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2010
NETWORKING® MAGAZINE’S
DAVID AWARD HONOREE.
JOHN
D. CAMERON, JR., P.E.
Founder
and Managing Partner, Cameron Engineering & Associates, LLP.

Under John Cameron’s
leadership, Cameron Engineering & Associates is celebrating its 25th
year as one of Long Island’s premier consulting engineering firms.
Cameron says that he began his company with a part-time secretary, Donna
Sinram, now his assistant, as a vehicle to fulfill his personal dreams and
goals to bring innovation to the engineering field. “While engineering
is typically a very conservative profession, I wanted to develop different
solutions to societal and technological challenges,” he adds.
Cameron’s love of
nature and the environment “goes back to when I was growing up in Long
Beach,” he says, spending much of his youth working on the beach and
at beach clubs. He got his first surfboard when he was 14, and surfing remains
a passion. An engineering graduate of the United States Merchant Marine Academy
at Kings Point, he spent a year at the Academy sailing around the world. “The
experience exposed me to different cultures and environments in Europe, Africa
and Asia and gave me a unique opportunity to see the beauty of those world
environments.”
Following the Academy,
he worked in the construction of the upstate Indian Point nuclear power plant.
Inspired by Earth Day, he moved on to become a public health and environmental
engineer at the Nassau County Health Department. Pursuing his love of the
environment, he earned a Master’s degree in Environmental Science from
Long Island University. He worked for an environmental engineering consulting
firm and was a manager of a resource recovery and wastewater treatment plant
complex that burned garbage and made electricity to run the plant, and taught
environmental courses at Nassau Community College.
As a licensed professional
engineer, Cameron’s expertise lies in various disciplines in which
the company specializes—planning, sustainable design and civil, electrical,
mechanical, security and environmental engineering—though his personal
area of specialty lies mostly in environmental engineering and planning,
particularly in wastewater treatment and solid waste management, recycling,
land use planning and environmental preservation. He and his firm hold seven
U.S. process and apparatus patents for recycling technologies. The firm also
employs 25 LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Accredited
Professionals, facilitating the company’s prominence in green building
and sustainable design.
“As engineering designs
evolve,” says Cameron, “you’re always learning and working
to make designs more efficient. We developed a series of designs that accomplishes
recycling in a more cost-effective manner, enabling us to reduce the amount
of material that is rejected for disposal and improve the quantity and quality
of recaptured materials for higher levels of recycling.”
A leader in waste management,
Cameron Engineering has completed some of the more innovative and larger
projects on Long Island. The company designed and built the Town of Islip’s
Materials Recovery Facility over 20 years ago, as well as the privately-owned
Omni Recycling Facility in Westbury. Fifteen years ago, the company designed
and built the Sanitary District #1 Materials Recovery Facility in Inwood—their
most advanced facility, which actually processes recyclables out of mixed
garbage. The firm will be designing improvements to the process train this
coming year. Cameron says, “Europe is much more progressive in waste
management programs. Through their pricing structure, they provide incentives
for waste minimization and recycling and employ resource recovery. With land
at a premium, financially they discourage landfilling.”
“Cameron Engineering
has always tried to push the envelope and stay ahead of the curve,” notes
Cameron. A speaker at the 2009 Sustainable Development Conference, he says
he follows a pathway in his career and business where “development
on Long Island should work in consonance with the environment rather than
in conflict with it.”
For over thirty years,
Cameron has been an active member of the New York Water Environment Association,
a member organization of the international Water Environment Federation,
serving in various state and local elected positions, and ultimately, State
President. In recognition of his accomplishments, Cameron was inducted into
the Association’s Hall Of Fame in 2007.
Cameron serves as chairman
of the Long Island Regional Planning Council, which is also a leading advocate
for public policy. The Council focuses on major issues affecting sustainability—affordable
housing, transportation, environment, economy and social equity. He says
the Council is developing a Sustainability Plan, entitled “LI 2035,” assisted
by national, regional and local consultants. A strong supporter of the work
of non-profit organizations, Cameron gives prominent exposure at Council
meetings to various groups to advance their agendas.
Cameron is vice chair of
the Long Island Chapter of Legatus, an organization of Catholic CEOs that
meets monthly with their spouses to discuss common issues. Supporting public
education, he is vice chairman of the SUNY College of Old Westbury Foundation
board, supporting the mission of the college, and currently exploring the
possibly of creating affordable housing for young faculty and administration
staff on the college campus. He served as State Vice Chairman of the New
York League of Conservation Voters, and board member of Sacred Heart Academy
High School and the St. Agnes Cathedral parish and school. With his wife
Loretta, he supports Catholic Charities (she’s a board member), Wounded
Warriors for physically or psychologically wounded veterans, Erase Racism,
Rockville Centre Community Fund, his local church, and other worthwhile organizations.
Cameron’s company supports numerous charities and nonprofit organizations,
and because he’s a big “anti-litter bug,” the company adopted
a two-mile stretch of Peninsula Boulevard in Rockville Centre, where they
have the roadway cleaned bi-weekly and plant seasonal flowers and shrubbery.
Cameron has received numerous
awards and recognitions in the area of community and environmental stewardship,
among them, the Catholic Charities’ Caritas Award (along with his wife),
the Anne and Charles Lindbergh Award, SUNY Old Westbury’s Ellie Simpson
Award and the Business Person of the Year by the Long Beach Martin Luther
King Center. He was selected Consulting Engineer of the Year in New York
State and Entrepreneur of the Year for Long Island by Inc. Magazine, Ernst & Young
and Merrill Lynch, and received the Alumni Outstanding Professional Achievement
Award from his Alma Mater, Kings Point.
Rockville Centre residents,
the Camerons have two children: Andrew, who works in real estate and construction,
and Christine, who’s in the retail/fashion industry. He and his wife
attend concerts, visit museums and travel internationally. Cameron is “into
sports big time,” recalling that when he was ten years old, he won
an NBC contest to be a Yankee Bat Boy, working along side Mickey Mantle,
Roger Maris and other Yankee greats for “the day of a lifetime.” He
considers music and art “two of the great elements of life; they’re
something that expands the human spirit.” Cameron says he has spent
hours studying Michelangelo’s extraordinary work, The David, at the
Academia Museum in Florence, Italy, which gives special meaning to his receipt
of Networking magazine’s 2010 David Award.
NETWORKING® January
2010
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