A
member of numerous ITE technical committees, Jim served on the ITE
Technical Council from 1980 to 1987, first as chairperson of the
Department on Standards, then as Council Vice Chairperson, and finally
as Chairperson of the ITE Technical Council from 1985 to 1987.
He has received the Technical Council Chairperson’s and Paper
Awards
Recognizing
his service to ITE over the years, the ITE membership elected
Jim Pline as its International President in 1989.
And in 1993 ITE awarded Jim the Burton W. Marsh Award
for Distinguished Service, the ITE’s highest recognition of
service over a number of years to advance ITE.
But his contributions do not stop there.
Since
serving as ITE International President, Jim has been as active as ever.
He helped initiate the ITE Transportation Safety Council, and
served as its first Chairperson and helped to organize the Expert
Witness Council.
He has received the ITE Safety Council’s Edmund Ricker Safety
Award and the Expert Witness Council’s Outstanding Council Project
Award.
He was chief editor of the fourth edition of the ITE Traffic
Engineering Handbook, published in 1991 and currently is serving as
the editor of the fifth edition of the Traffic Engineering Handbook.
For more than ten years he has helped to define and advance a
program for certifying traffic engineers.
These efforts have recently culminated in the establishment of a
separated corporation (Transportation Professional Certification Board,
Inc.) affiliated with ITE and funded by a loan from ITE.
Jim serves on the newly appointed Board of this corporation which
is scheduled to administer its first examination in January 1999 for
Traffic Operations Engineering Professionals.
And he continues to make his services available on a number of
ITE technical and administrative committees.
Jim
has also been active in a number of other organizations. For example,
Jim has served as a National Director of the National Society of
Professional Engineers and as the President of the Idaho Society of
Professional Engineers and received the Idaho Outstanding Engineer
Award. He has served as a member of the National Committee on Uniform
Traffic Control Devices and its predecessor committees for more than 25
years, and for ten of those years as the National Committee’s Vice
Chair for Research.
He has served on the Idaho Traffic Safety Commission for more
than 25 years.
The Transportation Research Board’s Group 3 Council (Operation,
Safety, and Maintenance of Transportation Facilities) has benefited from
Jim’s active participation, as have numerous National Cooperative
Highway Research Program panels.
Jim
has been able to do all this while pursuing a successful career that
includes 35 years with the Idaho Transportation Department, ten years as
a traffic engineering consultant and expert witness, and service in the
United States Air Force retiring as a Lt. Colonel.
Jim’s
hallmark in his career and volunteer activities is that he gets the job
done on time and gets it done well.
Jim is a role model for the consummate transportation
professional. With his election to Honorary membership he joins a list
of individuals who have and some that continue to shape our profession.
Jim’s wife Beverly has been a most supporting partner helping
to make Jim’s accomplishments possible. |