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Name:
Joe Johnson
Position: Environmental Regulatory Manager, Microsoft
Year graduated from UW DEH: 1994
Degree: MS
DEH Program: Environmental Health
In the fall
of 2000, Joe Johnson was the first environmental professional hired at
Microsoft. Since then, he has expanded his job beyond its original “compliance
manager” aspect into the policy arena. He now manages a group of
three people.
He tracks worldwide environmental regulations that affect Microsoft products
and business operations, and implements compliance strategies to address
these requirements. Most Americans are unaware of European or Asian regulations,
such as restrictions on use of heavy metals in product packaging and consumer
electronics, and Johnson often gets a surprised reaction when people hear
what he does at Microsoft.
Among other things, he has helped to manage and reduce the company’s
overall “environmental footprint.” Given the size of Microsoft’s
operations worldwide, he feels this is an opportunity to make a positive
impact on the environment.
After finishing his master’s degree under the guidance of Associate
Professor John Kissel, Johnson was hired by The Boeing Co. in a “design-for-environment”
program to reduce the use of hazardous substances in metal-finishing operations.
He moved on to manage Boeing’s remediation projects under state
and federal waste management regulations, such as the Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act (RCRA) and Superfund. He managed several local sites
at the Duwamish River and Boeing Field, and others across the United States.
He moved briefly into consulting, but “when Microsoft called with
the opportunity to get in front of the cleanup issue instead of chasing
behind, I took it.”
He finds that working at Microsoft “can be a lot like grad school—you
need to be dedicated to and passionate about your work, or you won’t
succeed.” The hours are equally long, but the pay is a lot better,
he quipped.
He encourages students to “take time to discover what truly motivates
you, then begin visualizing work that will allow you to express that motivation.”
It could take awhile to get there, he cautions, even a decade or more,
but “the clearer you are, the faster it can happen.”
He sees expanding opportunities to do environmental work in industry with
the evolution of standards for corporate social and environmental responsibility.
He encourages students interested in this field to “check out what’s
happening and learn about it.”
Johnson has always enjoyed playing sports, and was a member of the 1982
US national and 1983 world championship teams in Ultimate Frisbee. While
in grad school, his masters division teams won the 1992 national and 1994
world (and University of Washington intramural) championships. He has
since added the 2000 and 2001 national and 2002 world masters titles.
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