About
Our Team
Coastal Environments offers clients unique access to a team of professionals who specialize in a variety of interrelated expertise. Coastal Environments combines their abilities to solve multifaceted environmental challenges in an efficient, timely, and cost-effective manner.
The team is comprised of over 30 esteemed physical oceanographers, project scientists, coastal engineers and scientists, marine geologists, marine biologists, technologists, environmental assessors, hazardous material and waste management professionals, engineering geologists, data programming and numerical modeling analysts, and permitting, compliance and regulatory experts. Each specialist is well-published in their area of expertise.
Committed to a successful outcome on each project undertaken, Coastal Environments takes great pride in offering clients the most qualified team and resources in the industry.
- Hany Elwany, Ph.D.- Founder & President
- William Boyd, M.Sc.- Sr. Development Engineer
- James Peeler, P.G.-Sr. Geologist
- Ryan Switzer, M.Sc.-Project Manager
- Emily Callahan, M.A.S.- Project Scientist
- Amber Jackson, M.A.S.- Project Scientist
- William C. Speidel- Lead Coastal Engineer
- Mark R. Legg, Ph.D.- Lead Scientist
- Timothy Norall, M.Sc.- Project Scientist
- Lawrence L. Lovell- Project Scientist
- Janice Callahan, Ph.D.- Project Scientist
- Stephen Schroeter, Ph.D.- Project Scientist
- Ronald Flick, Ph.D.- Sr. Oceanographer
- William C. O’Reilly, Ph.D.- Project Scientist
- Phil Walen, B.S.- Project Scientist
- James Elliott, B.S.- Project Scientist
- Peter Bromirski, Ph.D.- Project Scientist
- David W. Skelly, PE- Project Engineer
- Howard Chang, Ph.D.- Project Engineer
- Martha Shaw, M.Sc.- Communications Specialist
- Jerome R. Wanetick, B.A.- Computer Programmer
- Gregory S. Reid, P.E.- Senior Project Engineer
Hany Elwany, Ph.D.
Founder and President
MASCE, Engineer, Oceanographer and Hydrologist
Dr. Hany Elwany is among the world’s foremost scientists and engineers in the nearshore environment, with specialized experience in coastal processes, sediment transport and estuarine dynamics. He founded Coastal Environments in 1988 to provide unprecedented professional services to meet coastal challenges. Dr. Elwany has authored and employed unique mathematical and computer techniques to study optimal design structures under various dynamic constraints. His work includes dynamic response of mechanical systems, design of offshore structures, data analyses, simulation, modeling of ocean and coastal conditions and the interaction between currents, waves and structures. Dr. Elwany holds a Ph.D. from the University of Dundee in the United Kingdom, a B.S. in Mathematics and Statistics from Alexandria University, and has worked extensively with the Center for Coastal Studies at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
William Boyd, M.Sc.
Senior Development Engineer
Underwater Data Acquisition Systems
Mr. William Boyd designs and develops data acquisition systems and oceanographic instrumentation for use in underwater applications. He has supervises the deployment and maintenance of large, multiple-array, coastal oceanographic field experiments. Mr. Boyd has worked at the Center for Coastal Studies at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography with members of the Coastal Environments team. He earned an M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from San Diego State University, and a B.S. in Physics and a B.S. in Oceanography from Humboldt State University.
James Peeler, P.G.
Senior Geologist
Geologist and Site Assessment
Mr. James Peeler specializes in site assessment, site maintenance, regulatory compliance, fieldwork oversight, and project management, pertaining to lagoons groundwater, surface water, stormwater, soil, and soil vapor sampling. He conducts aquifer testing, GPS site surveying, geologic mapping and drilling activities, including hollow-stem, geo-probe, air, mud, and sonic. A published scientist, his writing experience also includes multiple Phase I and II reports, surface and groundwater monitoring reports, RI and FS reports, and site conceptual models. He has a M.S. in Geology from San Diego State University.
Ryan Switzer, M.Sc.
Project Manager
Oceanographer/Administrative Management
Mr. Ryan Switzer is a specialist in GIS resourcing, bathymetry mapping, and data archiving and processing. He oversees many of the day-to-day operations at Coastal Environments, from project management to data acquisition. Mr. Switzer holds an M.Sc. in Oceanography from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UCSD.
Emily Callahan, M.A.S.
