Dr. Buckner graduated from the A.T. Still University of Health Sciences/ Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine in 2006. He works in Marshfield, MO and specializes in Family Medicine.
1040 W Washington St, Marshfield, MO 65706 199 Johnstown Dr, Rogersville, MO 65742
Education:
Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine - Doctor of Osteopathy Scottsdale Healthcare-Osborn - Residency - Family Medicine Scottsdale Healthcare-Osborn - Internship - Family Medicine
Board certifications:
American Board of Family Medicine Certification in Family Medicine
Collection Law Financial Institution Failures Directors, Officers and Professional Liability Products Liability Asbestos Litigation General Civil and Commercial Litigation
Toth and Associates, Inc.
Project Engineer
Power Division Kenny Construction A Granite Company
Project Executive
Kenny Construction Company Aug 2011 - Dec 2012
Project Manager
Kenny Construction Company Jun 2008 - Jul 2011
Purchasing Manager
Sho-Me Power 1997 - 2008
Transmission Engineer
Education:
Missouri University of Science and Technology 2004 - 2007
Masters, Master of Engineering, Management, Engineering
Missouri University of Science and Technology 1997 - 2002
Bachelors, Civil Engineering
Skills:
Construction Construction Management Engineering Energy Contract Management Power Generation Project Planning Management Analysis Procurement Commissioning Contract Negotiation Purchasing Negotiation Inspection Project Control Ms Project Primavera P6 Project Estimation Contractors Cost Control Value Engineering Process Scheduler Epc Cpm Scheduling Subcontracting Project Engineering Materials Change Orders Construction Safety Civil Engineering Electricians Concrete Cost Management Cost Engineering Autocad Supervisory Skills Power Plants Project Bidding Earned Value Management Power Distribution Pre Construction Project Coordination Electric Power Substation Design Build Electricity
But the practice of recalling judges older than 70 is being challenged by James Buckner, an appellant with a case before the state Supreme Court, and depending on how the justices rule, the vacancy problem could grow much worse.