Chapter Newsletters

February 2026

  

COLLABORATE TODAY. SUSTAIN TOMORROW.

Northeast Chapter Board Member Spotlight


Scott Davis is one of the IECA Northeast Chapter's newest board members, now serving as the New York Representative. Scott has attended many IECA and NEC conferences over the past 15 - 20 years and is excited to be participating in this new capacity. After two years of civil engineering courses at Syracuse University, Scott moved across the street, literally, to SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. He graduated in 1990 receiving a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental and Forest Biology with a concentration in fisheries biology.

His professional career started with a hydropower relicensing project in Michigan performing stream flow and fishery surveys. His next endeavor brought him into the world of water quality working for the Monroe County Health Department’s Environmental Health Lab, in Rochester, NY. Water quality monitoring, including sampling and lab tests, was performed for closed landfills, trout streams and potable water within the Irondequoit Creek and Genesee River watersheds. He then spent over nine years working for NYSDEC in the Bureaus of both Inland and Marine Fisheries before transferring to NYSDOT in 1999. Scott has worked in DOT’s Hudson Valley region for over 25 years performing stormwater and erosion control inspections as required by New York’s SPDES permit for construction projects. He also performed GIS based environmental screenings and permitting for emergency contracts and trains summer inspectors and new hires. He acquired his CPESC in 2005 and his CESSWI
in 2023.

The Hudson Valley region is a very diverse region. It includes the high peaks of the Catskill Mountains, about 80 miles of the tidally influenced Hudson River and shoreline along Long Island Sound. Most of the New York City drinking water supply either originates here or passes through the region in the form of aqueducts. It also has many miles of trout streams, a variety of threatened and endangered species and over 6000 lane miles of roadway. Major projects during Scott’s DOT career included multiple phases of upgrades along the I-287 corridor in Westchester County, Stewart airport access in Orange County which included clearing for new highway construction and realignment of existing roads and interchanges, replacement of the I-84 bridge deck over the Delaware River, several bridge replacement projects over the Esopus Creek in Ulster County and realignment of portions of the Taconic State Parkway which included removal of an at grade intersection at Pudding Street in Putnam County and bridge replacements in Yorktown, Westchester County. Scott retired from NYSDOT in November of 2023 and returned to that job part time in May of 2024.

Scott’s appreciation for the outdoors and environmental quality started at an early age. He grew up on 14 acres that included mixed hardwoods, a small sugarbush, a stream and wetland and about 1.5 acres of garden space. As a 4-H member he learned to canoe and fish. He applies the values learned throughout his life to protecting nature in hopes that others can have the same opportunities.

Welcome Mary Steblein to the Northeast Board serving as a new Member At Large

Mary graduated from Lafayette College with a BS in Civil Engineering and returned to Rochester, NY to work for URS Corporation for nine years, supporting municipal, solid waste, and environmental projects. Pivoting from a multi-national consulting firm, she joined local consulting firm, LaBella Associates in 2008, to get back into the municipal engineering world.

At LaBella she balances her time assisting with municipal review, MS4 consulting, and engineering/permitting support for utility clients. She is one of two NYS Stormwater Resource Specialists in the company. She is a professional engineer licensed in NYS, and has been a Certified Professional in Erosion and Sediment Control since 2010. She joined the IECA in 2021, attending her first Chapter conference in 2024 and her first international conference in 2025.

Mary and her husband Mike live in the city of Rochester, within minutes of the Genesee River, Lake Ontario, and within easy driving distance of Niagara Falls and the Finger Lakes. Growing up, she moved beyond sand castles to entire sand cities with retention ponds, drainage swales lined with aquatic vegetation, and pervious rock roads – perhaps leading to her eventual career. Outside of work, Mary enjoys birdwatching, hiking, gardening/houseplants, baking, attending concerts, and photography. She is also active with Rochester Ecology Partners, a non-profit helping people in the Greater Rochester area find nature where they live, work, and play.
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