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MOST INFLUENTIAL HISPANICS IN TECHNOLOGY


Thomas G. Searle President


CH2M HILL Canada


Thomas Searle was appoint- ed to his current position in the full-service engineering, construction and opera- tions firm in January 2011. He is deeply experienced in markets around the globe, including overseeing exten- sive international work in his prior role as president of the Water Business Group. These included program manage- ment for a $2.1 billion water and wastewater system improvement in Puerto Rico, design-build of several water and wastewater treatment plants in New Zealand, and aiding with tsunami recov- ery efforts in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka.


Cesar A. Beltran Vice President Information Technology–East Region Time Warner Cable


Cesar Beltran took on his new regional vice president’s position in January 2011. Previously, he served as senior vice president, Information Technol- ogy, Time Warner Cable–NYC Region for more than 15 years. Prior, he was a director of data processing at BDR Busi- ness Machines from 1980 to 1986. Mr. Beltran graduated from the Fundación Universidad de Bogotá ‘JorgeTadeo Lo- zano’ in 1980 with a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering. He earned a master’s degree in management infor- mation systems from City University of New York in 1988 and a Bachelor of Sci- ence (cum laude) in information systems in 2000 from New York University. Mr. Beltran has been instrumental in intro- ducing technologies to the New York market and recently conceptualized and implemented a virtual customer service expert system that helps customers resolve technical problems via speech. He is associated with the HITEC (His- panic IT Executive Council), The Global CIO & Executive IT Group, the American Institute of Cancer Research as well as the Christian Children’s Fund, where he helps needy children around the world.


www.hispanicengineer.com


Antonio M. Perez Chairman & Chief Executive Officer Eastman Kodak Company


Since joining the company in April 2003, Mr. Perez has led the worldwide transforma- tion of Kodak from a business based on film to one based primarily on digital tech- nologies. In the past seven years, Kodak introduced an array of new digital tech- nologies and products for consumer and commercial applications that generated approximately $5.5 billion in revenue in 2010. These ap- plications include consumer inkjet printers, pocket video cameras, sensors for digital products, and dry labs for printing at retail, as well as offset-class commercial inkjet presses, high-volume digital production presses, digital controllers, workflow soft-


ware solutions, and digital plates for commercial printing and packaging. The result is a new Kodak—a company where digital products account for 75 percent of rev- enue, where higher gross margin commercial businesses account for more than 50 percent of revenue, and with a portfolio of cash-generating traditional businesses.


HISPANIC ENGINEER & Information Technology | 2011 21


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