“It’s a deeply sacred space and an honor to be working with Nations around their water.
It’s not purely technical.” Robin Heavens, SVS Water Resources Engineer
SVS has been growing our team of professionals who work with water – engineers, environmental chemists, and water resource scientists. Organically and gradually over time, our team of water specialists has formed into a powerhouse of technical expertise that is deeply grounded in Indigenous ways of knowing. We’re thrilled to announce that the all-female team is also led by Indigenous women. Read on to get to know the team and their unique approach with Nations across Turtle Island.
The connection between women and water is central to the team’s approach. “It’s a deeply sacred space and an honor to be working with Nations around water,” says Robin Heavens, a water resources engineer on the team whose family roots extend to Fisher River Cree Nation in Manitoba. “It's never purely technical. And it's really inspiring to see our clients’ connection with waters and how they have the purest of intentions towards protection and conservation. Water has a real spirituality to it and anytime you're around water, there's a feeling that comes with that.”
Alison Gamble leads the wider environmental science team at SVS, as well as being a core member of the water team. A passionate champion of community-led project design and the two-eyed seeing approach, Alison embodies the confluence of world views. “I like thinking about the water chemistry, and how amazing the interactions are at a molecular level within the water,” Alison says. “In addition to working for our clients, there’s also an opportunity to advance and learn within my own cultural journey as a Métis woman, and to connect in a different way — to have that space to learn from elders and sit with information in a different way.”
The team takes pride in offering a unique experience for clients that is rooted in respect and reverence for water. “When we work directly with a Nation, there is a deep understanding and respect of treating water like it is alive and it has a spirit”, Robin observes. The water team upholds the SVS values of strong relationships, innovative excellence, prioritizing healthy lands and waters, and freedom for all Indigenous Nations to choose their self-determined path. We want to work closely with our clients, to better understand their unique circumstances and move forward together.
Hannah May, the team’s water resources scientist agrees. “Water really grounds me, and it is that connection not just to the land, but also to the people that matters.” The interconnectedness of water, people and Spirit permeates the context of all of the team’s work. The team prioritizes being on the land and co-creating projects with our clients.
Tamarra Lewis, a water resources engineer on the team, is passionate about her learning journey and sees client relationships as reciprocal. “I’m continuously learning from our clients, they’ve taught me to appreciate the water, land, and people as one entity. If you're working with the protection of water, it means you are protecting the people as well - they’re one and the same.”
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All four women chose their career paths because of their resonance with the water and the natural world as a whole — even if that choice was not initially obvious.
Alison’s Journey:
After Alison graduated with a chemistry degree, she knew she didn’t want to spend the rest of her career inside a lab but was uncertain of her next steps, so she went home to Dryden, Ontario to reevaluate her career options.
To learn more, find Alison’s biography here.
Robin’s Journey:
Robin’s path also pulled her outside – literally. “I excelled at science and math, and I had a lot of high school teachers and my dad pushing me towards engineering but I thought, gosh, all I like doing is being outside!,” says Robin. After completing a degree in civil engineering, the pull towards the environment only increased, as did Robin’s desire to make a difference in the world.
“I was really lucky to get bursaries through Indspire, and did my masters in environmental fluid mechanics, which is basically like contaminant hydrology. All of the processes - the hydrologic processes and the chemical ones and the water physics and chemistry, all mixed together and interacting in real time through rivers into groundwater. It's just so interesting,” says Robin.
To learn more, check out Robin’s biography here.
Hannahs’ Journey:
Hannah decided to pursue a degree in engineering after returning from a summer living and working in the remote bush of the North. “When living in the bush, we worked in harmony with nature. When I came back to the city, all I could see around me was that which is not natural. It became increasingly obvious to me that the world we live in is designed, and that means it can be changed.” She believed that learning about how the world around her was made would give her the keys to understanding systemic problems. “I thought that a degree in environmental engineering would help me understand the root cause of environmental issues and give me the tools to think of more environmentally and socially just solutions for the future.” She acknowledges that “science and technology alone cannot solve much of the problems we face today and there is a need to prioritize interdisciplinary work and the collaboration of knowledge systems.”
A few years into her career her connection to the water makes more and more sense each day. “The Great Lakes are my home. I grew up fishing in Long Point Bay of Lake Erie and exploring the shores of Lake Huron. I always lived by major rivers, like the Thames and the Grand. The water has always been the place I go to clear my head.” Her father’s Haudenosaunee heritage from Six Nations in Ontario and mother’s hometown of Long Point, further deepens her reverence for the Great Lakes and connection to water.
To learn more about Hannah’s journey, find her biography here.
Tamarra’s Journey:
Tamarra’s recent pursuits include a Master’s of Conservation Leadership at the University of Guelph. “There is a learning-on-the-land component to this program, which provides further connection to the land and how that connection is vital to conservation efforts in Canada,” says Tamarra, who is completing the program this spring.
To learn more, find Tamarra’s biography here.
Now that you have a feel for this unique and wonderful team, do get in touch — they would love to get to know you!