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Events: 2007 User Group Conference: Keynote Address
Sean OKeefe Announced as UGC Keynote Speaker
Will recount his first-hand experiences during Hurricane Katrina and the Columbia disaster
As a continuity planner, youre expected to think through
every type of scenario imaginable and lead each one to the same end result: a
return to normal operations in the shortest time possible. Your plans likely
take many scenarios into account such as fires, all types of weather, a
pandemic outbreak or maybe even an earthquake. As challenging as these
situations can be, can you imagine the scenarios that the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) must take into account?
Sean OKeefe was serving his tenure as the 10th
Administrator of NASA when the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated over Texas just mere minutes
before its scheduled landing.
Strohls message has always been about the importance in
preparing to face the consequences of any type of event, said Brian Turley,
President of Strohl Systems. The unimaginable situation OKeefe faced while at
NASA is obviously a unique one, but one that can teach every one of us some
very valuable lessons in knowing how to react during any range of disaster, big
or small.
In addition to sharing his experiences at NASA, OKeefe will
also recount his dealings with Hurricane Katrina while residing as the seventh
Chancellor of the Louisiana State University and A&M College, a position he
still holds today.
Accomplishments and Honors
His nomination by President George W. Bush as NASA
Administrator was OKeefes fourth Presidential appointment. While there, his
key accomplishments included eliminating a $5 billion cost overrun in the
construction of the International Space Station, leading the effort to begin
work on President Bush's plan to send humans to the Moon and Mars, and of
course, to work through the trauma of the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster and
its aftermath.
In 1993, President Bush and Secretary Cheney presented him
the Distinguished Public Service Award. He was the 1999 faculty recipient of
the Syracuse University Chancellor's Award for Public Service; recipient of the
Department of the Navy's Public Service Award in December 2000; and has been
awarded five honorary doctorate degrees from several prestigious educational
institutions.
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