Environmental Science Associates

Environmental Science Associates

Environmental Services

San Francisco, CA 21,452 followers

Celebrating 50 Years of Work that Matters

About us

ESA is a 100% employee-owned environmental consulting firm. We plan, design, permit, mitigate, and restore—for projects across our communities, infrastructure systems, open spaces, and wildlands. We are 50 years strong in 21 offices across California, the Pacific Northwest, and the Southeastern United States. Specializing in community and airport planning, environmental planning, analysis and assessment, natural and cultural resources management, environmental restoration and design, and regulatory compliance—ESA scientists, planners, historians, archaeologists, engineers, designers, and technical specialists provide critical thinking, in-depth analyses, and committed follow-through to guide successful policy development and project planning, and deliver enduring multi-objective solutions.

Website
http://www.esassoc.com
Industry
Environmental Services
Company size
501-1,000 employees
Headquarters
San Francisco, CA
Type
Privately Held
Founded
1969
Specialties
Environmental Technical Studies, Environmental & Community Planning, Federal & State Environmental Compliance, Restoration & Mitigation, Regulatory Permitting & Compliance Monitoring, Sustainability & Climate Change, and Water

Locations

Employees at Environmental Science Associates

Updates

  • Florida’s stunning rivers, lakes, and coastal waters are facing unprecedented challenges from population growth, water quality issues, and climate change. Passed in 2021, SB 64 aims to transform how the state manages and reuses water by making significant changes to the disposal of domestic wastewater. Senior Environmental Scientist Lindsay Cross details key elements of this legislation, and how ESA can help clients achieve sustainable water management in this evolving landscape of wastewater management. Read about it in our blog: https://lnkd.in/gvV5M8eU #ReclaimedWater #Wastewater #PotableReuse #WaterManagement #Environment #EnvironmentalPolicy #Florida #BeneficialUses

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    21,452 followers

    The results are in! Our 2024 Gallup Employee Engagement Survey revealed a majority of ESA’s employee-owners are highly engaged—scoring 22 percent higher than the U.S. average engagement level! This annual survey measures how enthusiastic and committed employees are to their work and workplace, and feel connected to their organization’s mission and purpose. Thanks to this employee feedback, we’re always elevating our culture of continuous improvement. Come join us and see what it’s all about! https://lnkd.in/gE2zbYk2 #WorkThatMatters #JoinUs #100PercentEmployeeOwned #EveryoneHasAVoice #EmployeeEngagement #GallupQ12

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  • ✍️📚 Grab your pencils and notepads, we’re headed to the 38th Annual Environmental Permitting Summer School this July 16 - 19 on Marco Island, Florida. Be on the lookout for familiar faces at the conference including former Janicki Environmental, Inc., scientists who are now an integral part of our team since they joined ESA. We will also be hosting these informative sessions: 👩🏫 Wednesday, July 17 at 10:30am and Friday, July 19 at 10:30am Julie Sullivan speaks in the presentation, “What’s New in Environmental Resources Permitting.” The presentation will cover the legal principles of ERP permitting, policy, and rulemaking updates, plus tips for achieving compliance. 👩🏫 Thursday, July 18 at 3:30pm Emily Keenan speaks on the panel, “Comprehensive Watershed Management.” The panel will provide an in-depth examination into the variety of planning and regulatory programs being implemented by water districts, such as TMDLs, stormwater, and NPDES for watershed management. 👩🏫 Friday, July 19 at 10:30am Mike Wessel speaks on the panel, “Restoration Options When Facing Water Quality Impairments.” The course will focus on water quality standard implementations, covering the scientific, technical, and legal issues concerning Florida’s water quality criteria. Find us at booth #216 and say “Hi!” to the team including Doug Skurski, Sharon Niemczyk, Tori Kuba, Tony Janicki, Susan Janicki, Sandy Scheda, Alexandra Hipolito and Nick Gadbois. We hope to see you there! For more information head to: https://floridaenet.com/ Florida Environmental Network, Inc. #2024EPSS #MarcoIsland #EnvironmentalPermitting

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    Summer fieldwork must-haves: giant water bottle ✅ UV-protective clothing ✅ wide-brimmed hat ✅ As heat waves continue to roil the US, ESA’s environmental scientists, like biologist Eva Lin (pictured below) are out conducting field work and overseeing environmental compliance monitoring, often dealing with brutal, sizzling heat. 🥵 How do they stay safe and keep cool in these hot temperatures? Eva shares that carrying extra water is an absolute must. “Always keep your water bottle on you, specifically in your safety vest! I also recommend keeping some extra water in your car to avoid running out on hot days—I leave a 1-gallon insulated water jug filled up daily in my car, and it has saved me whenever I run out of water or need to re-wet my cooling towel. Even if you don’t end up needing it, someone else in the field might!” Senior biologist Tamara Klug also practices some advice with her team when it comes to high temperatures—“don’t be a hero," she says. “Heat is a serious risk. Everybody needs to look out for one another and take breaks in the shade and the car with air conditioning as needed.” Other must-haves our crews shared are: - Coolers and ice filled with fizzy water and electrolytes - Sunshades for hard hats - UV protection shirt and pants - Cooling towel - Neck gaiter To all our crews out in the field: thank you for putting your safety first!

