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Hairston Receives Distinguished Service
Award
Auburn,
Nov. 3,
2003 ---
Dr. James Hairston, Alabama Cooperative Extension System water quality
scientist and Auburn University professor of agronomy and soil
science, recently received the 2003 Distinguished Service Award from
the Alabama Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Phi.
Epsilon Sigma Phi
is a national Extension honorary fraternity whose mission is “to
foster standards of excellence in the Extension System and to develop
the Extension profession.”
Hairston was
recognized for his work in water quality education since his arrival
at Auburn University in 1989.
In the course of
his career, Hairston has written more than 300 publications, not
including popular articles featured in newspapers, magazines and trade
journals. Hairston has lectured extensively on water quality-related
issues. In 2002, for example, he gave 42 presentations, including
three at the national level and 13 at the regional and state levels.
Recognized as one
of the land-grant university system’s leading experts in drinking
water quality as it relates to human health, Hairston has written for
and been quoted widely in newspapers and has appeared frequently on
television to discuss water-related issues.
Hairston serves as
Extension’s coordinator for the Alabama Water Quality Program, a
national partnership of university scientists, instructors and
Extension professionals working to increase public awareness of water
quality-related issues and to address ever-changing water quality
needs.
As part of this
program, Hairston recently spearheaded an effort to create a
comprehensive Web site for water quality information in Alabama. The
site, which contains the largest online glossary of water
quality-related terms found anywhere on the Web and an exhaustive
database of frequently asked questions about water, already has
developed into one of the nation’s most comprehensive sources for
water quality-related information. The site is frequently used by
freelance writers for background information about water quality and
by scholars from around the world to develop educational materials for
both national and international conferences.
He also helped
develop several sections of the National Water Quality Web site.
In addition,
Hairston coordinated the development of a geographic information
systems laboratory in the Department of Agronomy and Soils as a
resource for Extension education and Alabama Agricultural Experiment
Station research efforts. Along with 23 other organizations and
agencies, Hairston lobbied successfully for the creation of the
Alabama GIS Council by executive order of the governor in 2001. He
currently represents the Alabama Cooperative Extension System on this
council.
An Alabama native,
Hairston is a graduate of Berry College, where he received his
bachelor’s degree in chemistry and math in 1968. A Vietnam veteran,
he earned his doctorate in agronomy and soils from the University of
Georgia in 1978 after completion of his military service.
Before coming to
Auburn, Hairston was a faculty member in the agronomy department at
Mississippi State University.
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