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2006 SciPAC
Awardees
2006 Derek Dunn Memorial
Scientist Officer of the Year Award (2 Winners this year!)
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CAPT Pamela Ching |
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For her work as an epidemiologist at the Center for Disease
Control and Prevention, CAPT Pamela Ching has received 30
USPHS awards, and sharing two CDC/ATSDR Group Honor Awards
for research and international health, and two DHHS
Secretary’s Awards for Distinguished Service in outbreak
investigation and vaccination efforts.
CAPT Ching’s professional achievements include research and
expertise in multiple areas of public health. As an Epidemic
Intelligence Service (EIS) Officer in the Division of
Nutrition, CAPT Ching examined associations between health
behaviors and risks for chronic diseases using nationally
representative data from the Behavioral Risk Factor
Surveillance System (BRFSS). Complex statistical analyses
were conducted using SAS and SUDAAN software to account for
the multi-stage sampling design of the System. As a Staff
Research Epidemiologist in the Data Management Division of
the National Immunization Program between 1994 and 1996,
CAPT Ching assisted in the design and analysis of data for
the National Immunization Survey, the largest
telephone-based, multi-stage epidemiologic study of
vaccination coverage among pre-school children in the United
States, with an annual sample size exceeding 32,000. This
study is the only one in which vaccination coverage
information is issued in as little as six months to provide
timely reflections of the immunization status of the US
pre-school population. As the Surveillance Coordinator in
the Epidemiology and Surveillance Division of NIP between
1996 and 2001, CAPT Ching conducted research focused on
improving surveillance of vaccination coverage and case
reporting of diseases on the US Recommended Childhood and
Adolescent Immunization Schedule, and instructed state-based
immunization program personnel on the analysis, reporting,
and feedback of surveillance data.
Since February 2002, CAPT Ching has served as a Senior
Research Epidemiologist in the Immunization Services
Division in NIP. Her initial research involved collaboration
with researchers at the University of Michigan to understand
the knowledge, attitudes, and intended behaviors of health
department and hospital staff and community-based private
physicians concerning their decision whether or not to
participate in the national Smallpox Pre-Event Vaccination
Program. At present, CAPT Ching develops, administers, and
collects data from web-based interactive questionnaires to
evaluate how federally-funded vaccine supply programs and
outreach technical assistance influences vaccination
coverage in children and adults. These efforts include
analyses to evaluate the accountability of states in
administering the Vaccines for Children Program, CDC`s
largest public/private partnership reaching ~ 1/3 of all
U.S. children through 33,000 private practice sites and
10,000 public clinics managed through 61 state grantees, and
examining changes in rates of perinatal and infant hepatitis
B infection associated with the 13-year US Perinatal
Hepatitis B Prevention Program administered through 54
states and large cities. During July 2005, CAPT Ching was
asked to apply her study design skills in a short-term
assignment as the Study Execution Team Leader for Project
MedKit in the CDC Director’s Emergency Operations Center.
This assignment involved leading a five-member team tasked
with designing the logistical aspects of a 12-month
quantitative and qualitative study to evaluate the use of
pharmaceutical kits distributed to select US households in
preparation for a bioterrorism event. This project was
considered of high priority to and favorably received by the
Director of the CDC, the Secretary of DHHS, and the White
House.
