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The 2019 Black Engineer of the Year Professional Achievement in Government Award was jointly presented to Krystle Z. McClain by the Commander of the Naval Facilities Engineering Command and Chief of Civil Engineers Rear Admiral John Corker, and Public Works Officer Yokosuka Commander Jason M. Wood.
Both commanders praised McClain's professionalism, passion, and accomplishments in federal government service. Over the past 13 years, McClain has led organizations in three major branches of the defense department.
In addition to being a stalwart leader in the workplace, McClain has inspired others with her voluntary involvement in community service and youth activities."The entire Naval Forces Engineering Command congratulates you on this well-deserved recognition," Wood said.
McClain graduated from the University of Maryland, College Park with an undergraduate degree in chemical engineering and a master's in civil and environmental engineering. She spent her early career working in the private sector and entered the federal civil service in 2008 as the Site Environmental Coordinator for the U.S. Army, responsible for environmental media compliance programs in accordance with federal, state, and local laws, permits, policies, and regulations.
In 2011, McClain transferred to the Air Force as a program manager for the Environmental Quality Branch. She then transitioned to the Air National Guard Readiness Center at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland as an environmental planner, providing National Environmental Policy Act guidance for the center's National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) mission and aircraft movements. Over a five year period (2010-2015), she also served as an adjunct environmental science professor for American Public University.
In 2015, McClain joined the U.S. Navy's engineering command, accepting a supervisory role as the Environmental Conversation and Planning Branch Chief at the Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan. In 2017, she was appointed to her current position as Installation Environmental Program Director.
"In April 2005, I was relieved of my position with the parting words that perhaps the government was a better fit for me," McClain recalled in her acceptance speech. "I was five months out of college, working for a private firm and I was shattered.
"Fourteen years later, I stand here receiving a Professional Achievement Award as a government civil servant. This award should serve as an encouragement to the student confused in Engineering 101 or defeated in Organic Chemistry. Or to the employee frustrated in their work environment. Keep striving! I've learned that God directed my path to be exactly where I'm needed."