Past-Presidents

APEGA has existed for almost 100 years, and for every year of its existence, there has been a president of Council to uphold the pillars that APEGA stands for: integrity, accountability, innovation, and service. Through the decades of change and growth, the men and women listed below led APEGA’s Council.

They have worked across the globe, from Mississippi to Venezuela, but all settled their talents here in Alberta. Each came from different walks of life, from serving in the Second World War, to teaching aeronautics, to instigating first-time overseas ventures. This incredible group made its mark on the world and on APEGA.

All of these outstanding people helped make APEGA what it is today, and all were thanked for their service with an Honorary Life Membership award—a framed medallion memento—inducting them as life members of APEGA.

2016: Steven (Steve) E. Hrudey, P.Eng., PhD, FEC, FGC (Hon.), FCAE, FRSC, FSRA, IWAF, AOE, CM

steve-hrudey

Dr. Steve E. Hrudey, P.Eng., was born and raised in Edmonton, Alta. He obtained a B.Sc. in mechanical engineering at the University of Alberta in 1970 before earning an M.Sc. and a PhD in public health engineering from Imperial College, University of London, in 1971 and 1979, respectively. He was awarded a D.Sc. career academic degree from the University of London in 2002 and an honorary D.Sc. from the University of Alberta in 2012.

Dr. Hrudey lives in Canmore, Alta., and consults nationally and internationally on a range of environmental health risk issues. He has been an APEGA member since 1970, and his consulting firm has been an APEGA permit holder since 1983. He served on the practice standard subcommittees for writing the first Environmental Practice guideline and the Management of Risk in Professional Practice guideline and was first elected to APEGA council in 2012. 

Dr. Hrudey started his career as an environmental regulator before joining the University of Alberta in 1975. He spent 13 years as a professor in the Department of Civil Engineering before moving to the Faculty of Medicine in 1988 to establish an interdisciplinary environmental health program, retiring as Professor Emeritus in 2008. 

He served 13 years as a member of the quasi-judicial Alberta Environmental Appeals Board (EAB), his final four years as chair. At the EAB, he was engaged in chairing several public hearing panels and also served as a mediator. 

He has served on 28 national and international expert panels on science and public policy issues, 10 of them as chair. Several of these were related to drinking water safety, most notably the research advisory panel for the Walkerton Inquiry from 2000–2002. He and his wife, Elizabeth J. Hrudey, are the authors of two books that examine cases of drinking water contamination in developed nations, and the lessons to be learned from major failures.

Dr. Hrudey has been honoured with several awards, among them the American Water Works Association’s top research award and a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, both presented in 2012. He received an APEGA Summit Award for Research Excellence in 2013. He was named a fellow of Engineers Canada in 2015, and an honorary fellow of Geoscientists Canada in 2016.

On October 19, 2017, he was invested to the Alberta Order of Excellence. This is the province’s highest civilian honour, recognizing those who have served Albertans with excellence and distinction.