CAPT Ching has also served as a technical advisor in 16
consultancies in 18 countries in Eastern and Western Europe,
Africa, the Middle East, and Asia. As a part of these
consultancies, CAPT Ching has designed and evaluated public
health intervention and training programs, and surveillance
systems. During a temporary duty assignment to the Republic
of Armenia as an EIS Officer in the Division of Nutrition,
CAPT Ching advised scientists of the Armenian National
Institute of Health on the assessment of risk for famine in
refugee populations. As one of two project directors, CAPT
Ching hired, trained, and supervised staff responsible for
collecting nutrition and communicable disease survey and
surveillance data. As a Research Epidemiologist in the NIP,
CAPT Ching has provided technical assistance on issues
related to training for and surveillance of
vaccine-preventable disease case reporting and vaccination
coverage, conducted program assessments and reviews, and
designed 5-year immunization plans relevant to pediatric and
adult populations. These consultancies have included: 1)
participation in a three-month CDC-supported Stop
Transmission of Polio (STOP) assignment to identify cases of
polio, neonatal tetanus, and measles in Bangladesh; 2)
monitoring and assessing delivery of oral polio vaccine and
vitamin A supplements to pre-school children during National
Immunization Days in Sierra Leone; 3) development of
training materials focused upon surveillance of
vaccine–preventable diseases, and assessing the effect of
vitamin A supplementation on pre-school child mortality for
the Expanded Programme on Immunizations (EPI) at the WHO
headquarters in Switzerland; 4) providing training in
disease and risk factor surveillance for the control,
elimination, and eradication of diphtheria, measles,
neonatal tetanus, and polio for Ministries of Health in five
Former Soviet Republics; and 5) development of immunization
program infrastructure and policy guidelines for existing
and new vaccines in support of submission of funding
applications to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s
Global Alliance on Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI)
Initiative in three Former Soviet Republics. As a consultant
for the International Emergency and Refugee Health Branch in
the Division of Emergency and Environmental Health Services
of the National Center for Environmental Health at the CDC,
CAPT Ching has assessed risk factors for and the prevalence
of malnutrition and food insecurity, evaluated supplemental
feeding program efforts, and guided development of
nutritional surveillance systems for eight famine-affected
African countries. Finally, CAPT Ching has provided
technical assistance in the design of Behavioral Risk Factor
Surveillance Systems to track at-risk health behaviors for
obesity and other chronic diseases in adolescents and adults
for the Directorates of Primary Health Care and of Health
Centers in the Ministry of Health of the State of Bahrain.
In these capacities, CAPT Ching has worked with research
scientists and epidemiologists associated with the WHO,
UNICEF, USAID, the International Federation of Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), the National Red Cross
Societies of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, the Program for
Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH), the World Food
Programme, and the Ministries of Health in twelve republics
within the Newly Independent States of the Former Soviet
Union, nine African countries, Bangladesh, and Bahrain.
CAPT Ching is recognized as an expert in multiple areas of
public health by national and international organizations.
CAPT Ching has balanced her research efforts with volunteer
commitments to her community and to the USPHS Commissioned
Corps. As a Registered and Licensed dietitian, CAPT Ching
serves as a volunteer nutrition consultant to three
community organizations in Georgia and Alabama focused on
preventing pediatric obesity through physical activity and
nutrition intervention programs: 1) Cool Girls, Inc., a
community outreach program to assist girls from minority
groups with life skills; 2) Soccer In The Streets, a program
which teaches life skills to children as part of a soccer
program; and 3) Foundation, Inc., an organization focused on
programs for minority youth. In addition, since 2002, CAPT
Ching has served as a disaster response volunteer with the
Metropolitan Atlanta Chapter of the American Red Cross
(ARC). In this capacity, she responds to local disasters as
a Disaster Assistance Team (DAT) member, and to national
disasters as a member of the Disaster Services Human
Resources system, a national data base of qualified disaster
service volunteers used by the ARC to evaluate home damage,
and assist in the provision of food, shelter, and emergency
health services and supplies to individuals affected by
disasters. Since 1995, CAPT Ching has served as a volunteer
for the Atlanta Marathon and Half-Marathon and since 2001
for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Peachtree Road Race.
CAPT Ching has served the USPHS as a member of the APAOC and
SciPAC. Although her tenure on the latter ended in 2003,
CAPT Ching has continued to serve the Scientist Category by
hosting informal mentoring sessions for new and Junior
Scientist Officers at the CDC, co-chairing the SciPAC
Mentoring Committee (which recently formulated a network of
34 Senior Officers mentoring 30 Junior officers), and
serving on panels to discuss international travel and
promotion requirements on Scientist Category Day at the 2005
and 2006 annual COA meetings. CAPT Ching has served on two
USPHS Commissioned Corps Personnel Boards, and been an
Active member of the CCRF/OFRD since 1999 (resulting in
receipt of the FMRB and the NEPA in 2003). CAPT Ching has
been deployed in a Liaison capacity for TOPOFF II and III
exercises, and in response to Hurricanes Frances, Katrina,
and Rita. She has broadened her abilities to serve the USPHS
by completing four in-person CCRF training courses in
Anniston, Alabama in 2002 (becoming qualified as a Liaison
Officer and Emergency Coordinator Augmentee, and to work in
mass vaccination/pharmaceutical clinics with the Strategic
National Stockpile), and completing OFRD on-line courses to
qualify as a Communications Officer and a Safety Officer.
