Kirt K. Parker Home: 225-***-****
**** **** ****** ****: 225-***-****
Sorrento, LA 70778-3001 Email: abh6nq@r.postjobfree.com
Associates,
Over my 28.6 years with ExxonMobil, I have performed the below seven major
assignments and many short-term projects. During these assignments, I have
performed various duties, such as project planning, customer relations,
meeting deadlines, working within a budget, purchasing equipment &
supplies, setting up new equipment & creating maintenance schedules,
creating quality control methods & reports, running various analytical
tests, writing test methods, writing reports & memos, maintaining inventory
tracking spreadsheets, making detailed excel spreadsheets for pilot plant
unit operation & material balance calculations, setting work schedules for
units and other Lab Technicians, along with project supervision.
1. In September of 1978, I accepted a position with ExxonMobil Process
Research Labs in their computer group as a computer operator and
programmer. I spent 2 years in this group, while attending Louisiana
State University at night, taking computer science courses.
2. For an immediate 37% pay raise, I transferred into the ExxonMobil
Special Laboratory Technician apprenticeship program in May of 1981.
This apprenticeship required 3 years of on the job training, along with 3
years of course study and testing on my own time. For the next 2 years
while in the apprenticeship program I worked for the Fuels Catalyst
Cracking group testing new catalysts and feeds in lab pilot plant units.
3. I then moved to the Analytical group, where I spent 4 years working in
the Gas Chromatography lab running samples, designing test, setting up
GC's and performing GC Maintenance. I was also acting supervisor of this
lab for the last 2 years, due to the regular supervisor being on special
assignment setting up equipment in the Mass Spectrometry lab.
4. When ExxonMobil's Baytown, Texas Research Lab was relocated in 1987, I
was selected to train in Texas and relocate a Synfuels lab to Baton
Rouge, Louisiana. I worked in the Synfuels group for the next 8 years
preparing noble metal compounds and catalyst. After which I screened the
catalyst with different feeds in autoclave's and lab hydrotreating units.
I designed ExxonMobil's fully automated MiniHydrotreater-2 unit, which
was built in 1992. This unit was the smallest and most advanced pilot
plant unit at that time, (could run 5 days and take samples daily without
attention).
5. When ExxonMobil's Baytown, Texas Specialty Products Lab was relocated in
1995, I was again
selected to train in Texas and relocate equipment, the Thermal Diffusion
unit and Mini-Dewaxer unit to Baton Rouge, Louisiana where I worked for
the next 2 years.
6. In January of 1997, I accepted a Distillation STAP position and
transferred to the Lubes Separations group. This assignment was a
"Special Technical Assistance Program" to troubleshoot problems at
ExxonMobil refineries around the world. In July of 1997, I was
additionally assigned responsibility for Propane Dewaxing STAP, which
included the B91 Propane Dewaxer unit and the Propane Mini-Filter unit
used on propane dewaxing STAP trips. In 1998, I was additionally
assigned Ketone Dewaxing STAP projects and trips. The STAP program was
phased out in 2001, due to cost cutting measures by ExxonMobil.
7. In July of 2001, I was assigned to the Fuels Catalyst Cracking group.
My primary assignment was working with ExxonMobil refineries around the
world for selection of new catalysts for their Fluid Catalyst Cracking
units. I worked with commercial catalyst vendors to select test
catalysts for the ExxonMobil refineries, deactivated these catalysts in a
Catalyst Metals Deactivation Unit and then tested the deactivated
catalysts on an Advanced Catalyst Evaluation Unit. After this was
complete a final report was published showing the ExxonMobil refinery
which catalyst would be best to load into their unit during the next
turnaround. The entire ExxonMobil Process Research Lab was shut down in
Baton Rouge, Louisiana and the units & equipment were relocated to
Clinton, New Jersey in 2007-2008, due to consolidation measures by
ExxonMobil. Note that all managers and only a few engineers were
relocated to Clinton, New Jersey in this move. No supervisors, unit
operators or laboratory technicians were offered a chance to relocate to
Clinton, New Jersey.
Kirt K. Parker's Resume
September 30, 2010
Section-1: Work Experience
Dates: May 2007 to Current
Job Title: Research Pilot Plant Unit Consultant
(Equipment, Instrumentation, Analytical & Software)
Clients: Albemarle-PDC (Baton Rouge, Louisiana)
BP-Research (Naperville, Illinois)
Intertek-PARC (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Duties: 1. Set up, Shake Down and Troubleshoot Research Pilot Plant
Units,
(ex: Advanced Catalyst Evaluation Model-R Unit designed by John
C. Kayser,
300 cc to 4 Liter Autoclaves made by Autoclave Engineers).
