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Johnson Engineering Names Two New Company Stockholders

Johnson Engineering has named Laura DeJohn and Erik Howard as its newest company stockholders.

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Laura DeJohn, AICP has been with Johnson Engineering for 12 years and is the Director of the Planning and Landscape Architecture group. Laura has both public and private sector planning experience including entitlement of residential, mixed use, community facility, commercial, and industrial development projects; redevelopment plans; architectural design review; annexation; and airport related general planning services, comprehensive planning, and incentive-based code writing. Laura works to facilitate projects that implement smart growth principles. She is a member of the Urban Land Institute and has presented for the American Institute of Architects of Southwest Florida and the Florida Chapter of the American Planning Association, and is appointed to the Collier County Development Services Advisory Committee.

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Erik Howard, PE, PSM, CGC, CFC, EC, a project engineer in the company’s water resources group, has been with Johnson Engineering for 13 years. He earned both his Master of Engineering and Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering degrees from the University of Florida. He is a licensed engineer, surveyor and mapper, water well contractor, plumbing contractor, electrical contractor, and general contractor in the State of Florida and serves as a member of the Charlotte County Construction Industry Licensing Board. Erik’s experience as an engineer is steeped in construction, utilities, and water resources. He routinely prepares specialized plans and specifications for projects that require an ‘outside-of-the-box’ solution.

“Both of these individuals are strong leaders and well-respected in our industry,” said company president Lonnie V. Howard, P.E. “They have been an important part of our team, and will now have the opportunity to play an even bigger role in our company’s growth.”

For further information, contact Marketing Director, Juli Kern at [email protected]

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Johnson Engineering’s 14th Annual Clean up at Lovers Key State Park

FORT MYERS, FL (October 22, 2016) – More than 80 Johnson Engineering employees, their families, friends, the Friends of Lover’s Key (FOLKS) and park staff. The group pitched in on Saturday, October 22, at 9 a.m. for the 14th consecutive year. This group volunteers their time to preserve one of Florida’s natural gems, the park which bears their founder’s name, Carl E. Johnson State Park commonly referred to as Lovers Key.

This event is an opportunity for Johnson Engineering employees to make a difference in the community, while also paying tribute to the company’s founder, Carl E. Johnson. Johnson Engineering’s Coastal Cleanup began in 2003 in honor of Carl E. Johnson, whose efforts in the late 1960’s, played a major role in making this popular recreational area a reality. He conceived the idea of connecting the islands with a causeway from the south end of Fort Myers Beach to Bonita Beach, helped get most of the land donated from several large landowners, surveyed and designed the road, overcoming a variety of obstacles along the way. Today, Lovers Key/Carl E. Johnson State Park has become a world-famous tourist destination.

The company’s employees are proud of their roots and intrigued by the historical connection, so they come together each year to do their part in keeping the park looking its best. The teams dedicate the morning to cleaning and fixing up numerous areas throughout the park including removing/replacing a stairway, removing and replacing sod, exotic vegetation removal, native planting, trail trimming, and painting tram bridges. After the morning’s efforts, they enjoy a BBQ lunch in the beach pavilion, provided by the local Fort Myers beach restaurant Truly Scrumptious.

The volunteer’s efforts not only support Lovers Key State Park by keeping it looking its best for many visitors, but as a company we also choose to support the local Fort Myers Beach businesses. Throughout the years we have established relationships with Greater Fort Myers Beach businesses who sponsor our event by providing raffle items. As raffle prizes entice our employees to volunteer, they are also a great way to encourage local employees to patron the Fort Myers Beach businesses. Our raffle sponsor this year was Wyndham Garden Fort Myers Beach hotel, who provided a 3 day/2 night stay at their hotel. In addition, our caterer, Truly Scrumptious, donates extra lunch items which makes for a fulfilling meal for the volunteers after the morning’s effort.

This annual event’s volunteer efforts were previously recognized by The Friends of Florida State Parks with the Outstanding Volunteer Team of the Year Award for exceptional service and support.

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Florida Grades and Standards for Nursery Plants 2015

Florida Grades and Standards for Nursery Plants 2015At this year’s Florida Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (FLASLA) annual conference in Orlando, one issue in particular created quite the buzz. After 17 years, The Florida Grades and Standards for Nursery Plants, or simply “Grades and Standards,” has been updated by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. The update went into effect on September 1, 2015.

For any project subject to permitting, most localities require that landscaping must meet minimum grading standards. After installation, some localities require that the plantings are inspected and certified by a landscape architect. The update to the Grades and Standards eases the specification of plants and simplifies the certification process. There is now more flexibility for a greater variety of tree characteristics to qualify for grading. The steps for grading trees have also been reduced from ten to seven. In the past, curved palms would not meet the grades and standards because the trunk is not straight. Landscape architects can now specify a curved trunk palm, and it can pass the grading because research has shown that curvature in the trunk of a palm has no negative bearing on its strength or health.

Allowing some leniency in the specification and grading of landscape material will result in more flexibility to use plant materials that were previously considered below Number 1 grade. This will also result in more visually interesting landscapes.

