: June 11, 2019

    Click this image to download information about the blood drive

    Click Image to Download Flyer

     

  • Urban Coast Institute Marine & Environment Speaker Series

    Money, Mandate, and Water Management

    with

    Professor Keith Rizzardi, St. Thomas University School of Law

     

    Professor Keith Rizzardi from St. Thomas University School of Law will speak about climate change, rising sea levels, and professional ethics. Discussions will also include insights into how the historic commitment to water management in South Florida has dramatically decreased and considerations on how water managers can best prepare before the next disaster strikes in the future.

    For more information, contact Doris Meyer, Urban Coast Institute, at 732-263-5662 or dmeyer@monmouth.edu.

  • Monmouth University Blood Drive

  • Our Ocean and Beaches: A Record of Success and New Challenges to Face

    Please Note: This event if free and open to the public, but registration is required.

    Event Schedule

    Registration & Coffee: 9:30 – 10:00 a.m.

    Program: 10:00 – 11:30 a.m.

    Program Participants

    • Moderator: Joseph M. Kyrillos,  State Senator (Ret.) and Monmouth University Public Servant-in-Residence 2018-19

    PANELISTS:

    • Chris Daggett, Former Regional Administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
    • Cindy Zipf, Executive Director of Clean Ocean Action
    • Tony MacDonald, Director of the Monmouth University Urban Coast Institute

     

  • Climate Change, Coasts & Communities Symposium

    The “new normal” of increased storm events, flooding, sea level rise, and coastal erosion from climate change presents daunting adaptation challenges for New Jersey in the years ahead. This symposium features leading experts in climate change adaptation law and science to discuss lessons learned from other states and countries to assist New Jersey in navigating these challenges.

    Topics will include:

    • S. and Australian case studies in coastal adaptation;
    • Public health dimensions of coastal adaptation;
    • Human rights impacts to vulnerable coastal communities;
    • Climate change impacts to “voiceless” communities (future generations, wildlife, and natural resources);
    • Strategies to combat climate change-induced and other anthropogenic factors in eutrophication of coastal marine ecosystems, and the impacts to ecosystem services and the communities who depend on them.

    Visit the symposium web site for a full list of speakers and more event details. Admission is free for Monmouth employees and students (registration required), $35 for the general public, and $25 for Monmouth alumni and non-Monmouth students. (Cost covers Wednesday evening reception and Thursday breakfast, lunch and refreshments.)

    For more information, contact Professor Randall S. Abate at 732-571-3641 or rabate@monmouth.edu.

     

  • Peer Mentor Study Break: Popcorn and a Movie

    This event will take place at 9 p.m. in the Club Lounge at Magill Commons.

  • Fall Classes Begin

    Fall 2014 Classes Begin at 8:30 a.m.

  • Urban Coast Institute $5 Million Challenge

    An anonymous donor has committed $3,000,000 to Monmouth University to support the Urban Coast Institute’s (UCI)
    Marine Science & Policy Initiative. Monmouth University must secure
    commitments for an additional $2,000,000 by December 31, 2014.

  • 5th Annual School of Science Dean’s Seminar

    The 2014 speaker will be Ann Reid, Executive Director of the National Center for Science Education (NCSE). Ann graduated from Simon’s Rock Early College with a B.A. in Environmental Science and received a M.A. in Advanced International Studies from Johns Hopkins University. Ann became the executive director of NCSE in 2014. For fifteen years she worked as a research biologist at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, where she was responsible for sequencing the 1918 influenza virus. She then served as a Senior Program Officer at the National Research Council’s Board on Life Sciences for five years and then, most recently, as director of the American Academy of Microbiology. In both roles she oversaw major efforts aimed at communicating science to the public.

    The NCSE is a not-for-profit membership organization that defends the teaching of evolution and climate science in the public schools. The NCSE provides information, resources, and advice to schools, teachers, parents, and concerned citizens defending science education. The NCSE educates the press and public about the scientific, educational, and legal aspects of these issues at local, state, and national levels. Its 5000 members are scientists, teachers, clergy, and citizens with diverse religious and
    political affiliations.

    The seminar is free and open to the public but seating is limited. If you plan to attend, please register for the seminar here.

    Seminar details will be updated on the website and, as available, further information about the event will be circulated to registrants via e-mail.