2. Set up, Shake Down and Troubleshoot associated Pilot Plant Unit
Equipment,
Instrumentation, Analytical Equipment & Software Problems,
(ex: GC's made by Agilent Technologies).
Equipment: 1. PC-Lab = Windows-XP, Excel, Word & PowerPoint.
2. PC-Unit = Windows, Labview & FIX/DMACS.
3. PC-GC = Windows, Agilent Cerity, HP ChemStation & SimDist.
. 4. ACE Model-R Units = made by Xytel or Zeton Corporation
(Designed by John C. Kayser).
5. Agilent-3000A Micro GC = Refinery Gas Analysis.
6. HP-5890 GC = SimDist ASTM D-2887 Analysis.
Salary: Billing rate of $50 per hour (Plus Travel Expenses).
Company: ExxonMobil Process Research Laboratories in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Dates: July 2001 to May 2007
Job Title: Senior Research Laboratory Technician / Supervisor
Fuels Technologist / EMPR Fuels Catalyst Cracking Group
Duties: 1. Supervise running of Fluidized Catalyst Cracking "Advanced
Catalyst Evaluation Model-R
Unit" at EMPR made by Xytel Corporation for Catalyst and Feed
Evaluations (2).
2. Run Fluidized Catalyst Cracking "Advanced Catalyst Evaluation
Model-R Unit"
at EMPR made by Xytel Corporation for Exploratory Research (1).
3. Run "Catalyst Metals Deactivation Unit" at EMPR for Refinery
Catalyst Testing
to determine the best catalyst for loading into ExxonMobil
Fluidized Catalyst
Cracking units worldwide.
4. Perform Gas Chromatograph analysis on both gas & liquid products
from above units.
5. Perform Metals Impregnation of Feed and Catalyst for ACE unit
evaluations.
6. Produce material balance reports, QC reports, maintenance reports,
project reports from unit data, using custom designed Excel
spreadsheets.
7. Troubleshoot problems with GC's, ACE units and various other pilot
plant units
for the Fuels Group at EMPR.
Equipment: 1. Pentium PC running Windows-XP, Excel, Word, PowerPoint &
Access (2).
2. Pentium PC running Windows-NT and FIX for ACE & CMDU Units (3).
3. Pentium PC running Windows-XP, HP Cerity or HP ChemStation for
"Gas" GC's (2).
. 4. Pentium PC running Windows-98, HP ChemStation & SimDist for
"TLP" GC's (2).
5. ACE Model-R Units by Xytel Corporation in EMPR Labs (3).
6. Catalyst Metals Deactivation Unit made by EMPR (1).
8. Agilent-3000A Micro Gas Chromatograph running "Refinery Gas
Analysis" (1).
9. HP-5890 Gas Chromatograph "Refinery Gas Analysis" (1) & SimDist
ASTM D-2887" (2).
11. Paar DMA-35 Density Meter (1).
12. Roto-Vaps for Catalyst Metals Impregnation's (2).
13. Furnaces for Catalyst Calcining (3).
Salary: Started at $4,238 per month, Ended at $5,472 per month.
Supervisors: Jerry S. Perrin, Jason B. English, Andrew C. Moreland
Company: ExxonMobil Process Research Laboratories in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Dates: January 1997 to July 2001
Job Title: Special Laboratory Technician / Pilot Plant Operator /
Supervisor on STAP Trips Worldwide
EMPR Lubes Separations Group (Dewaxing) / Lubes Special Technical
Assistance Program
Duties: 1. Ran propane dewaxing pilot plant unit made by IOL in Sarnia,
Canada at EMPR for testing
new dewaxing aids and feeds for use in ExxonMobil propane dewaxing
units worldwide.
2. Ran various analytical lab tests to support ExxonMobil refinery
lubes ketone and propane
dewaxing units worldwide while at EMPR and at ExxonMobil
refineries around the world.
Developed & constructed equipment for many in house Lab Tests used
in lubes dewaxing.
3. While on ketone STAP trips, set up & ran various analytical tests
from samples collected
on refinery ketone dewaxing units for troubleshooting and
optimization of refinery unit.
