Luke Chandler Short, PhD, HCLD(ABB), serves as director of the Dallas County Public Health Laboratory, a CLIA-accredited facility supporting Dallas County and surrounding jurisdictions. With over 20 years of experience across public health, forensic science and clinical chemistry, Short has led laboratory programs through periods of rapid growth, emergency response and regulatory transformation.
Prior to his current role, he served as interim director and chief of chemistry at the Department of Forensic Sciences in Washington, DC, where he founded the city’s Forensic Chemistry Unit and led its accreditation efforts under ISO 17025. There, he became a subject matter expert in forensic and regulatory standards, while managing complex, multidisciplinary operations in toxicology and chemical threat response. His collaboration with law enforcement and public safety officials across DC, federal agencies and regional jurisdictions provided him with a deep understanding of interagency coordination and the operational needs of high-stakes environments.
Short also led the District’s syringe-residue biosurveillance initiative and chaired its Opioid Fatality Review Board—projects that integrated laboratory science with policy and community impact. In Dallas, he continues to build laboratory capacity in toxicology, molecular testing and data integration, including implementation of AI-assisted workflows and health information systems.
A Fulbright Scholar and Phi Beta Kappa inductee, Short earned his PhD in chemistry and dual bachelor’s degrees in chemistry and biology from the University of California, Irvine. He has authored numerous peer-reviewed publications and remains committed to strengthening the national laboratory system through innovation, workforce development and strategic alignment with emerging public health priorities.
For APHL, Short serves as board liaison to the Knowledge Management and Informatics Committees.