Andrew Stone Executive Director, American Ground Water Trust, Concord, NH Andrew Stone is a hydrogeology graduate from London University and has over twenty-five years of ground water experience in Africa and the U.S. as a professor and ground water consultant. He has first-hand experience of ground water exploration, well design and source protection in a wide variety of geologic environments. As the director of the Trust's education programs he has coordinated ten Trust conferences related to ASR, conjunctive use and water banking. Since 1990, as adjunct professor, he has taught an annual course on Ground Water Protection Polcy in the Masters Degree Program at Antioch New England Graduate School. Richard Roth UIC Program Director, Wisconsin Dept. of Natural Resources, Madison, WI Richard Roth is employed as a drinking water and groundwater specialist with the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (WDNR). He is assigned to the DNR's Bureau of Drinking Water and Groundwater where he has served as state coordinator for Wisconsin's Underground Injection Control (UIC) program for the past 14 years. Rich holds a master's degree in Water Resources Management from the University of Wisconsin Madison. Bill McLemore State Geologist, Georgia Geological Survey, Atlanta, GA Dr. William H. McLemore, State Geologist of Georgia has over forty years of experience in solving geological problems and managing large multidisciplinary projects. As State Geologist, he manages the Geologic Survey Branch of Georgia's Environmental Protection Division. The Survey performs comprehensive technical investigations of Georgia's earth, water, and mineral resources as well as coordinates the State of Georgia's ground-water management activities. The Survey also regulates oil and gas activities, water-well construction, and underground injection within the state. Before coming to the Georgia Geologic Survey, he gained extensive experience with the firm of Dames & Moore in Cranford, New Jersey. While with Dames & Moore, Dr. McLemore served as principal investigator or project manager on a wide variety of complex geological studies. Included among these were nuclear and coal-fired power plant site selection and geotechnical studies, underground gas storage investigations, mineral investigations, environmental impact assessments, and numerous ground-water protection plans. Prior to joining Dames & Moore, he was employed as an economic geologist by the U.S. Forest Service and as a petroleum geologist by the Pan American Petroleum Corporation. Dr. McLemore is a native of Atlanta, Georgia and holds a Ph.D. degree in Geology from the University of Georgia. John Taylor Senior Environmental Engineer, US EPA, Region V, Chicago, IL John Taylor received his B.S. in Civil Engineering from the Illinois Institute of Technology and has worked in the drinking water, wastewater and ground water fields for the past 34 years, 31 of them with the US Environmental Protection Agency. He is a registered professional engineer and has held a number of leadership positions in the Chicago and Atlanta offices of EPA, including Construction Grants Program Manager for the State of South Carolina and Oversight Chief for the Region 5 UIC Program. He currently serves a senior technical advisor to the Region 5 UIC Program, focusing on Class V wells, state oversight and tribes. Mr. Taylor has been very active in national activities, including serving as the Regional Co-Chair of the State and Federal Affairs Committee of the Ground Water Protection Council for the past 10 years, as well as UIC representative to the Native American Water Association for the past 8 years. He has also served as the Region 5 representative on EPA's National Class V Workgroup for the past 8 years and played a major role in the development of the Class V Rule, which covers large capacity cesspools and motor vehicle waste disposal wells. He has also been quite active in the Class V Phase 2 focus on additional well types, including aquifer storage and recovery (ASR). He has assisted the Wisconsin DNR in their evaluation of ASR sites in Green Bay and Oak Creek, Wisconsin, and he led the development of criteria for ASR projects in the direct implementation state of Minnesota. POSTER PAPER PRESENTERS Al Aikens, CH2M HILL Mr. Aikens earned a B.A. in Geology from Thiel College, Greenville, PA in 1980 and an M.S. in Hydrology and Water Resources from the University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ in 1986. He has been employed with CH2M HILL from January 1986 to the present serving as a project hydrogeologist and a project manager on water resource planning and development projects, and contaminated site investigation and clean-up projects. Mr. Aikens is the project manager and principal investigator in the SJRWMD Central Florida Aquifer Recharge Enhancement Program -Phase I, Artificial Recharge Well Demonstration Project that is the topic of the poster session. The purpose of the project is to measure and evaluate groundwater quality for microbial and chemical changes that result from long-term operation of stormwater recharge wells in Central Florida, identify if supplemental treatment would be beneficial, and measure groundwater quality changes if treatment is implemented. Thomas L. Dobecki, SDII Global Corporation Thomas L. Dobecki is Principal Geologist with SDII Global Corporation of Tampa, Florida. This follows an extensive career in engineering and environmental geophysics including employment with Sandia National Laboratory, several international engineering firms, as well as the geophysics faculty at the Colorado School of Mines. Dr. Dobecki is currently President-elect of the Near Surface Geophysics Section of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists (SEG). He is a Professional Geophysicist/Geologist licensed in Florida, Texas, and Tennessee. He has recently completed a FDEP/FGS funded study using electrical methods to map the boundary between fresh and saline waters at various depths around Central Florida. William C. Hutchings, HSA Engineers & Scientists William C. Hutchings, M.S., P.G. is a Hydrogeologist with HSA Engineers & Scientists. He obtained B.S. (1981) and M.S. (1986) degrees in Geology from the University of Florida. He subsequently attended the University of South Florida (USF) and received a Graduate Certificate in Advanced Studies in Hydrogeology in 1992. He is currently pursuing a M.S. degree in Hydrogeology at USF with thesis research in the effects of aquifer heterogeneities and variable density on aquifer storage and recovery systems. His interests are in numerical modeling of groundwater recovery systems, contaminant transport, and seawater intrusion.