Digital Direct Infrared Inc.: Thermal Infrared Imaging

 

Digital Direct IR, Inc.’s management spoke to potential investors, scientists, professionals, and academics this morning about their firm and strategy.

Thermal Infrared Imaging has been used for many years and is an indispensable tool for Law Enforcement, First Responders and all aspects of the military, as well as industrial, medical, environmental, diagnostic and research uses. Presently the market for Thermal Imaging Cameras is over $ 30 billion annually and growing at over 5% CAGR /year. Digital Direct Infrared (D2IR) has developed a revolutionary way to broaden the spectrum available on lens, improve image quality and lower cost. The concept has been proved though sophisticated computer simulations.

Digital Direct IR, Inc.’s Dual-Spectrum Direct-to Digital IR imaging and companion Ultra-Wide-Spectrum optics (lenses) will be able to offer much lower cost, equal or better performance as well as many new capabilities to address the new needs of the military, security, medical, environmental and scientific worlds.

LAW241 Guest Speaker: Paul Simon from the EPA

 

Paul Simon is the Deputy Regional Counsel of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Region 2. In that capacity, he works closely with the Regional Counsel in the management and direction of the Office of Regional Counsel (ORC), an office of approximately 80 lawyers who provide legal support for Region 2’s implementation and enforcement of the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Solid Waste Disposal Act, the federal Superfund law, and a number of other federal environmental statutes. Paul helps to set priorities, strategies and goals for the office and provides guidance to and oversight of the office’s work units.

In 2011-2012, Paul did a stint as EPA Region 2’s senior policy advisor on climate change issues. In 2009, he served on a 4-month detail in EPA Headquarters as the Acting Deputy Director of the Office of Ground Water and Drinking Water.

Before becoming Deputy Regional Counsel in 2005, Paul was the Chief of ORC’s New York/Caribbean Superfund Branch, and as such, managed that branch’s judicial and administrative enforcement efforts concerning hundreds of Superfund sites in New York, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Paul joined EPA in 1985 as a staff attorney, and became a first-line supervisor in 1989. Before coming to EPA, Paul was a litigation attorney with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources.

Paul earned his law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School and his B.A. from Harvard University.