CAPT Ching updated her Liaison Officer skills by completing
on-line SERT Liaison training in February 2006. Finally,
CAPT Ching has received > 400 hours of ARC disaster response
training to serve as a volunteer Liaison Officer for the
ARC.
In support of her sister Uniformed Services, CAPT Ching is a
member of COA, ROA, and AMSUS, and has volunteered at the
Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport USO in Atlanta
since 2001. Her professional achievements, career
development, leadership skills, and volunteer activities in
support of her community and the USPHS make CAPT Ching most
worthy of being receiving the Derek Dunn Memorial Scientist
of the Year Award. |
| Because there is no means by which the
SciPAC is able to directly notify supervisors of the
availability of these awards, scientist officers are
encouraged to ask their supervisors to consider nominating
them for these awards. |
2006 Derek Dunn Memorial
Scientist Officer of the Year Award
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CDR Francois Lalonde
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CDR Lalonde has a distinguished record of accomplishments,
most notably in the fields of positron emission tomography
(PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI). The
early years of his career coincided with the development of
new technologies that enabled unprecedented exploration of
the human brain in action. Using positron emission
tomography (PET), he coauthored a study published in the
journal Science which described which regions of the brain
stored our knowledge of color and action. Along with PET,
the field of functional MRI (FMRI) was in its infancy and
CDR Lalonde was one of a handful of researchers who
pioneered many of the techniques and instruments used for
FMRI, ranging from a visual presentation device which was
reviewed by the NIH for a possible patent application to the
development of methods of analysis. He helped develop
procedures for the acquisition of FMRI data and mentored
numerous post-doctoral fellows in the acquisition and
analysis of FMRI data receiving a Commendation medal and
letter of appreciation from groups within and outside the
NIMH. In 1995, he was among the first researchers to
describe the presence of regions of the brain that actually
fell below their resting level of activity during cognitive
tasks.
CDR Lalonde was named the Young Scientist of the Year award
in 1996 for his scientific contributions and his service to
the Corps. Pending final approval by the OSG, CDR Lalonde is
the recipient of an Outstanding Service Medal in recognition
of continuous outstanding leadership in carrying out the
mission of the Public Health Service particularly in the
field of neuroimaging.
More recently, CDR Lalonde was recruited by COL James M.
Ecklund, Professor and Chairman of the Neurosurgery Program,
National Capital Consortium (Walter Reed and National Naval
Medical Centers and Uniformed Services University) to
develop FMRI capabilities at the WRAMC and to be a
co-principal investigator on an FMRI study of blast-injured
soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Although CDR
Lalonde already has a full workload at the NIH, he agreed to
be an investigator on the research study. Over the past
year, CDR Lalonde has 1) extensively modified the research
protocol and added state-of-the-art neuropsychological tests
and gene expression analysis components to the study, 2) he
was instrumental in having the research protocol approved by
the IRB and Human Use Committee, 3) he modified one of the
MRI scanners to enable the acquisition fMRI brain scans, 4)
he configured and installed the patient stimulus
presentation system, and 5) he directed the acquisition and
installation of an fMRI data analysis system.
Throughout his career CDR Lalonde has demonstrated
professional growth and development. Trained as a
neuropsychologist, Dr. Lalonde recognized the potential of
neuroimaging early in his career and proceeded to
independently acquire the knowledge and skills necessary to
conduct neuroimaging research. He mastered and improved upon
the technologies that would expand our abilities to
understand the relationship between the brain and cognition.