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Johnson Engineering ranks #315 in Gulf Coast 500

Gulf Coast 500 - 2015Johnson Engineering has been recognized as #315 in the Business Observer’s 2015 Gulf Coast 500 rankings. We have achieved recognition for the past four consecutive years due to our steady performance, profitability, and growth.

The 2015 Gulf Coast 500 features an annual review and ranking by revenue of the top 500 companies located throughout the Gulf Coast of Florida, from Polk to Collier County. The magazine also includes the top 500 companies listed by industry, the fastest-growing companies, and largest employers.

For more information visit: www.businessobserverfl.com

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Project Aims to Jump-Start Tape Grass Growth in River

View Johnson Engineering Sr. Ecologist, David Ceilley’s News-Press interview regarding our Caloosahatchee Tape Grass Restoration project.


View the full News-Press article.

PROJECT AIMS TO JUMP-START TAPE GRASS GROWTH IN RIVER

Val is a VEC, and a $103,000 project is under way to restore it to the Caloosahatchee River.

In other words, tape grass, often known as Val, from its scientific name Vallisneria americana, is a Valued Ecosystem Component that has virtually disappeared from the river, and the South Florida Water Management District and Lee County are financing a three-year effort to bring it back.

“Tape grass is a keystone species,” said project manager Dave Ceilley, senior ecologist for Johnson Engineering. “It’s a forage base for manatees. It’s habitat for 35 to 40 fish species. Turtles and water fowl eat it. It’s important invertebrate habitat. It stabilizes sediments and removes nutrients from the water. It’s the foundation of the ecosystem of the river.”

Historically, tape grass, a freshwater species, grew in dense beds as far downstream as Whiskey Creek.

Things started going bad for Val during the wet season of 2000, when massive nutrient-laden releases down the Caloosahatchee River from Lake Okeechobee triggered algal blooms that blocked light in the river, and tape grass started dying.

Then lack of freshwater releases during the dry season allowed salt water to move upstream and kill more tape grass.

Ultimately, 2,000 acres of tape grass were wiped out downstream from Interstate 75 — nobody knows how much tape grass died upstream from I-75 because tape grass upstream was never mapped.

“People have the misconception that it’s all about water quality,” Ceilley said. “It’s not about water quality. You can’t blame everything on Lake O. This plant is very resilient. It came back.”

But it didn’t come back in dense beds, and manatees and turtles grazed the sparse tape grass plants almost down to the root.

Male tape grass plants produce flowers at the base, but female tape grass flowers form at the top of the plant, so if the tops of all the plants are eaten, the plants can’t reproduce.

“Manatees and turtles graze tape grass down just like a lawn mower,” Ceilley said. “It’s like mowing your lawn too short.”

For tape grass plants to grow to reproductive size, the grazers need to be kept away, and that’s what the present project is doing by planting tape grass in the river and enclosing the plants in cages.

On Monday, Ceilley and a team from Sea and Shoreline LLC, which built the cages being used in the project, planted tape grass at four sites in the Caloosahatchee River upstream from the W.P. Franklin Lock and Dam.

A minimum of 10 plants were placed in each of 40, .96-cubic-yard metal cages (previous studies have showed that metal cages last longer than PVC, and 10 plants is a good number for each cage).

“What we’re trying to do is give the tape grass a jump-start,” Ceilley said. “We want to keep the grazers away to the point where the female plants can produce flowers.”

Plants for the project came from Lake Trafford, where FGCU faculty and students planted tape grass in 2008. In that project, 30 1-meter plots grew to 73 acres in five years — cages weren’t used at Lake Trafford because no manatees live in the lake, and alligators keep turtle populations down.

If the tape grass in the project begins to reproduce, they’ll create a seed source that could start tape grass beds downstream.

Lake Trafford tape grass has a different genetic signature from grass already growing in the river, and genetics tests will be performed on grass in the river to determine what strain it is.

“It’s a way of tracking the growth of what we planted,” Ceilley said. “Did it spread out? If so, how far did it spread? Is it below the lock? The whole goal is to have a seed source upstream so, when they open the lock, it will flow downstream.”

The water district is putting $83,000 toward the project, while Lee County is adding $20,000.

“The bottom line is water quality in the Caloosahatchee; we’re all about that,” said Kurt Harclerode, operations manager for the Lee County Division of Natural Resources. “Tape grass is down at the bottom of the food chart, and it’s a good barometer of the health of the estuary. If we have thriving tape grass, it will support all the critters that need that. It will also indicate we’re doing OK with salinity levels.”

This three-year project won’t be the end of tape grass work in the river: Ceilley has applied for $2.4 million in BP oil spill grants to restore Val from the Orange River to Whiskey Creek; partners in that project will probably include Johnson Engineering, FGCU, the University of Florida, Fort Myers and the Caloosahatchee River Citizens Association.

“I’ve been working with tape grass out here since 2001,” Ceilley said. “We know what works. We don’t need more studies. We need to act.”