Project Scientist
Marine Biodiversity & Conservation
Ms. Emily Callahan specializes in biological oceanography, marine law, environmental compliance, and multi-faceted sampling programs. She has participated in marine environmental impact assessments worldwide for governmental agencies and private sector clients. Her work has focused on the development of offshore technologies, biodiversity baseline management studies, and ecological assessments of offshore resources. A certified PADI dive master, Ms. Callahan has worked as a field technician collecting sediment and biota samples on oil spills in the Gulf of Mexico. She received her M.A.S. from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in Marine Biodiversity and Conservation, examining the ecological, socio-economic, regulatory/policy, and advocacy issues surrounding the implementation of the Rigs-to-Reefs program in California to repurpose offshore oil and gas platforms as artificial reefs.
Amber Jackson, M.A.S.
Project Scientist
Marine Biodiversity & Conservation
Ms. Amber Jackson experience includes habitat and coral reef restoration, sample collecting, research analysis, multi-beam bathymetry and acoustic backscatter data. She has engineered and launched intelligent map layers in Google Maps for the creation of the virtual seafloor in Google Earth. A former National Science Foundation Researcher at the California Academy of Sciences, she designs, implements, and conducts site assessments and has authored numerous reports and grants. She co-founded the Rigs-to-Reefs program, which won the Tribeca Film Festival Disruptive Innovation Award. She has a B.A. in Marine Science from UC Berkeley, and her M.A.S. from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in Marine Biodiversity and Conservation.
William C. Speidel
Lead Coastal Engineer
Marine Engineer and Geological Oceanographer
Mr. William Speidel specializes in the acquisition, processing and interpretation of coastal data, and is both an engineer and certified professional geologist. Among prior positions, Mr. Speidel has served as oceanographer at the U.S. Navy Electronics Laboratory and was the founder and president of the Pelagos Corporation providing engineering, surveying, infrastructure design, and integrated geotechnical, subsea and geoscience services. He has unprecedented experience in harbor and port construction. Experienced in high-resolution shallow marine geological and multi-channel seismic surveys, he has planned and directed coastal and offshore surveys in all areas of the Pacific Ocean, Southeast Asia, Europe, West Africa, Europe, Australia, Central and South America, Caribbean and the Arctic Ocean.
Mark R. Legg, Ph.D.
Lead Scientist
Marine Geophysicist
Dr. Mark Legg directs subsurface geophysical investigations and data processing, and manages geology and geophysical studies, seismicity studies, and projects involving deterministic and probabilistic seismic hazard assessment and risk characterization, and Geographic Information System (GIS).
Timothy Norall, M.Sc.
Project Scientist
Marine Biology, Oceanography, Sonar Specialist
Mr. Timothy Norall has been responsible for kelp mapping studies off San Onofre, California. His experience includes designing, conducting and managing marine studies and surveys, including deep sea survey operations with deep tow instrumentation and deep sea sampling procedures, bathymetric and side-scan surveys, physiological and ecological studies of benthic and intertidal marine algae and invertebrates, nutrient analysis of seawater, and mariculture and propagation techniques of economically important marine algae. Mr. Norall received his M.Sc. degree in Marine Botany at the University of New Hampshire and has logged over 1000 hours underwater.
Lawrence L. Lovell, B.S.
Project Scientist
Invertebrate Systematics and Benthic Ecology
Mr. Lawrence Lovell has over 25 years of experience in the areas of invertebrate systematics and benthic ecology in estuarine, bay, intertidal, and subtidal benthic communities from Alaska to Peru, and South Carolina to Massachusetts. Mr. Lovell acts as field leader, laboratory manager and polychaete taxonomist for benthic studies, including 316b waiver studies, biological assessment for oil platform and pipeline studies, dredge disposal, port expansion, oil spill monitoring, and biological baseline studies.
Janice Callahan, Ph.D.
Project Scientist
Statistician
Dr. Janice Callahan performs statistical data analysis and numerical modeling for a wide variety of high-technology applications. She develops statistical designs, methods, protocols, models, and analysis plans. From data entry, calculations, manipulations, samplings, interpretations, verifications and validations to analyses, she also prepares studies, plans, and statistical reports. She holds a B.S. in Applied Mathematics & Engineering Physics from the University of Wisconsin and a Ph.D. in Mathematical Statistics from Johns Hopkins University.
Stephen Schroeter, Ph.D.
