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The Honorable Kristine Svinicki wins University of Michigan College of Engineering Alumni Medal

The Honorable Kristine L. Svinicki (BSE NE ’88), chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), has won the 2017 University of Michigan College of Engineering Alumni Medal. The Alumni Medal recognizes extraordinary professional achievement and is the highest commendation bestowed by the Michigan Engineering Alumni Board.

By Kim Roth

Svinicki’s distinguished career includes nearly 27 years in public service at the state and federal levels. Her first nuclear engineering position was with the U.S. Department of Energy in Idaho, involving programs carried out at the Idaho National Laboratory. While the work was predominantly technical, the connection with public policies driving that work became evident to her.

“When you work in government, the public policy dialogue creates the framework for everything you do,” said Svinicki. “That dialogue shapes the vision of the future, and that can be very energizing.”

Svinicki went on to work as a congressional staff member in the U.S. Senate and as a professional staff member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Advising elected officials on a range of policies and initiatives related to atomic energy, national security and defense science and technology, among other areas, “widened the aperture of my work,” she said.

She found the opportunity “to facilitate a broader public policy debate by ensuring elected officials had a basic understanding of a common set of facts” deeply engaging.

The ability to translate technical discourse into policy dialogue is critical for defining policy, reaching consensus and compromise, she says. It’s a capability that has been key to her success in her roles as engineer, policymaker and leader.

Attesting to Svinicki’s professional success is a long list of honors and awards, including two Presidential Citations from the American Nuclear Society for her work on U.S. nuclear energy policies. She appreciates that the 2017 U-M College of Engineering Alumni Medal recognizes her policy-oriented career.

“It’s deeply meaningful on a lot of levels for me,” she said. “I’m very honored the College would consider a recipient in the policy space rather than someone who took a more technical path. It shows that there are a lot of different visions of the contributions one can make with a valuable engineering degree, and it sends a powerful message to the rising generation.”

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