Unit and analytical data entered into customized Excel
spreadsheets for material balances,
charts and final ketone STAP trip report given to ExxonMobil
ketone dewaxing units
around the world for comparison and to increase profit margin.
4. While on propane STAP trips, set up & ran small pilot plant unit
tied into the refinery propane
dewaxing unit for troubleshooting and optimization of refinery
unit.
Unit and analytical data entered into customized Excel
spreadsheets for material balances,
charts and final propane STAP trip report given to ExxonMobil
propane dewaxing units
around the world for comparison and to increase profit margin.
Equipment: 01. Pentium PC running Windows-95, Excel, Word, PowerPoint,
Access-(2).
02. Propane Dewaxing pilot plant unit at EMPR (B91 = made at IOL in
Canada).
03. Propane Dewaxing Minifilter unit (MINIFILTER = for STAP trips, tied
into refinery unit).
04. Test = Cloud Point (ISL / Phase Tech / Wescan / Test Tube).
05. Test = Wax Appearance (Test Tube).
06. Test = Color Measurement (Minolta Colorimeter).
07. Test = Density (Paar Autodensitometer / ASTM D-4052).
08. Test = Dewaxed Oil Production (Buchner Filtration).
09. Test = Dewaxing with Solvent (Micro-Filter).
10. Test = Filtration Rate (LEAF Filtration).
11. Test = Liquid Flow Measurement (Panametrics PT868 Liquid
Flowmeter).
12. Test = Miscibility (Wescan / Test Tube).
13. Test = Noack Volatility.
14. Test = Oil Content of Wax (ASTM D-721 / D-3235 / UV).
15. Test = Pour Point (Hanovia / ISL / Phase Tech).
16. Test = Refractive Index (Bausch & Lomb / Index Instruments
GPR-11-37E).
17. Test = Vacuum Distillation.
18. Test = Water (Karl Fisher).
Salary: Started at $3,693 per month, ended at $4,238 per month.
Supervisor: Brent E. Beasley.
Company: ExxonMobil Process Research Laboratories in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Dates: September 1995 to January 1997
Job Title: Special Laboratory Technician / Professional Assistant / Pilot
Plant Operator
EMPR Lubes Base Stocks & Specialties Group
Duties: 1. Ran Thermal Diffusion units from Baytown, Texas at EMPR.
2. Ran Lubes Dewaxing equipment from Baytown, Texas at EMPR.
Equipment: 1. Pentium PC running Windows-95, Excel, Word, PowerPoint,
Access.
2. Thermal Diffusion Unit with 3 Thermal Diffusion Columns in
EMPR Lab-394.
3. Bench Top Lubes Dewaxing equipment in EMPR Lab-194.
4. Gas Chromatograph, Roto-Vaps, Vacuum Ovens, etc.
5. Troubleshoot problems with Thermal Diffusion Columns,
Dewaxing Unit and GC.
Salary: Started at $3,535 per month, ended at $3,693 per month.
Supervisor: Barry C. Deane.
Company: ExxonMobil Process Research Laboratories in Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Dates: May 1987 to September 1995
Job Title: Special Laboratory Technician / Professional Assistant / Pilot
Plant Operator
EMPR Alternate Fuels Group (Synfuels)
Duties: 1. Formulated new catalyst and noble metal impregnated catalyst.
2. Impregnated EMPR made catalyst & commercial made catalyst
with different metals and compounds
3. Performed catalyst studies on synthetic fuels such as coal oils,
shale oils and
tar sands with catalysts using an autoclave engineers autoclave
unit.
4. Performed catalyst studies on synthetic fuels such as coal oils,
shale oils and
tar sands with catalysts using EMPR fixed bed hydrotreating pilot
plant units.
5. Wrote and maintained nomad computer programs on mainframe computer
to generate QC reports and final reports of test results.
6. Troubleshoot problems with autoclave units, pilot plant units
and GC.
Equipment: 1. 486 PC running Windows-3.1, Excel and Word.
2. EMPR Mainframe Computer.
3. Autoclave Engineers 300 cc autoclave unit in EMPR Lab-194
(MMMCU).
4. Fixed bed dual train hydrotreating unit in EMPR Lab-194 (MHT-
2: designed).
5. Fixed bed single train hydrotreating unit in EMPR Lab-396 (MHT-
1).
6. Varian gas chromatograph.
7. Nitrogen atmosphere glove box.
8. Melting Point testing instrument.
9. Roto-Vaps, heated vacuum desiccators, centrifuges, vacuum
ovens, etc.
