Bill earned a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering and a Masters in Urban Planning from the University of Cincinnati. After working a professional engineer, teaching highway engineering at the University of Cincinnati, and serving as county sanitary engineer in Cincinnati, he went to work in 1967 for the Dept. of Interior in the Federal Water Quality Administration. Bill had a deeply felt love of the natural world which led him in 1971 to become a charter member of the newly created Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). His professional life at EPA took him from Cincinnati to Denver to Boston to Washington DC to San Francisco and finally back again to Denver where he retired in 1991.
Bill's years at EPA were the most satisfying of his professional life and he maintained a huge network of colleagues from his wide ranging career there. Throughout his long life this self-described "frustrated writer" was a prodigious letter and note writer who single-handedly strove to keep the US Post Office going. Bill's Christmas card list at one time had over 400 recipients. In addition to his love of the environment, Bill was a voracious reader and an avid follower of current events. He had a lifelong love of jazz music and enjoyed telling stories about the musicians he had seen in person including Sarah Vaughan, Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday and many others. In retirement, Bill devoted himself to his family and friends, and he enjoyed traveling, attending Elderhostel classes, following his favorite teams, dining at local restaurants, listening to jazz music, gardening, reading, taking walks, and adding to his collection of Southwestern art through regular trips to Santa Fe.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Pat, in 1998.
Bill earned a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering and a Masters in Urban Planning from the University of Cincinnati. After working a professional engineer, teaching highway engineering at the University of Cincinnati, and serving as county sanitary engineer in Cincinnati, he went to work in 1967 for the Dept. of Interior in the Federal Water Quality Administration. Bill had a deeply felt love of the natural world which led him in 1971 to become a charter member of the newly created Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). His professional life at EPA took him from Cincinnati to Denver to Boston to Washington DC to San Francisco and finally back again to Denver where he retired in 1991.
Bill's years at EPA were the most satisfying of his professional life and he maintained a huge network of colleagues from his wide ranging career there. Throughout his long life this self-described "frustrated writer" was a prodigious letter and note writer who single-handedly strove to keep the US Post Office going. Bill's Christmas card list at one time had over 400 recipients. In addition to his love of the environment, Bill was a voracious reader and an avid follower of current events. He had a lifelong love of jazz music and enjoyed telling stories about the musicians he had seen in person including Sarah Vaughan, Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday and many others. In retirement, Bill devoted himself to his family and friends, and he enjoyed traveling, attending Elderhostel classes, following his favorite teams, dining at local restaurants, listening to jazz music, gardening, reading, taking walks, and adding to his collection of Southwestern art through regular trips to Santa Fe.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Pat, in 1998.
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