He developed his expertise as a neuroimager and demonstrated
leadership by mentoring post-doctoral fellows in FMRI
acquisition and analysis and organizing an FMRI interest
group. Having worked as a Support Scientist in a large group
of brain imaging researchers focused on studies of the
organization of the brain in healthy individuals he chose to
extend the application of these techniques to studies of
aging and diseases. He joined the Geriatric Psychiatry
Branch in 1998 and developed a state-of-the-art imaging
facility dedicated to the study of Alzheimer’s disease.
During that time CDR Lalonde demonstrated leadership by
establishing contacts with leading brain imaging centers and
organizing the training of neuroimaging by experts in
neuroanatomy. He drew on his years of experience in FMRI
data acquisition and mentored staff and fellows on all
aspects of brain imaging. He is a role model for Junior
Officers making time to be a member Maryland Mental Health
Volunteer Corps, providing FMRI capabilities to Walter Reed
AMC, participating in numerous school functions at the local
elementary, middle, and high schools including career days.
CDR Lalonde has been actively involved with the SciPAC since
he joined the Corps in 1991. He is a past Chair, has served
on numerous committees. He is currently co-chair of the
committee charged with the revision of the Scientist
Category web site. The site was actually first developed by
CDR Lalonde in the mid-90’s before web hosting became
readily available. He also setup the list server using the
facility at the NIH and still manages it today. CDR Lalonde
is a basic qualified member of the OFRD and a member of the
Commissioned Corps Music Ensemble by virtue of his
contributions in maintaining the Ensemble web site. He is a
member of the COA and the ROA and has presented at the COA
conference.
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2006 Young Scientist Officer of the Year Award
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Laura Draski |
LCDR Draski worked as Director of the US Food and Drug
Administration Prior Notice Center (PNC) and was recognized
for her outstanding work in reducing bioterrorism risks in
imported foods. The PNC was established in December 2003 in
response to the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism,
Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 (the Act). Acting
under mandates from Congress, the PNC receives, reviews, and
responds to information submitted before the importation of
all food products into the United States. The review process
is designed to conduct risk analyses that detect potential
bioterrorism risks and to prevent the importation of food
that may be unsafe due to terrorism or other food-related
emergencies.
LCDR Draski served as the Deputy Director and later as
Director of the PNC. She played a key role in the
development of the PNC, helping establish a new office
including hiring permanent staff (9 GS-14 Level Supervisors
and over 20 GS-11/12/13 Consumer Safety Officers),
establishing Performance Goals and Accountability Reports,
acquiring workspace, forming working relationships with
other FDA offices and divisions, creating an effective team
environment and leveraging intelligence resources with other
agencies. In recognition of her dedication and
professionalism in establishing a new office devoted to
bioterrorism, LCDR Draski and the PNC staff were awarded the
DHHS Secretary’s Award for Distinguished Service for
outstanding performance in the planning, establishment and
implementation of the PNC to protect our food supply.
The PNC is the first FDA component to be fully operational
24 hours per day, 365 days a year. Being a leader of an
office that operates with three shifts on a 24/7 basis
presents its own challenges. In this respect, LCDR Draski
goes above and beyond in being accessible and interacting
and working with individuals on every shift, even when it
means being in the office outside of normal business hours,
overnight, as well as on weekends and holidays. To
accomplish this, she routinely puts in an immeasurable
amount of time at work with most weeks consuming 60-70
hours. In addition, since this office is devoted to
responding to emerging bioterrorism threats within discrete
timeframes, she truly is on call 24/7 and has spent
countless nights, weekends and holidays countering purported
threats to our country.
The PNC is co-located at the Department of Homeland
Security’s National Targeting Center with the Bureau of
Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Designed to be
interactive, the space and resources are shared with
liaisons from other federal and intelligence agencies,
including but not limited to the FBI, ICE, Border Patrol,
Container Security Initiative Teams, TSA, USDA, Coast Guard,
Federal Air Marshals and the Fraudulent Document Analysis
Unit. In order to evaluate the risks associated with the
food shipment information, the PNC utilizes sophisticated
computer systems, complex databases and electronic
intelligence from CBP and other agencies. LCDR Draski first
was instrumental in breaking down those systems and
understanding the information it provided so FDA could
develop its own rule-based threat matrix to be used as a
quantitative guide for the overall risk assessment. After
assisting with developing the higher level rule sets, LCDR
Draski declassified and translated the procedure into
language that could be presented to all personnel in the
office.