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  • ESA’s Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) foster a strong community for employee-owners of all backgrounds, where they can share their experiences, openly discuss issues, and advance our work to make everyone feel welcomed, safe, valued, and accepted. Throughout Pride Month, we asked members of the LGBTQ+ ERG to share what this community means to them, and also what allyship feels like in the workplace. Thanks to Antonette Hrycyk, Brandon Mukogawa, Phong Ly, PE, Joseph Billela, and Dave Davis who shared their perspectives with us. See what they had to say below: #Pride #Pride2024 #EmployeeResourceGroup #EmployeeOwner #DiversityIsOurStrength

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  • 🏖️ Birds of a feather flock together—at the beach! Much like beach-goers in the summer, shorebirds love to flock at Florida’s beaches where they settle and find refuge in the sand dunes and coastal habitats. However, they are increasingly facing threats from human disturbance and climate-driven habitat loss. Along Florida’s Gulf Coast, ESA's environmental scientists are monitoring protected species including the American Oystercatcher, Black Skimmer, Least Terns, and Wilson’s Plover—all classified as Imperiled Beach Nesting Birds (IBNB). In Lee County, this monitoring is supporting an emergency shoreline relief effort where crews are working to repair portions of the Sanibel Causeway destroyed by Hurricane Ian, and a boating vessel recovery effort at Bunche Beach. While in Pinellas County, the teams are monitoring IBNB and other types of shorebird activity at the Grand Canal Maintenance Dredging project in Pass-a-Grille, and at the Indian Shores Beach Dune Restoration project. Much of their work involves surveying and recording nesting sites, which blend in with the sand and are hard to spot, and requires a close study of bird behavior. That means looking for clues like footprints, divots in the sand known as “scrapes,” and for the Wilson’s Plover in particular, watching for the “broken wing display” where the birds feign injury, says BJ Quinton, GISP, who recently observed the behavior. “Seeing me as a predator, the bird pretended to be hurt with a broken wing so I would see it as an easy target and be drawn away from the nest,” he said. “The exact location of the nest in this area is not crucial, so I didn’t pursue it further for fear of stressing the adult. But this sort of behavior would be a clue that we do have a nest in the area.” 📷's by BJ Quinton, GISP, and Kristin Maki Jenkins Pinellas County Government Lee County #Shorebirds #Biology #ImperiledBeachNestingBirds #Florida #Birds #CoastalHabitat #ShorelineProtection

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  • From North to South, and East to West, we’ve got dozens of exciting job opportunities “blooming” across our regions! We’re looking for archaeologists, biologists, engineers, GIS analysts, landscape architects, project managers, and many other types of professionals to join us and do work that matters. Check out our open positions and learn what it means to work for a 100-percent employee-owned environmental consulting firm that is committed to justice, equality, diversity, and inclusion, and future-focused to support your career growth and work-life balance. Head to our Job Openings page at: https://lnkd.in/gHT2xMnM 📷: Water Resources Engineer Alaina Floor, PE at a site visit to a sunflower farm outside of Seattle. #JoinUs #WeAreHiring #JobOpenings #EnvironmentalCareers #EmployeeOwnedFirm #WorkThatMatters

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    With its incredibly vast and intricate network of waterways spanning more than 1,000 miles long, the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is a real boaters’ paradise. Unfortunately, dozens of abandoned and derelict vessels have been discarded across local marinas and waterways over the years. The polluting, decaying vessels are causing environmental harm, are a safety hazard, and impede boat traffic and navigation. Working with the California State Lands Commission (CSLC), ESA’s Fish and Aquatic Science team is completing a multi-year survey of the Delta to provide a complete inventory of abandoned and derelict commercial vessels. This data collection and management will provide CSLC up-to-date information informing the environmental and navigational hazards that each boat presents, as it works to remove more than 100 known vessels in the Delta. Find out more about the ongoing work at: https://lnkd.in/g3Rb2Uak #SacramentoDelta #CaliforniaStateLandsCommission #AbandonedAndDerelictVessels #EnvironmentalCleanup

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  • A botanist never leaves their work at the office, at least according to Amanda Segura-Moon! As a botanist and consulting biologist, Amanda spends a lot of time out in the field looking for rare plants and mapping natural habitats, managing invasive plant spread, conducting biological and botanical resource surveys and performing aquatic delineation analyses. And at home, she unwinds by taking care of her collection of potted plants, tending to her bioactive terrariums full of isopods, and experimenting with growing native plants in her container garden, as well as fostering kittens! “I love caring for pets, plants, and other living things in and around my house!” she shared.   Find out more about Amanda’s passion for all things plants in her professional and personal life, in our employee-owner spotlight series. https://lnkd.in/g-EhxRaM #EmployeeOwnerSpotlight #EmployeeOwner #Botanist #Biologist #LifeOfABiologist

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    We are totally amped! ⚡🔌 The 125-mile Ten West Link transmission project is now charged up and operational, bringing more than 3,000 megawatts of renewable energy throughout California and the Desert Southwest. ESA’s Cultural Resources Team is honored to have supported Lotus Infrastructure Partners during the development of the project by providing archaeological monitoring during the peak construction efforts. To keep the project’s schedule on track, ESA averaged 20 personnel daily in the field, and routinely adjusted on short notice to match changing construction demands. Notably, the corridor spans numerous jurisdictions with varied cultural resource requirements involving Arizona and California Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Arizona and California State Historic Preservation Officers, Bureau of Reclamation, California Public Utilities Commission, Arizona State Lands, LA PAZ COUNTY, Arizona and California tribes, and private landowners. “Our Southern California cultural resources team is incredibly proud that we were able to help execute on a shared vision for clean, safe energy to communities throughout California and the Desert Southwest,” says Cultural Resources Practice Leader Tony Overly, RPA. Read more about the project at: https://lnkd.in/gpJtqZsM and Ten West Link Electrical Transmission Line Archaeological Monitoring — Environmental Science Associates (esassoc.com) #TenWestLink #Solar #PowerTransmission #RenewableEnergy #Archaeology #CulturalResourcesMonitoring

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