Project Scientist
Ecologist
Dr. Stephen Schroeter’s experience includes demographic studies of marine plants and animals and experimental studies on the effects of competition and predation on marine communities. His team conducted a large research program for the California Coastal Commission (CCC) that examined the potential impacts of an open coast nuclear power plant. Dr. Schroeter has worked on population dynamics and competitive interactions among three species of sea urchins on Catalina Island and on the effects of different guilds of predators on sea urchin populations in Nova Scotia. He received a B.S. in Zoology, and an M.S. in Zoology with a minor in Statistics at Brigham Young University. At the University of California, Santa Barbara, he received a Ph.D. in Ecology with a minor in Mathematical Biology.
Ronald Flick, Ph.D.
Senior Oceanographer
William C. O’Reilly, Ph.D.
Project Scientist
Oceanographer
Dr. William O’Reilly is a specialist in the study of coastal waves. He has developed a very successful and informative refraction-diffraction program utilizing directional wave information to model surface gravity waves in the Southern California Bight. Dr. O’Reilly received a Ph.D. and M.S. in Oceanography from Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and a B.S. in Environmental Engineering and a B.S. in Civil Engineering from the University of Michigan.
Phil Walen, B.S.
Project Scientist
Geophysicist
Mr. Phil Walen specializes in survey design, data acquisition, interpretation, and computer modeling. He provides reports on geological conditions for engineering, mining, and environmental projects, proficient in the latest geophysical data acquisition systems used for seismic reflection and refraction, GPR, gravity, magnetics, electrical, and electromagnetics. He received a B.S. in Geosciences from the University of Arizona.
James Elliott, B.S.
Project Scientist
Biologist
Mr. James Elliott is a biologist specializing in ecology and marine invertebrate taxonomy and all aspects of nearshore marine life, water quality and effects of sedimentation. His experience includes data collection and sampling of invertebrates, kelp, algae, marine plants, and fish, and projects that monitor the impact of thermal and sewage discharges, pipelines and other underwater structures.
Peter Bromirski, Ph.D.
Project Scientist
Oceanographer and Vulnerability Analyst
Dr. Peter Bromirski serves as a strategic consultant to Coastal Environments. He is among the world’s leading scientists on sea level change, and coastal response, with over thirty scientific publications on topics related to climate change and vulnerability. His talents include the integration of scientific principles to make calculated assessments on the effects of varying wave climate on coastal communities.
David W. Skelly, PE,
Project Engineer
Howard Chang, Ph.D., P.E.
Project Engineer
Hydrologist
Dr. Howard Chang is a registered civil engineer in California and Arizona and specializes in hydraulics, hydrology, sedimentation, fluvial processes, flood plain mapping, channel design, river channel erosion and sedimentation, hydrological simulation and watershed analysis. He has developed the HHC-1 program for the modified rational method in hydrology and made extensive use of HEC-1, HEC-2, HEC-RAS, TR20 and other programs in hydraulics and hydrology. He works with local, state and federal governmental agencies and the United Nations.
Martha Shaw, M.Sc.
Communications Specialist
Public Engagement
Ms. Martha Shaw specializes in strategic communications around coastal and oceanographic issues to share complex topics with local communities, state and federal agencies, NGOs, and the general public. Her expertise includes littoral processes, pollution, coastal erosion, climate change, and sea level rise. A published scientist and journalist, her experience includes United Nations Small Island Developing States, Climate Literacy Network, UNFCCC, U.S. State Department Bureau of Oceans, and the Center for Coastal Studies (CCS) at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. She is a geologist by education, with a B.A in Earth Science and Oceanography from the University of New Hampshire and M.Sc. in Coastal Geology from San Diego State University in conjunction with CCS.
Jerome R. Wanetick, B.A.
Computer Programmer
Programmer/Analyst
Mr. Jerome Wanetick is a leading expert in oceanographic data acquisition systems, systems programming, and computer graphics and display. He works on projects involving the acquisition, analysis, and display of oceanographic data collected both in the nearshore and shelf regions and works as chief systems manager and scientific programmer for the Center for Coastal Studies at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Mr. Wanetick designed automated data acquisition system programs funded by the Office of Naval Research to measure wave field in the surf zone off the coast of North Carolina. He helped to develop hardware for the Coastal Data Information Program and the California Storm and Tidal Wave Study, and has managed the San Onofre Beach Study, and the San Diego Beach Profile Program funded by the California Department of Boating and Waterways.