Dr. Chi Ho Sham is the 140th American Water Works Association president following a gavel-passing ceremony June 17.
“It was an honor to be elected by the AWWA Board of Directors in January 2020 as the president-elect of AWWA. I am very grateful to the nomination committee and the board for their confidence in me,” Sham said. “I believe we have been doing a great job, but there is still a lot to do with our community to make improvements with our drinking water systems.”
He quoted Hellen Keller, “Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much,” while noting the dedication, persistence and determination on the long game is what sets water professionals apart from others.
“I believe it is important for all of us to think critically, learn avidly and collaborate strategically to link sound science and engineering with effective education and communication to build a resilient workforce and to enhance public trust in the water industry,” Sham said. “I look forward to making a better world through better water.”
During his speech, Sham explained he is the son of two factory workers who migrated to Hong Kong from Shanghai in the 1940s. He was born in the 1950s on the verge of Hong Kong accelerating to a world class city. but in the 1960s, drought struck the country.
“We had running water for four hours every four days,” Sham said, “so I truly understand what it is like to live through a day without water.”
He added that the drought seen in the Western U.S. is not a new problem, but rather one with a recurring focus. As a child during the drought, he said they would boil water every morning for drinking water, and that a push began for using seawater to flush toilets, “which of course required a separate infrastructure,” Sham said. By the year 2000, he said 79% of buildings in Hong Kong use seawater for flushing toilets.
He talked about his career path traveling to abroad for collegiate studies, and then to Buffalo, New York for a Masters Degree, followed by a Doctorate in Water Resources Management and Hydrology. He was offered a teaching position at Boston University in 1982, finished his dissertation in 1984 and remained on staff as a junior faculty member until 1991. At that point, he became a technical consultant for the Safe Drinking Water Act. He followed the winding path of his career with significant milestones and research efforts along the way before getting involved with AWWA at the section level.
“I’m a big fan of sections because — pardon the cliche — I believe drinking water requires to tackle it both from a top-down and also a bottom-up approach,” Sham said. “The collaboration between the association and the sections, and also between sections, have offered and will also continue to offer us optimal solutions to many of these problems.”
The entire gavel passing ceremony is available on YouTube, which can be viewed below in full.