For PNC to be successful in preventing bioterrorism, it is
essential to leverage and share not only electronic
resources and databases but to develop collaborative office,
field and national procedures with other agencies. LCDR
Draski assisted in the development of national policies and
procedures that are utilized throughout the investigation
field offices as well as within the PNC. She routinely works
with Customs on coordinating the transmission of shipment
data between our systems so that safe cargo is not impeded
from entering the country. She also has been very active in
outlining and interpreting the prior notice regulations and
legal procedures as FDA collaborates with CBP on the
issuance of the Prior Notice Final Rule that amends the
Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. For her role in this
tremendously successful collaborative effort, LCDR Draski
received the FDA Commissioner’s Special Citation as a member
of the FDA and US Customs Targeting Initiative for
leadership, initiative, and successful achievement in
establishing the PNC procedures and joint targeting
capabilities. This was later reinforced with a Unit
Commendation Award. To date, the PNC has conducted security
reviews on over 150,000 different lines of food and, in
conjunction with CBP, has stopped over 25 shipments for
examination and sampling under the Bioterrorism Act. In
addition, LCDR Draski was one of the FDA leads on a national
level case involving a container ship heading towards
Newark, NJ, that reportedly was carrying lemons tainted with
an unknown biological substance.
Since the area of bioterrorism risk assessment and targeting
was novel to FDA, the agency offered no formally recognized
training in the area. LCDR Draski distinguished herself by
seeking outside material and becoming a self-taught
bioterrorism and targeting expert. Although this training is
not reflected in any type of coursework or continuing
education credits, it was and is commendably achieved and
should not be overlooked or understated. Indeed, during her
time at the PNC, LCDR Draski used her knowledge and
experience to help establish an internal training program in
the subject matter and has successfully trained over 170
detailed and permanent PNC employees. In addition, she is
now part of the FDA training cadre and routinely lectures on
the topic in formal courses for the agency. She also has
been invited to speak at FDA Outreach Conferences and
regularly gives presentations and briefings about the
implementation of prior notice and the Bioterrorism Act to a
variety of groups including executives from the White House
OMB, the Commission on Weapons of Mass Destruction, and DHS
Deputy Secretary Jackson.
In addition to having the tremendous responsibility of
providing leadership, guidance, counsel and direction in the
management of the overall operations of the PNC, LCDR Draski
has taken the initiative to devise innovative ways that the
PNC can contribute to the public health and food defense
mission of the FDA. In the past year, FDA has worked on
incorporating food defense strategies into surveillance and
food safety assignments. To test our overall responsiveness
to an increased threat level associated with several food
commodities, the PNC played a major role in the nationwide
FDA Food Security Surveillance Assignment (FSSA). The
assignment was designed to integrate food safety and defense
by incorporating a field to table-top risk assessment and
overview. Under LCDR Draski’s leadership, the PNC developed
procedures to assess risks at various points in the imported
food supply and distribution chain such that food facility
inspections, food shipment examinations, and food product
sampling could be prioritized for the field. During the FSSA,
the PNC assessed and prioritized 14,794 food products
contained in 9058 shipments.
In the aftermath of the Indian Ocean Tsunami that affected
Asia and East Africa, FDA became concerned about products
potentially contaminated by the devastation being shipped to
the US. LCDR Draski worked with her office to remodel and
adapt some of the electronic information and systems
normally used in their office to focus on the importation of
FDA regulated products from this area. The PNC identified
340 anticipated shipments of interest for possible follow-up
by field staff upon arrival in the US. Out of these
shipments, nine examination and sampling assignments were
sent to the field resulting in one shipment being deemed
violative and refused and another shipment being immediately
re-exported. Before the existence of the Prior Notice Center
and the development and adaptation of their targeting
protocols, these types of assignments would not have been
possible.