 

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USFWS Lists Florida Bonneted Bat as Endangered

Effective November 2, 2013, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) listed the Florida bonneted bat (Eumops floridanus) as endangered under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The Florida bonneted bat is only found in south and southwest Florida, primarily in Charlotte, Lee, Collier, Monroe, and Miami-Dade Counties. Recent data also suggest the bat is found in portions of Okeechobee and Polk Counties and possibly in some areas within Glades County. The largest Florida bat, the Florida bonneted bat is non-migratory and uses forests, wetlands, and other natural habitats as well as residential and urban areas. At present, no active, natural roost sites are known. All active, known roosts are bat houses.

The Florida bonneted bat is threatened by habitat loss, degradation, and modification from human population growth, associated development and agriculture. Other threats include its small population size, restricted range, low fertility, weather-related events, such as hurricanes and lengthy cold snaps, removal or displacement by people, and potential impacts from pesticide applications.

Both private developers and public entities with proposed projects in the Florida bonneted bat consultation area are likely to be affected by the Florida bonneted bat listing if the project requires federal regulatory approvals, such as U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) permitting. To assist the USACE in determining whether proposed development projects may affect the Florida bonneted bat, the USFWS has established a Florida bonneted bat Consultation Area (CA), Focal Areas and an Effect Determination Key (Key). According to the Key, the USACE will issue a determination of “May Affect” the Florida bonneted bat for proposed projects occurring within the Florida bonneted bat Focal Areas. USACE determinations for projects occurring outside the FBB Focal Areas, but within the Consultation Area, will depend on site specific criteria, including:

•  Project sizes;
•  Availability and size of Florida bonneted bat habitat types onsite (e.g., upland or wetland forest; upland or wetland shrub; freshwater wetlands; or open water); and
•  Whether the site contains potential roost sites (e.g., snags, large trees with cavities or hollows, abandoned buildings, bridges or overpasses).

The USFWS is currently developing a standard Florida bonneted bat survey protocol, which will likely involve habitat assessments and acoustic surveys using specialized acoustic bat identification equipment, similar to the requirements for the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis) in other parts of the country. The USFWS has already begun requesting that consultants conduct manual surveys of snags, tree cavities, and hollows to ensure that no Florida bonneted bat roosts are impacted for projects about to commence with development or land clearing activities.

Johnson Engineering ecologists are trained and have the latest acoustic bat detection equipment (Wildlife Acoustics Song Meter SM3Bat© Ultrasonic Recorder). We are prepared to assist its clients with Florida bonneted bat surveys and regulatory agency permitting, if required.

For more information on FBB survey or agency permitting requirements, contact John Curtis or David Ceilley at [email protected].

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11th Annual Coastal Clean Up at Lovers Key State Park

FORT MYERS, FL (October 19, 2013) – The community spirit is alive and well for nearly 65 Johnson Engineering employees, families, friends, the Friends of Lover’s Key (FOLKS) and park staff.  This dedicated group pitched in on Saturday, October 19th, at 9 a.m. for the 11th consecutive year.   This group volunteered their time to preserve one of Florida’s natural gems, the park which bears our founder’s name, Carl E. Johnson/Lovers Key State Park.

This is an opportunity for Johnson Engineering employees to make a difference in the community while also paying tribute to our Company’s founder, Carl E. Johnson. Johnson Engineering’s Coastal Cleanup began in 2003 in honor of Carl E. Johnson, whose efforts in the late 1960’s, played a major role in making this popular recreational area a reality. He conceived the idea of connecting the islands with a causeway from the south end of Fort Myers Beach to Bonita Beach, helped get most of the land donated from several large landowners, surveyed and designed the road, overcoming a variety of obstacles along the way. Today, Lovers Key/Carl E. Johnson State Park has become a world famous tourist destination.

Our employees are proud of their roots and intrigued by the historical connection, so they come together each year to do their part in keeping the park looking its best. Teams dedicated the morning to cleaning and fixing up numerous areas throughout the park including building recycle bins, replacing kiosk roofing, construction of bridge handrails, constructing protected area rope fencing, trail trimming, and planting. After the morning’s efforts, we enjoy a BBQ lunch in the beach pavilion.

Our efforts not only support Lovers Key State Park by keeping it looking its best for their many visitors, but we also were supported by local Fort Myers Beach businesses. We established relationships with Greater Fort Myers Beach businesses that sponsor our event by providing raffle items. As raffle prizes not only enticed our employees to volunteer; they also encouraged our local employees to patron the Fort Myers Beach businesses.  This year the Fort Myers Beach raffle sponsors were, Bayfront Bistro, Estero Bay Express II, The Fish House, Matanzas Inn Restaurant, and the Pieces of Eight Pirate Cruise. Our BBQ lunch was also be provided from the local Fort Myers beach restaurant Truly Scrumptious.

This annual effort was also previously recognized by The Friends of Florida State Parks with the Outstanding Volunteer Team of the Year Award for exceptional service and support.

For more information, visit the News-Press to view video of the event: http://www.news-press.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2013310200041.

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