Salary: Started at $2,633 per month, ended at $3,535 per month.
Supervisor: Gopal H. Singhal & S. Mark Davis.
Company: ExxonMobil Process Research Laboratories in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana
Dates: March 1983 to May 1987
Job Title: Special Laboratory Technician / GC Specialist
EMPR Analytical Group (GC Lab)
Duties: 1. Mainframe Computer and Software.
2. Gas Chromatograph operator in the EMPR GC lab.
3. Performed new gas chromatograph installation in the EMPR GC Lab-
131.
4. Did design modification of GC's for special test in the EMPR GC
Lab-131.
5. Troubleshooter on all Gas chromatograph's for the entire EMPR
site.
6. Backup HP-1000 Systems Computer operator.
7. Backup Mass Spectrometer Type 21-103c operator.
Equipment: 1. GC = Carle series s, 8 metal packed columns, TCD (2).
Used for the determination of gases and light hydrocarbons.
2. GC = Hewlett Packard 5890, .25 mm fused silica columns, FID
(5).
Used for the determination of paraffins, olefins, and
aromatics.
And for the determination of light ends in naphtha.
3. GC = Hewlett Packard 5710a, autosampler, packed metal columns,
FID (3).
Used for the determination of a simulated distillation on
hydrocarbon samples.
4. GC = Perkin-Elmer sigma 2b, .25 mm fused silica columns, FID
(4).
Used for the determination of paraffins, olefins, and
aromatics.
5. GC = Perkin-Elmer sigma 2, .25 mm fused silica columns, FID
(1).
Used for the determination of saturates and olefins in
alkylation products.
6. GC = Perkin-Elmer 900, .25 mm fused silica columns, FID (1).
Used for the determination of saturates and olefins.
7. GC = Perkin-Elmer 900, packed metal columns, FID (1).
Used to quantify groups of polynuclear aromatics & related
high boiling materials.
8. GC = Perkin-Elmer 900, glass columns, FID (1).
Used for the determination of components found in petroleum
feeds & products.
9. GC = Perkin-Elmer 910, scot columns, FID (2).
Used for the determination of aromatic compounds in
powerformer products.
Salary: Started at $2,265 per month, ended at $2,633 per month.
Supervisor: Jerry S. Perrin.
Company: ExxonMobil Process Research Laboratories in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana
Dates: May 1981 to March 1983
Job Title: Special Laboratory Technician / Pilot Plant Operator
EMPR Fuels Catalyst Cracking Group
Duties: 1. Pilot Plant Studies of EMPR made catalyst and commercially made
catalyst
In a fluidized catalyst cracking pilot plant units for
determination of best
catalyst for ExxonMobil refinery FCC units.
2. Impregnation of EMPR made and commercially made catalyst
with metals and compounds.
3. Troubleshoot problems with fluidized catalyst cracking pilot
plant units.
Equipment: 1. Laboratory catalyst cracking pilot plant unit LCC-3 in EMPR S
building.
2. Laboratory catalyst cracking pilot plant unit LCC-4 in EMPR S
building.
Salary: started at $1,790 per month, ended at $2,265 per month.
Supervisor: Thomas H. Harry.
Company: ExxonMobil Process Research Laboratories in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana
Dates: September 1978 to May 1981
Job Title: Administrative Technician / Computer Operator / Computer
Programmer
EMPR Support Services Group (Computer Room)
Duties: 1. Computer operator from EMPR of the Houston, Texas Mainframe
computer.
2. Computer operator from EMPR of the Florham Park, New Jersey
Mainframe computer.
3. Ran payroll reports for the entire EMPR laboratory.
4. Ran all analytical laboratory reports.
5. Wrote, debugged and updated Fortran engineering unit programs.
6. Wrote, debugged and updated Cobol business report programs.
Equipment: 1. IBM (Communication Terminal-3777).
2. IBM (Card Reader 2502 / Printer-3203 / Card Punch-029).
3. IBM (Card Sorting Machine-083 / Reproducing Punch-519).
4. IBM (Plotter-1637 / Keypunch Machine / Electric Typewriter).
5. 3M (Microfiche Reader Printer-800).
Salary: Started at $830 per month, ended at $1,308 per month.
Supervisor: Alfred S. Guitrau.
