WASHINGTON (29 January 2007)
—
John W. Meredith, P.E., who became IEEE-USA
president on New Year's Day, said he will devote
his presidency to helping U.S. engineers cope
with the impact of globalization.
"Our
profession within the United States is in a
continuing struggle to deal with the effects of
global competition," said Meredith, a product
development engineer with Agilent Technologies
in Colorado Springs, Colo. "While the U.S.
economy has shown improvement since the infamous
dot-com bust of 2000-01, our national
competitiveness in the high-tech sector is
increasingly challenged."
Meredith will work closely with 2006 IEEE-USA
President Ralph W. Wyndrum Jr. of Fair Haven,
N.J., and IEEE-USA President-Elect Russell J.
Lefevre of Redondo Beach, Calif. The three are
committed to bolstering the career prospects of
U.S. electrical and computer engineers in the
face of global competition in high-tech
industries.
"This competition was initially in manufacturing
but is now moving more and more into design and
development work," Meredith said. "Because labor
rates are lower in many countries that compete
with the United States, we are losing high-tech
jobs. We must act strategically as a nation to
improve U.S. competitiveness. This is necessary
to preserve jobs for U.S. engineers and to
maintain the standard of living that Americans
have enjoyed for several generations."
Meredith defines competitiveness, as it relates
to our nation, as a concerted drive to compete
with other countries in selling our goods and
services. While the United States has been the
world's leading high-tech incubator, other
countries have made advances that challenge our
position.
"My
highest priority is to take steps to ensure the
competitiveness of U.S. industry in our fields
of interest," Meredith said. "This is a big
challenge because developing countries are now
competing in jobs that are higher up the
high-tech 'food chain.'"
Read
more about Meredith's 2007 vision for IEEE-USA
at
www.ieeeusa.org/communications/presidentscolumn/Meredith/jan07.html.
IEEE-USA is in year two of its strategic plan to
address U.S. competitiveness. The organization
will continue to work with Congress to enact
comprehensive legislation promoting U.S.
innovation and competitiveness. It will also
recommend that Congress reform high-tech
immigration and correct significant flaws in the
H-1B guest worker program. The IEEE-USA
Innovation Institute, which will begin this
year, will promote innovation through training
and mentoring tomorrow's technology leaders. For
more on IEEE-USA's Innovation Initiative, go to
www.innovation-institute.org.
Meredith is a registered professional engineer
and a senior member of the IEEE. He is in his
27th year working for Agilent Technologies
(formerly Hewlett-Packard) in various management
and engineering positions. He has also worked
for Honeywell (1974-79), American Microsystems
(1972-74) and General Electric (1969-72). He has
been an adjunct professor of electrical
engineering at the University of Colorado at
Colorado Springs (UCCS) for a number of years.
Meredith, a native of Fayetteville, Ark.,
graduated from the University of Arkansas in
1965 with a bachelor of science degree in
electrical engineering. He added a master's in
the field from UCCS in 1981. He served in the
United States Navy, first as an assistant
electronics officer aboard the USS Intrepid
(1965-67), and then as a projects officer in the
Navy's Electronics Laboratory (1967-69).
Meredith began his IEEE volunteer career in
college and began doing section work in 1972. He
has been a member of the Educational Activities
Board (2003); the Regional Activities Board
(2004-05); the IEEE-USA Operating Committee
(2004); and the Membership Development Committee
(2002). He joined the IEEE and IEEE- USA Board
of Directors when he served as Region 5 director
in 2004-05. He was honored with an IEEE
Millennium Award in 2000; an Educational
Activities Board Meritorious Service Citation in
1995; and a Regional Professional Leadership
award in 1991. He was named Region 5's
Outstanding Member in 1998.
An
author of numerous technical and professional
papers, Meredith's interests include high-speed
analog integrated circuit design and lifelong
learning. He and his wife, Lorraine, will
celebrate their 38th wedding anniversary on 19
April. They have two children, Joseph and
Allison, and two grandchildren, Courtney and
Tiffany.
IEEE-USA advances the public good and promotes
the careers and public policy interests of more
than 220,000 engineers, scientists and allied
professionals who are U.S. members of the IEEE.
IEEE-USA is part of the IEEE, the world's
largest technical professional society with
360,000 members in 150 countries. See
www.ieeeusa.org.
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