Shortly after Hurricane Katrina, LCDR Draski and her office
once again performed above and beyond the scope of their
mission. Given the disaster situation in the Gulf Coast, the
State Department directed the Office of Foreign Disaster
Assistance (OFDA) to establish a 24/7 Emergency Operations
Center in Arlington, VA, to coordinate and facilitate the
many donations of foreign relief supplies and financial
assistance offered by our friends and allied countries from
around the world. Due to the regulatory policies involved
with the importation and receipt of a number of these items
and the 24/7 nature of the emergency, the PNC staffed the
OFDA office from September 8 to September 28, 2005 to assist
in these humanitarian efforts. The primary focus of the PNC
staff was to identify, provide advice and facilitate the
shipment of foreign relief items regulated by the FDA to
assure that only safe food and safe and effective drugs and
medical devices were released into distribution by
government emergency response personnel. During the three
weeks that LCDR Draski and the PNC staff were stationed with
OFDA, a total of fifty three (53) relief shipments were
cleared by the State Department and arrived by air at the
Little Rock Air Force Base. Some of the countries sending
donations included the United Kingdom, France, Israel,
Russia, Italy, Spain, Egypt, Tunisia, India, Thailand,
Chile, Slovakia, Czech, Slovenia, Denmark, Norway, and Peru.
In addition, the PNC handled other relief shipments arriving
via Canada and Mexico that were not recognized and cleared
by the State Department. These shipments including bottled
water and ice from contractors with the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) and assorted donated products from
various charity organizations that were not covered by the
OFDA scope of operation. LCDR Draski was instrumental in
establishing her office at the OFDA site and continues to
have her staff work with OFDA and other agencies to develop
better emergency importation procedures in times of
disaster. It also should be pointed out that LCDR Draski
oversaw this operation as a collateral duty to the primary
PNC operations.
Even though much of her time has been occupied with
establishing this new office for FDA, LCDR Draski still has
found time to be a model Commissioned Corps Officer and
participate in Corps activities. She is a BOTC graduate,
CCRF Basic Qualified, and a member of COA. When possible,
she participates in the SciPAC meetings. Unfortunately, this
is not always possible since most of the meetings are
conducted in the middle of the work day when she has even
less free time. LCDR Draski recently told me that she
volunteered for two sub-committees in her PAC and she
appears ready and committed to contributing to these groups.
I know that one of the committees is concerned with Career
Development, and I can’t think of a better person to be on
that committee. LCDR Draski has a proven track record of
taking on additional roles and increasing responsibilities
and, as a Director in FDA, is operating well above her rank.
Although she is not eligible for promotion until the 2008
cycle, FDA recognized her significant leadership
contributions and nominated her for and Exceptional
Proficiency Promotion this year.
LCDR Draski’s dedication, commitment and conviction to
protecting the public health exemplify the role of the
Public Health Service Commissioned Officer. She has spent
countless hours assessing the operations and risks
associated with the importation of food into the United
States to ensure that the food supply of the American
citizens is safe from terrorist attack or other food related
emergencies.
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LCDR
Mark Methner
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The
Junior Officer of the Year Award is presented annually to a junior
officer who has made outstanding contributions to the overall
mission of the Corps.
This award, presented at the Awards Luncheon on Wednesday, was given
to LCDR Mark Methner, an Industrial Hygienist with NIOSH. He
currently serves as Director of Field Research, where he measures
occupational exposure to engineered nano-scale materials, and makes
recommendations about engineering control technologies that would
reduce or eliminate exposures. He and his team conduct Health Hazard
Evaluations in a variety of workplaces to determine the magnitude of
exposure to a wide range of substances.
LCDR Methner earned his Ph.D. in environmental sciences/industrial
hygiene at Rutgers University in 1992. He is also a Certified
Industrial Hygienist (CIH) with the American Board of Industrial
Hygiene, a member of the Scientist Professional Advisory Committee,
and an executive board member of the Cincinnati Branch of the
Commissioned Officers Association.
LCDR Methner’s work has contributed to a safer environment for all
citizens. |
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