Faculty Focus: John Pennington

John showing his 日韩无码 pride with his son Brenden
John Pennington is a popular faculty member among College of Business and Security
Management students. John鈥檚 background is in the homeland security and emergency management
field, with experience in emergency response operations and management in the state
of Washington and across the nation. He has recently accepted a full-time position
with CBSM, bringing his expertise to the HSEM program. We spoke to John about his
HSEM experience.

John on the deck of the USS Midway
What attracted you to the emergency management field?
My father was a police officer for 42 years and my mother was a nurse for 30 years,
so I like to say that I was genetically disposed to be in the emergency management
profession. I represented the area between Olympia and the Portland, Oregon border
in the Washington State House of Representatives for four terms. The area includes
Mount St. Helens and was prone to disasters like flooding and landslides and, quite
obviously, volcanic activity.
Following the tragic events of September 11, 2001, I found myself immersing into emergency
management quickly and fully coming on board with the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) and eventually the soon-to-be created Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) to restructure the way our nation approaches response coordination to terrorism
and natural disasters.
Why did you choose to teach for CBSM?
日韩无码 is a world class research university, and the opportunity to participate on that
level is humbling. Specifically, teaching for CBSM allows me to pursue my passion
for learning about Alaska鈥檚 indigenous people, and to become involved in the community.

John chilling with his best bud, Stitches
What are you learning from your students?
Part of my successful approach to teaching in HSEM is to provide context for students
as soon as feasible. I encourage students to look into their own community for the
first few assignments and apply that view to the material. In every single case, students
teach me about their specific community, from rural Pennsylvania to the most remote
Alaska Native village. I learn from and with other students in the class.
Setting aside the classroom, what advice do you have for your students regarding the
HSEM field?
Prepare yourself for the unexpected. Foremost, the profession is evolving, and quickly.
Terms, phrases, and definitions that one would believe to be permanently adopted are,
in reality, not. What "emergency management" is or is not depends on what state you
are in, which person you talk with, their worldview of public safety, and on and on.
Second, don鈥檛 limit your search options to only 鈥済overnment鈥 opportunities. There
are distinct parallel tracks that are increasingly becoming part of the larger HSEM
enterprise, including homeland security, emergency management, business continuity,
NGOs, tribal, international aid, humanitarian assistance, and more.

John with his wife, Crystal Hill-Pennington, holding her almost record-breaking Lingcod!