Lewis A. Conklin, C.E.T.
Construction Service Project Manager | ||||
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| Lewis.Conklin@earthsolutionsnw.com | ||||
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Mr. Conklin has 19 years of geotechnical field experience and has been directly involved in over 2,000 residential and commercial projects. His construction monitoring experience in the field includes earthwork observation and testing of site mass grading, utility trench backfill, building foundation/slab subgrade, foundation supported piles, shoring, retaining walls, rockeries, roadway subgrade and asphalt. Mr. Conklin has provided installation and surveying for building surcharge monitoring programs. He has provided turbidity monitoring plans, turbidity monitoring field services and DOE certified erosion control observations. He serves as a liaison between the contractor, project manager and client, and is responsible for providing field recommendations and understanding project plans and specifications. Mr. Conklin also has environmental experience with Phase I Environmental Site Assessments, underground storage tank decommissioning, asbestos inspections and well monitoring. Mr. Conklin has ten years experience as a Construction Services Manager supervising up to 17 field technicians. His responsibilities also include being a project manager, and providing field dispatch. |
Education
Bachelor of Science., Physical Sciences (Emphasis in Civil Engineering) Washington State University - 1988Certifications DOE Certified Erosion and Sediment Control Lead, December 5, 2006 Environmental Health Sciences, Inc. - Health and Safety Training for Hazardous Waste Operations, #OST 0500 01/0006 February 1992, Argus Refresher, January 27, 2005 WSDOT Certified Erosion and Sedimentation Control Lead - March 10, 2004 CPN Certified Radiation Safety Officer for Nuclear Gauges, April 4, 2003 Argus Pacific - Asbestos Inspector Refresher Training, #992000, May 1999 National Institute for Certification in Engineering Technologies Geotechnical Engineering Technology - #079004, March 1991 CPN Corporation - Radiation Safety and Use of Soil Gauges, January 1989 |
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