Job of the Day: Civil Engineer/Hydrologist

Posted : Jul 28, 2010 10:44 AM
Updated: Jul 28, 2010 10:46 AM

The US Bureau of Reclamation is seeking a Civil Engineer /Hydrologist to work in the Fryingpan-Arkansas Pueblo Field Office. The Pueblo Dam is part of the Frying Pan-Arkansas project.

Duties include:

-Responsible for river and reservoir operations associated with Reclamation dams and reservoirs, including hydrology studies, technical reports and maintaining the Fryingpan-Arkansas Project computerized water accounting program.
-Prepares annual and short term operation plans, along with daily water orders, for use in predicting water releases and power production and revises those plans as necessary; assists with coordinating all reservoir operations with other agencies and entities; evaluates climatological, river stage, stream regulation and other data which have an influence on reservoir operation decisions.
-Meets with a variety of user groups to present information on water supply conditions, runoff forecasts and operations plans.
-The work of the position is guided by the incumbent's fundamental understanding of technical, administrative and political issues impacting the particular projects for which coordination activities are accomplished.

Apply by Aug. 17

Starting pay is $50,000 - $96,000 per year.

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Not registered? Enter your information. You will be sent a confirmation email.


Please keep your comments relevant. Inflamatory or offensive comments will be removed. Email addresses are NEVER displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

New users will be sent an email to confirm their comments. If you choose to create an account, a subsequent email will be sent with a password to login. To leave another comment, just use that password.

To create a link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and it will automatically be made a link. Paragraph and line spacing is automatically maintained, so there is no need to use <p> or <br /> tags. All other HTML tags are removed, including <img>.

Commented Stories

Most Popular of the Last Week

Sponsored Content