Q&A: Vanderbilt alumna is GDOT’s first female chief engineer

A Vanderbilt University School of Engineering alumna is the first female chief engineer for Georgia’s transportation department.

Meg Pirkle, CE'89

Meg Bryson Pirkle earned her Vanderbilt bachelor’s degree in civil engineering in 1989 and went to work for Georgia Department of Transportation’s planning department the same year, later earning her master’s in civil engineering from Georgia Tech. She’s currently director of GDOT’s Permits and Operations Division and will take on her new job effective Jan. 1.

Pirkle also spent some of this year implementing task force recommendations after the January 2014 Atlanta “Snowpocalypse” that stranded thousands of commuters for eight hours or more on iced-over interstates.

In a phone interview this morning, she discussed those fixes, her time at Vanderbilt and being a woman in a male-dominated profession.

At what point did you know you wanted to be a civil engineer? As a young girl?

I grew up in South Florida, and at the high school I went to, there wasn’t a lot of instruction given to most of our graduates, particularly about engineering. I thought about the medical field because I knew I liked science, but after volunteering at a hospital while in high school, I realized I was way too squeamish. One of my high school counselors suggested engineering.

When I started at Vanderbilt, I had to declare a major when I applied, so I picked one that sounded good to me based on my research – electrical engineering.

What changed?

After taking a digital engineering class and looking at this little board for the whole semester, I realized I wanted something that was a little bigger. I talked to the dean at the time and some of my professors and decided civil engineering sounded like a good fit for me.

I like the fact that it impacts everybody. I feel like the work I do makes a difference, because everyone uses transportation, and everyone uses infrastructure. I like the interaction with citizens and elected officials.

How was your Vanderbilt experience?

I loved going to school at Vanderbilt and always reflect on it very positively. There were some really great professors – Dr. Peter Hoadley and Dr. Robert Stammer influenced me a lot. Dr. Stammer is the reason I’m in transportation today. He presented it in a way that was compelling and challenging, and that’s what helped me make my decision.

You went to GDOT right after Vanderbilt and ascended through the ranks. What kept you there?

When I look back on the last 25 and a half years, it may seem like one job for a long time, but I’ve had many different positions, and they’ve all been varied and challenging. I guess for me, it comes down to two things. One, I work with really great people. That’s going to make the difference in any job — coworkers I have so much respect for and really enjoy working with. Number two, it’s an opportunity to make a big difference in transportation in Georgia. I like feeling that I’m doing something good for the citizens of Georgia and anyone traveling through Georgia, and that the work I do really as an impact.

In announcing your promotion, GDOT said you’re its first female chief engineer. What has being a minority in your profession been like?

When I was at Vanderbilt, there were two women graduating with our civil engineering class: me and another woman. When I came to GDOT, there were not a lot of women in leadership positions at the department, but they were hiring a good number of women. I always felt there was a lot of support, and that I never stood out as the lone female anywhere. I’ve had really great mentors who have been so supportive.

I might be the first woman to become chief engineer, but I’m certainly not the only fabulous female engineer here, and I know I won’t be the last. I look at some of the young engineers we are hiring, and they are so impressive.

The announcement also said you were in charge of implementing a task force’s recommendations after the January 2014 Atlanta “Snowpocalypse.” In a culture so packed with traffic and unaccustomed to icy roads, can anything be done?

 

Traffic inches along the connector of Interstates 75 and 85 as snow blankets Metro Atlanta on Jan. 28, 2014. (Photo courtesy Atlanta Journal Constitution)

It’s challenging. Here, we have to weigh the benefits of spending a lot of money in preparing for snow and ice with the fact that January was the first snow we’d had since 2011.

We coordinated a lot with fellow state departments of transportation in Tennessee and North Carolina and asked how they handle things in Nashville and Charlotte – cities that get occasional snows but not all the time.

Tennessee DOT told us, if they think it’s going to snow, they start applying brine to all the interstates. It’s kind of a cheap insurance policy. You spent $20,000, and if it snows, you were prepared. If it doesn’t, at least you were prepared. Before this year, we had a small brine application effort where we would apply it on bridges and overpasses, but in the last year, we have ramped up to be able to apply it on every lane of every interstate in Metro Atlanta and some in North Georgia.

We’re expanding our Georgia Navigator, our intelligent transportation system, to some other areas where we didn’t have camera coverage and electronic signs to get messages out to travelers. And we’re also working with the National Weather Service and our Georgia Emergency Management Agency in expanding our road weather information system so they can have some more data about how the weather is changing in Georgia and any impacts with the pavement.

We haven’t had any weather to put all this to the test, and if we never put it to the test, that’s fine with me.

Contact

Heidi Hall, (615) 322-6614
Heidi.Hall@Vanderbilt.edu
On Twitter @VUEngineering