Associate Professor
The University Of Texas At El Paso
Dr. Ivonne Santiago is a wife, mother, Environmental Engineer, and teacher. She is a Clinical Professor of the Civil Engineering (CE) Department at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP). Dr. Santiago has a combined experience of over 20 years in the areas of community engagement, water quality, water treatment and wastewater treatment in Puerto Rico (PR), New Mexico and Texas.
Currently, she is Vice-Chair of the El Paso Water Public Service Board (PSB), where she is a member of Engineering Selection and the Communications subcommittees, and the ad-hoc committee for storm water priorities. She has been a member of the Environmental Protection Agency National Advisory Committee (NAC), that advises the Administrator of the EPA on environmental policy issues related to the implementation of the former North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation and was a member of the Good Neighbor Environmental Board (GNEB) that advises the President and Congress of the United States on good neighbor practices along the U.S. border with Mexico. Dr. Santiago’s history of service started in Puerto Rico as Director of the Water Quality Area of the PR Environmental Quality Board, in charge of Compliance, Permit, and Planning Bureau, that included Industrial and Non-Industrial permits, Leaking Underground Storage Tanks (LUSTs), and watershed restoration activities. As Director, she implemented the first Beach Monitoring program in coordination with the PR Tourism Office and the Blue Flag program (A world renowned eco-label) and implemented the first Total Maximum Daily Load Program in PR.
Professionally Dr. Santiago has been recognized with the 2019 El Paso Engineer of the Year by the Texas Society of Professional Engineers. This is the first time in more than 30 years that a UTEP faculty wins this prestigious award; and the 2018 American Society of Civil Engineers’ Texas Section “Service to the People” award. This award honors civil engineers who have distinguished themselves with special service to the people and bring credit to their profession through community activities that are visible to the public. As Clinical Professor at UTEP, her main responsibility is to connect education to professional practice. This has been her mantra in everything she does inside and outside the classroom as demonstrated by the local and state awards she has won: 2014 UTEP’s CETaL Giraffe Award (for sticking her neck out); 2014 College of Engineering Instruction Award; 2014 The University of Texas System Regents’ Outstanding Teaching Award; the 2012 NCEES Award for students’ design of a Fire Station.
In her work, Dr. Santiago helps to find innovative engineering solutions through an understanding of the balance between sustainability, social equity, entrepreneurship, community engagement, innovation, and leadership to improve the well-being of people. A few examples include: interdisciplinary projects that provide safe drinking water to underserved communities in El Paso, Ciudad Juárez, Puerto Rico, and Haiti; a bridge that connected communities in Puerto Rico; a solar charging station for natural disasters in Puerto Rico; innovation and entrepreneurship activities on water quality sensors and phyto-remediation; remote sensing applications using Hyperspectral cameras on UAVs for water quality and agricultural applications; and study abroad opportunities that advance the emerging field of Peace Engineering in Curitiba, Brazil; native communities in the Amazon in Villavicencio, Colombia; and underserved communities in Piura, Perú.
Dr. Santiago is passionate about providing experiential learning opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students with a focus on Hispanic and female students. She is currently Co-PI of UTEP’s NSF-AGEP program focusing on fostering Hispanic doctoral students for academic careers; the Department of Education’s (DoE) STEMGROW Program to encourage students Latino(a) students and students with disabilities to pursue STEM careers; and DoE’s Program YES SHE CAN that provides support and mentoring to female pre-college students. She is also a member of two advisory committees to the UTEP’s President: The Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion committee and of the Women’s Advisory Council, in which she served five years as Chair. She is also Co-PI in the NSF Engineering Research Center for Advancing Sustainability through Powered Infrastructure for Roadway Electrification (ASPIRE), where she co-Directs the Diversity and Culture of Inclusion Program, where she is also a researcher in the Adoption Thrust.
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Wednesday, June 1, 2022
4:30 PM – 5:20 PM MDT