Section-2: Education
Place: ExxonMobil Corporation + Louisiana Department of Labor
4045 Scenic Highway
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70805
Phone: 1-877-***-****
Course: Special Laboratory Technician Apprenticeship
Dates: 04/11/1981 to 04/11/1984
Training: Algebra, Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, and Physics courses
taken during employees
off time over a three year period + 2,600 hours of on the job
training in analytical tests,
pilot plant operation & maintenance and various equipment
operation & maintenance.
Place: Chroma-Skills & Agilent Technologies
Baton Rouge, Louisiana Richardson, Texas
Phone: 225-***-**** Phone: 1-800-***-****
Course: Intermediate, Advanced and Trouble Shooting for Gas
Chromatography.
HP ChemStation software course taught by Agilent Technologies.
Agilent Cerity software course taught by Bruce Phillips.
Dates: 07/1983, 04/1986, 02/2002, 06/2003, 01/2006
Training: Operation and routine maintenance of gas chromatographs,
different types
of injectors, detectors, columns, inserts and specialized
operation of gas
chromatographs. Optimum performance of GC's using new types of
columns,
injectors, detectors and different run conditions. Advanced
troubleshooting
on the entire gas chromatograph system including the gas
cylinders,
liquid nitrogen, tubing, gauges, injectors, columns, detectors,
computers.
Operation of HP ChemStation and Agilent Cerity software used to
operate
Gas Chromatographs.
Place: ExxonMobil Baton Rouge Area Training Organization
4045 Scenic Highway
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70805
Phone: 225-***-****
Course: Various Computer Programs
Dates: 09/1978 to 05/2007
Training: Windows-XP, Windows-NT, Windows-98, Windows-95, Windows-3.1,
FIX & TDC-3000 Computer Operating Systems.
Microsoft Software = Excel, Word, PowerPoint & Access Software.
Nomad Computer Programming Courses, (SPIDAR Databases).
Place: Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Phone: 225-***-****
Course: Computer Science
Dates: 01/1979 to 12/1980
Training: Fortran Computer Programming & Cobol Computer Programming
Courses.
Course Name Course Date Course Instructor &
Location
GC Cerity Data Analysis & Reporting 01/12-13/2006 Quality
Technical Services: Bruce Phillips
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
GC ChemStation Data Analysis & Reporting 05/20-22/2003 Agilent:
Charles Maldonado
Richardson, Texas
Laboratory & Pilot Plant Safety Course 04/10-12/2002 ExxonMobil:
Richard Palluzi
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Trouble Shooting for Gas Chromatography 02/07-08/2002 Chroma-Sills:
Linda Green
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Defensive Driving Course 08/12/2000 State of
Louisiana
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
ExxonMobil Dewaxing Workshop-2000 06/05-09/2000 ExxonMobil:
David Sinclair
League City, Texas
Pilot Plant Safety Course 11/05-06/1998 ExxonMobil:
Richard Palluzi
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Hydroprocessing Theory & Practice 12/1992 ExxonMobil:
Various Instructors
Florham Park, New Jersey
Advanced Heterogeneous Catalyst 11/1992 ExxonMobil:
Various Instructors
Florham Park, New Jersey
Catalysis Course 11/1990 ExxonMobil: Fuels
Group
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Investment in Excellence (I,II,III) 08/1988
ExxonMobil: Various Instructors
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Nomad For End Users 05/1988 ExxonMobil: Various
Instructors
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Advanced Gas Chromatography 04/10/1986 ExxonMobil: Ed
Green
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Intermediate Gas Chromatography 07/01/1983 ExxonMobil: Ed
Green
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Louisiana Lab Technician Apprenticeship 04/11/1981-04/11/1984
ExxonMobil & State of Louisiana
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Computer Science Courses 01/1979 to 12/1980 Louisiana State
University
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Industrial Blueprint Drafting 01/1977 to 04/1977 Baton
Rouge VoTech Institute
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Section-3: Awards
2005 Nomination (Individual Award for Safety, Base Business Support &
Improvement to EMPR):
The HTE program was designed to study model compound reactions in order to
tune SOL
inhibition parameters. The volume of work completed in a short time is the
least impressive
aspect of Kirt's contribution. Kirt focused on working safely and
efficiently -- assuming extra
responsibility without displacing regular work load and minimizing
overtime. Kirt's troubleshooting
around handling solid/waxy feeds and open communication with the group
helped to streamline
experiments at Symyx and maximize the chance of technical success.
Learnings from Kirt's work
will be incorporated into the design of the HTE equipment and increase the
value that the tool will
be able to deliver to multiple EMPR research groups.
