GERALDINE KNATZ, Ph.D.
Executive Director
As Executive Director at the Port of Los Angeles, Geraldine
Knatz, Ph.D. oversees the daily operations and internal management of
the nation’s
number one containerport. After an exhaustive national search, Los
Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa nominated Dr. Knatz for the position
in late 2005. In January 2006, she became the first female executive
director of the Port of Los Angeles.
Moving the Port of Los Angeles forward with an agenda that focuses
on responsible Port growth and environmental leadership is an aggressive
goal that Dr. Knatz has tackled from day one. Reducing port emissions,
eliminating health risks and expanding capital development programs to
accommodate the Port’s future growth as a premiere Pacific gateway
and national economic engine are top priorities at the Port under
the leadership of Dr. Knatz.
A key to accomplishing these goals is the landmark San Pedro Bay
Ports Clean Air Action Plan, approved in November 2006 by the Los
Angeles and Long Beach Harbor Commissions. The Clean Air Action Plan provides
a comprehensive strategy for reducing air emissions from port operations
by nearly 50 percent over a period of five years. Dr. Knatz was
instrumental in the creation and implementation of the Clean Air Action
Plan. Her efforts facilitated the first joint meeting of the leaders
of the two ports since the 1920s and the first ever public meeting
of the two Port Boards on the day the Plan was approved last November.
Dr. Knatz’s take-charge attitude and relentless energy in making “green
growth” a top priority at the Port of Los Angeles has earned her
numerous accolades, including recognition as one of Southern California’s
100 Most Influential People by the Los Angeles Times’ West magazine
and, in December 2006, a spot on Los Angeles Magazine’s “Power
List” of L.A. Influentials.
Dr. Knatz previously served as managing director of
the neighboring Port of Long Beach. As the number two executive at the Port of Long Beach,
Dr. Knatz oversaw a $2.3 billion capital improvement program and spearheaded
a number of environmental initiatives, including development of the Green
Port Policy and Truck Trip Reduction Program. While her impressive
tenure at the Port of Long Beach spans two decades, Dr. Knatz began
her maritime career as an environmental scientist at the Port of Los Angeles
in 1977.
Dr. Knatz serves on the Alameda Corridor Transportation Authority
(ACTA) Board of Directors, is the past chair of the Marine Board
of the National Academy of Sciences and has been appointed by the Secretary
of Commerce to the National Sea Grant College Program Review Panel. A
member of the Executive Committee of the International Association of Ports
and Harbors (IAPH), Dr. Knatz chairs the organization’s Environmental
Committee, representing the IAPH at the International Maritime Organization
(IMO), part of the United Nations, on international maritime treaties. She
is also an active member of the American Association of Port Authorities
and is a past chair of its Harbors and Navigation Committee.
A proud alumna of the University of Southern California, where she
presently teaches in the Civil Engineering School, Dr. Knatz earned
two degrees from USC: a doctorate in biological science and a Master of
Science in environmental engineering. She also holds an undergraduate degree
in zoology from Rutgers University. Born and raised in New Jersey,
Dr. Knatz resides in Long Beach with her husband and two sons.
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