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Alan Carvohttps://bios.inl.gov/Lists/Researcher/DisplayOverrideForm.aspx?ID=729Alan Carvo Alan Carvo has 30 years of experience performing environmental, regulatory, and operations support both in the private sector and for government entities. His work experience includes medical research at the University of Southern California, regulatory oversight and waste management for commercial hazardous waste operations in California and Utah, and environmental supervision and management supporting the Department of Energy at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina, the Hanford Site in Washington, and INL. <div class="ExternalClass465E63C154C34B35AFB9B1DCCE6BA7A8"><p>Bachelor's degree, Biological Sciences, University of California, Irvine </p><p>Master's degree, Industrial Hygiene, Montana Tech<br></p></div>https://bios.inl.gov/BioPhotos/AlanCarvo.jpgSafety and Compliance Division Director
David Loydhttps://bios.inl.gov/Lists/Researcher/DisplayOverrideForm.aspx?ID=968David Loyd David’s career has included experience with management and operations of aerospace, energy research, and hazardous testing. David has also been successful sharing training programs with management, technical, and academic audiences on a variety of occupational safety and risk management topics. David currently serves as the Occupational Safety and Health Manager for Battelle Energy Alliance at the Materials and Fuels Complex of the Idaho National Laboratory. In this role, David manages safety program and support equipment assessments, hazard characterization and mitigation planning, industrial hygiene monitoring, fire protection engineering, and workplace inspection associated with energy research and test operations. In 2020, after nearly 35 years of federal service, David retired from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), last serving as Assistant to the Director of Safety & Mission Assurance (SMA) at Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas. He was responsible for assuring effective governance of infrastructure-related regulations and requirements, and supported agency SMA training, facility safety, and safety culture initiatives. For 12 years starting in 2006, David served as the Chief of the Safety & Test Operations Division at JSC. Prior to that David served for 11 years as the Chief of SMA at the White Sands Test Facility (WSTF) in New Mexico. He managed occupational safety programs associated with hazardous test operations, support systems, space flight crew training, construction, and emergency preparedness. He also oversaw WSTF quality engineering and assurance associated with flight hardware qualification, component failure analysis and repair, and materials compatibility testing. At JSC, David chaired an ad hoc committee chartered by the JSC Mission Operations Director to review and approve protocols for commercial industry use of the Neutral Buoyance Laboratory and Space Vehicle Mock-up Facility. He also led a long-term cross-functional effort to clarify and reduce safety and health requirements at JSC, while simultaneously overseeing an approximate 50% injury rate reduction throughout his leadership of JSC’s safety program. In 2013, David completed a one-year temporary assignment with the NASA Safety Center, developing a training program guiding SMA professionals through the federal acquisition process, and revising NASA’s mishap investigation protocols. Early in his career at WSTF, David coordinated the site’s implementation and certification to the ISO 9001 Quality Management Standard and led efforts to implement OSHA Process Safety Management and EPA Risk Management regulations for site hypergolic propellant operations. David also contributed to WSTF’s implementation and acceptance into OSHA’s Voluntary Protection Program. David began his aerospace career in 1985 with the Western Space & Missile Center at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, where he supported DoD space launch activities. For over 10 years, David also served as an adjunct instructor with the Gulf Coast Safety Institute and the University of Houston – Clear Lake. He instructed students in Physical Hazard Control, Safety Program Management, and Fire Safety Engineering. He has also delivered seminars to industry and government participants on subjects such as Facility Risk Assessment, Safety Communication, and Accident Investigation. David graduated with a BS in Mechanical Engineering from the University of New Mexico in 1985, and also earned an MS in Industrial Engineering from New Mexico State University in 2005. David is a Certified Safety Professional and Safety Management Specialist with the Board of Certified Safety Professionals and is a certified AS91002016 Aerospace Quality Management System Auditor with the International Aerospace Quality Group. David is a recipient of the NASA Silver Snoopy Award, two NASA Exceptional Service Medals, and the NASA Manned Flight Awareness Honor. David lives in Idaho Falls, Idaho, with his wife, Natasha, daughter, Lidiya, and son, George. <div class="ExternalClassF457846A2A0C4690B6BB82DB6371264B"><p>​Bachelor's degree, Mechanical Engineering, University of New Mexico<br></p><p>Master's degree, Industrial Engineering, New Mexico State University<br></p></div>https://bios.inl.gov/BioPhotos/david%20loyd.JPGMFC Occupational Safety and Health Manager
Tim Sollehttps://bios.inl.gov/Lists/Researcher/DisplayOverrideForm.aspx?ID=969Tim Solle Tim Solle has over 30 years of experience in the environmental regulatory permitting and compliance field. He earned a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Engineering from the California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. His work experience includes permitting thermal treatment systems in California prior to moving to Idaho. Tim has worked at INL for 28 years in a variety of key environmental positions.​ ​ https://bios.inl.gov/BioPhotos/tim%20solle.JPGMFC Environmental Manager
Robert Goodrichhttps://bios.inl.gov/Lists/Researcher/DisplayOverrideForm.aspx?ID=970Robert Goodrich Bob was in the U.S. Army for four years assigned to B Company 19th Engineers. After his discharge from the Army he started working in commercial nuclear power and worked all over the country for 20 years. He has been at INL since 2004 in many different capacities (Site Coordinator, RCT, Foreman, Supervisor, Manager) and has worked at many facilities (PBF, MTR, ETR, EBR II, GEM project, and IWTU). He currently works at MFC in the TSD facilities as a supervisor. https://bios.inl.gov/BioPhotos/robert%20goodrich.JPGMFC Radiological Controls Supervisor
Jon Johnstonhttps://bios.inl.gov/Lists/Researcher/DisplayOverrideForm.aspx?ID=971Jon Johnston Jon started his INL career at the Waste Experimental Reduction Facility in 1989 as a Health Physics Technician where he worked for about 3 years. He then moved to the Radioactive Waste Management Complex where he worked in the count room for about 8 years and learned gamma and alpha spectrometry as well as regular HPT duties. He then moved to Test Area North where he worked for about 7 years. While working at TAN he was assigned to work with divers at the TAN-607 Fuel Storage Pool, CPP-603, PBF Reactor, and MTR Canal at ATR. This work involved the clean-up and repair of underwater structures. He began working at MFC in 2007. At MFC, he has worked as an HPT, RWP Writer, Radiological Engineer, and is now a Supervisor covering the Secured Facilities, the Zero Power Physics Reactor, the Fuel Manufacturing Facility, the Advanced Fuels Facility and the Space and Security Power Systems Facility. <div class="ExternalClass293046C289FF43B29C8C43BF8952FDA7"><p>​Certificate of Applied Science, Radiation Safety, Easter Idaho Vocational Technical College<br></p><p>Associate's degree, Ricks College<br></p><p>Bachelor's degree, Industrial Technology, University of Idaho<br></p></div>https://bios.inl.gov/BioPhotos/jon%20johnston.JPGMFC Radiological Controls Supervisor