2005 EMPR Peer Recognition Award (Presented to Kirt Parker):
"Outstanding accomplishment in Safety, Base Business Support and
Improvements to EMPR blending and analytical support for the Lubes/Diesel
Model compound studies."
2005 Nomination (Team Award for Base Business Support):
ACE data was obtained to determine whether or not a light, vaporizable feed
being considered for the
HTE project with Symyx would provide catalyst rankings that were consistent
with ranking using typical
FCC vacuum gas oil feeds. The experiment program compared a number of
catalysts some of which had fairly similar selectivity profiles. In order
to determine if the light feedstock influenced catalyst rankings,
very precise data was required to discern differences within the normal
data scatter of the unit. The exceptional data precision obtained allowed
an unambiguous conclusion to be made that the light feed would be suitable.
2005 EMPR Peer Recognition Award (Presented to Kirt Parker):
"Outstanding Accomplishment in Base Business Support through work in the
ACE Study in support of FCC HTE project with Symyx."
2002 Nomination (Individual Award for Safety & Innovation Improvements to
ACE Operations):
Kirt is recognized for his contributions to Safety and Innovation. Since
joining ACE lab last year,
Kirt has suggested and implemented many improvements to the way that the
units are run.
In the FCC exploratory program, he has dealt with non-routine situations as
almost routine.
He worked out ways for experiments to succeed, when in less skilled hands,
no data would
have been obtained. Kirt's innovations in the adaptation of a catalyst
screening unit to exploratory
work have been numerous. Several of his improvements have been implemented
in both the other
ACE units at EMPR as well as the two in Clinton. His improvements include
ways to handle gas
phase hydrocarbon feeds, miniscule amounts of expensive model compounds as
feeds, products
that solidify in the collection lines and experiments that caused coke to
"go where coke had never
gone before". None of these things had ever been done in the ACE unit
before and were not part
of his training on the unit. In addition to all this, he has improved the
lab operations from a safety
standpoint including new catalyst handling procedures to minimize
particulates, methods to minimize
fumes from calcination of fresh and spent catalysts.
2002 EMPR Peer Recognition Award (Presented to Kirt Parker):
"Outstanding safety and innovation accomplishments by improvements to the
ACE Exploratory Operations"
1998 EMPR Lubes & Specialties Milestone Award (Presented to Kirt Parker):
"In recognition of a new
minifilter dewaxing record set during the 1998 Baytown PDU STAP dewaxing
trip. The 205 dewaxings completed with excellent repeatability during the
6.5 week period shattered the previous record of 110. In addition, your
ability to repair and maintain the unit while continuing to generate
critical data in a well organized manner helped ensure the success of this
trip."
1997 EMPR Lubes & Specialties Milestone Award (Presented to Kirt Parker):
"In recognition of your
significant contributions to the ER&E Dewaxing STAP Team during the 1997
STAP visits to the Baytown Refinery."
1996 EMPR Lubes & Specialties Milestone Award (Presented to Kirt Parker):
"For his persistence in
successfully and safely transferring Thermal Diffusion and the Lab Mini-
Dewaxer to EMPR, and for taking a lead role on the operations of the EMPR
Lab Mini-Hydrofiner."
Section-4: Personal Data
Name: Kirt Kelvin Parker Birth Date: July 24, 1958
Sex: Male Race: Caucasian
Home Phone: 225-***-**** Marital Status: Married
Cell Phone:: 225-***-**** Home Address: 8474 Main Street
Email Address: abh6nq@r.postjobfree.com
Sorrento, LA 70778
Section-5: References
Name: Jason B. English, PHD Chemist
Company: BP Chemicals
Address: 28100 Torch Park Way
Warrenville, ILL 60555
Work Phone: 877-***-****, Ex=4472 or 630-***-****
Name: Andrew C. Moreland, PHD Chemist
Company: Albemarle Corporation
Address: 1991 Kingston Cv
League City, TX 77573
Work Phone: 281-***-****
Name: Brent E. Beasley, Senior Engineering Associate
Company: ExxonMobil Research and Engineering
Address: 3225 Gallows Road
Fairfax, VA 22037
Work Phone: 703-***-**** or 908-***-****
Name: Jerry S. Perrin, Supervisor
Company: ExxonMobil Global Services Company (Global Real Estate and
Facilities)
Address: 3545 Scenic Highway
Baton Rouge, LA 70805
Work Phone: 225-***-**** or 225-***-****