John R. McDougall | |
---|---|
Born | 1945 (age 78–79) Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
Education | BS in Civil Engineering University of Alberta |
Occupation | Petroleum engineer |
Employer | President of National Research Council (Canada) (retired 2016) |
Known for | Re-focusing NRC [citation needed] |
Spouse | Irene |
Children | 4 |
John R. McDougall (also John McDougall) was appointed as the President of the National Research Council (Canada) in April 2010.[1] He was president and Chief Executive Officer of the Alberta Research Council (ARC) for 12 years. He worked for ten years as a petroleum engineer. He was a "member of the NRC-Industrial Research Assistance Program (NRC-IRAP) Advisory Board from 2002 to 2006 and also contributed to the AUTO21 Network of Centres of Excellence, the Edmonton Space & Science Foundation and the Environmental Protection Advisory Committee."[1] He contributed to the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), a Canadian government agency that funds, promotes and assists research in the natural sciences and in engineering.[citation needed]
From 1991 to 1997, he served as the university's first Poole Chair in Management for Engineers, a leadership position within the Faculty of Engineering.[citation needed]
Early in John McDougall's tenure at NRC, in June 2012, there was a controversy concerning Tim Hortons gift cards sent to employees who had just been laid off.[2] On July 29, 2014, Canada's chief information officer announced that the NRC's computer system had been hacked by a "Chinese state-sponsored actor" earlier in the summer.[3]
As described in more detail in a subsequent section, John R. McDougall's tenure as a whole was characterized by a steep drop in publications and patents,[4] by significant cuts in scientific staff[5] and by a 23-month period during which NRC management was aware that NRC was contaminating the water table in a small Ontario community but did not inform that community's inhabitants.[6] The water contamination episode caused owners of nearby homes to launch a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against NRC.[7]
In March 2016, John R. McDougall sent a three-sentence email to NRC employees, announcing that he was going on personal leave.[8] The reasons for John R. McDougall's "retirement" from the presidency of the NRC were never given.[9]