Gayle Tejada is Vice-President — Wealth Management for a local brokerage office in La Jolla. She served on the La Jolla Town Council's (LJTC) Executive Board and served on the City of San Diego Coastal Area Committee Board. Ms. Tejada chaired LJTC's Parks and Beaches Committee, and was a member of San Diego County's Board of Planning and Zoning Appeals. She was involved in the planning process for the La Jolla Design Charrette and La Jolla Coastline Workshop - workshops that focused on future planning for La Jolla business district and coastline. The La Jolla Coastline Workshop culminated in the La Jolla Coastline Preliminary Plan (LJCCP) which was endorsed by the community and the City. She served as Co-Chair of the LJTC Coastal Review Committee. This committee was responsible for the oversight of the City of San Diego's coastline improvements on the La Jolla Coastline, per the LJCPP and helped raise funds to match City funds to implement improvements along the La Jolla Coastline. Ms. Tejada has been active in the San Diego community as a board member, committee member and supporter of both cultural and charitable philanthropic causes. They include The Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary, La Jolla Guild/San Diego Opera, La Jolla Playhouse, and the Girl Scouts.
John Redlinger is a former La Jolla lifeguard and resident of San Diego. His architectural thesis at Cal Poly focused on the planning of Girard Avenue. He worked on a variety of local preservation issues in the 1970's including the Tyrolean Terrace and Green Dragon Colony. Since that time he has been the construction manager for a number of Sea World projects around the country and also been responsible for providing budget estimates for theses projects. He is a registered architect in California and numerous other states. He recently moved back to California and is once again concerned about the La Jolla coastline and related issues.
Ray Weiss is Distinguished Professor of Geochemistry and Associate Dean at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, where he teaches and conducts research on physical, chemical and biological processes in the global atmosphere, oceans and lakes using chemical tracers. He has authored or co-authored over 130 peer-reviewed research papers published in the international scientific literature. His research focuses on the fates of man-made emissions in the atmosphere, especially the compounds responsible for depletion of the ozone layer and global warming, on the cleansing capacity of the atmosphere, on the exchange of substances between the oceans and the atmosphere, and on the circulation and mixing of deep oceans and deep lakes. He has served on numerous national and international advisory and review committees and editorial boards, and has participated in 24 major oceanographic or limnological expeditions around the world. As Associate Dean he oversees the academic review process for the appointment and advancement of a distinguished faculty and research staff of more than 200 individuals. He is an elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Geophysical Union, and a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Geophysical Union, The Oceanography Society, and The Geochemical Society. His community service activities have included: Board Member, La Jolla Conservancy; Trustee, La Jolla Town Council; Member, La Jolla Parking Advisory Board; Member, La Jolla Coastal Access and Parking Board; and Member and Bylaws Committee Member, La Jolla Community Planning Association.
David Raphael Singer is an architect who has received awards for his residential, commercial, & non-profit institutional projects. His work has been exhibited and he has lectured and taught architecture. He is interested in planning principles which recognize and give value to the natural and built characteristics of a site and strives to find an appropriate balance between his client's need and the community's goals. Singer was a board member of the Mingei International Museum of Folk Art, Installation Gallery / inSite 93 & 97, which worked to foster better understanding of San Diego - Tijuana border issues and a member of the Public Art Committee for the San Diego Commission of Arts and Culture. He served as Co-Chair of the LJTC Park & Beaches Committee and helped organize the La Jolla Design Charrette which focused on Guidelines for Public Spaces; the La Jolla Coastline Workshop which focused on Guidelines for Shoreline Preservation and Enhancement and resulted in the La Preliminary Plan for the La Jolla Coastline; and was involved in the Downtown La Jolla Master Plan & Streetscape Design Guidelines.
Steve Haskins is an attorney specializing in real estate, finance and business law matters, and is also a licensed California Real Estate Broker. Steve graduated from the University of California, San Diego, in 1985, studied at the Chateau Laval French Language School in Antibes, France, and went on to graduate from University of California Hastings College of the Law in 1989. Steve worked as an associate with the San Francisco firm of Bronson, Bronson & McKinnon and later with San Diego's Nugent & Newnham before founding Haskins & Associates APC with his sister Elena in 1995.
Elected as a City Councilman for the City of Imperial Beach in 1992, Steve became Deputy Mayor in 1995. He also served as a Director of the Metropolitan Transit Development Board (MTDB) of San Diego from 1992 to 1994, a Director of the Metropolitan Wastewater Authority from 1994 to 1995, and as a Member of the Assessment Appeals Board for San Diego County from 1997 to 1999. Steve was elected as a Trustee of the La Jolla Town Council in March 2003 and served four terms as Treasurer of the organization.
Tony is the principal of his own architectural firm in La Jolla, California. Tony has over 30 years experience as a volunteer and professionally, in the field of historic preservation and the conservation of natural resources.
Eric Korevaar lives with his family along the La Jolla coastline. He attended Scripps Elementary School, Muirlands Junior High School, and La Jolla High School before getting a bachelors degree in physics from Caltech and a Ph.D. in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering from Princeton. He moved back to La Jolla after selling AstroTerra Corporation, a laser communications company which he founded. Eric is currently the president of The Science Artist in La Jolla. He also serves on the Board of Summer Science Program, Inc. (a nonprofit educational organization) and is on the La Jolla Elementary School Site Council.