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Our Team
Executive
Officers
John Ullman
President
Chung Kim Vice
President Rebekah Heckmann Secretary
Board of Directors
John Ullman
Chair Jed Fahey, Sc.D.
Johns Hopkins University
Russell Hayden Harvard
University
Julie Newman, Ph.D.
Yale University
Paul Reillo,
Ph.D. Rare Species Conservatory
Foundation
Joseph
Sempolinski Yale University
Advisory Board
Rocky Anderson Former Mayor, Salt Lake City,
Utah
David Barclay Northeast
Sustainable Energy Association
David Beschen GreenDisk, Inc.
Judy Braus National Audubon Society
Stuart Buckner, Ph.D. US
Composting Council
William Chameides, Ph.D. Duke University
Leila Conners Tree Media Group
Ann Elsen Elsen Energy Associates
Suzy Friedman Environmental Defense Fund
Carol Goodstein Rainforest Alliance
Merrilee Harrigan Alliance to Save Energy
Elenor Hodges Arlingtonians for a
Clean Environment
Roland Hwang Natural Resources Defense Council
Timothy Juliani Pew Center on Global Climate Change
Joseph Keyser GreenMan Communications
Sharon Krag, Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University
Jennifer Krill Rainforest Action Network
Kerry Krumsiek Carolina Recycling
Association
Michael Mann, Ph.D. Pennsylvania State University Bruce Marsh, Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University
Pauline Martinson I Love A
Clean San Diego
David Mizejewski National Wildlife Federation and
Animal Planet
William Moomaw, Ph.D. Tufts University
Julie Muir California Resource Recovery Association
Martin Ogle Northern Virginia
Regional Park Authority
Leana Pitkevits Johns Hopkins University
Charles Redman, Ph.D. Arizona State University
Capt Philip Renaud, USN(ret) Living Oceans Foundation
Celeste Royer California Regional
Environmental Education Community
Stephen Schneider, Ph.D. Stanford
University
Gary Skulnik Clean Currents, LLC
Stephanie Smith Alliance For The Great Lakes
Betsy Taylor 1Sky
Ellen Telander Recycling
Association of Minnesota
Cynthia Thomashow Center for
Environmental Education
Jennifer Thorne Amann American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy
Marcel Van Ooyen Council on the
Environment of New York City
David Van't Hof Sustainability Advisor to Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski
Polly Walker, M.D. Johns Hopkins University
Darryn Waugh, Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University
Lance Webster Earth
Communications Office
Michele Weingarden
Greenprint Denver
* Directors and advisors serve as individuals,
organizations are listed for identification purposes
only.
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Executive Officers
John Ullman is the
founder and president of OurEarth.org. John earned
his B.S. in Molecular and Cellular Biology at The Johns
Hopkins University in Baltimore, M.D. John is
currently enrolled in Duke University's Master of
Environmental Management program.
Chung Kim is the vice
president of OurEarth.org. Chung graduated from
Johns Hopkins University in 2005 and she is currently
pursuing education in alternative medicines.
Rebekah Heckmann
serves as the secretary for OurEarth.org. Rebekah
completed undergraduate work in public health and
Latin-American studies at Johns Hopkins University and
received her MPH from Columbia University's Mailman
School of Public Health. Currently enrolled as a
first-year student at the University of Minnesota
Medical School, Rebekah also works as a grant program
associate for the At-Risk Populations Project at the
Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP).
After completing her medical education, Rebekah plans to
become a physician who practices public health and
contributes to the future of health policy as a means of
providing comprehensive patient care.
This summer, Rebekah is thrilled to be working with
Fundación Cimas del Ecuador (CIMAS), a not-for-profit
organization that is committed to the study of Ecuador's
environment, health, and development. While in Ecuador,
Rebekah will engage in community-based participatory
research activities, collaborating with the residents of
Pedro Moncayo County to identify the health need
priorities of that community. Ideally, the outcome of
her research will aid CIMAS and other local
organizations as they seek to achieve sustainable
community-based health promotion activities. Upon her
return to Minnesota, Rebekah plans to collaborate with
Dr. Suárez-Torres (CIMAS) and various professors at the
University of Minnesota to publish the information that
she collects with the hope that it will provide the data
needed to address health disparities in Ecuador.
Additionally, her project will contribute to the
development of a joint educational initiative supported
by the University of Minnesota Medical School and School
of Public Health that is designed to train physicians
and health care professionals who are competent to
address international health disparities.
Board of Directors
Dr. Jed W. Fahey
M.S., Sc.D. is a Faculty Research Associate in
the Department of Pharmacology, Laboratory of Molecular
Pharmacology at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine. He is also a plant physiologist who manages
Johns Hopkins University's Brassica Chemoprotection
Laboratory, where he has been involved in developing
cruciferous plants as chemoprotective agents.
Dr. Fahey has been an invited lecturer of various
classes at the University of Maryland, Texas A&M
University, University of Maryland School of Medicine
and Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. He also has
been an invited speaker at numerous international
academic and business symposia including Seed Technology
Workshops, International Horticultural Society Symposia,
the International Symposium on Brassicas, the
Moet-Hennessey Colloquium on Advanced Technology & Plant
Breeding Strategy and the CNRS Antioxidant and Health
Symposium. Dr. Fahey graduated from Johns Hopkins
University in 1975 and then earned a Master of Science
degree in botany from the University of Maryland, and a
doctorate in human nutrition from the Johns Hopkins
University School of Public Health.
Russell Hayden is a
student at Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Julie Newman
is the Director of the Office of Sustainability at Yale
University. Before becoming Yale’s first sustainability
director, Julie assisted with the development of the
Office of Sustainability Programs (OSP) at the
University of New Hampshire. Prior to her work with the
OSP she worked for University Leaders for a Sustainable
Future (ULSF) while a graduate student at Tufts
University. Julie’s fifteen years of experience in the
field of sustainable development from community based
experience overseas to university campuses has enabled
her to build bridges with students, staff, faculty and
administrators to facilitate the vision of a sustainable
campus for Yale. Julie also holds a lecturer appointment
with the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies.
In 2004 Julie co-founded the Northeast Campus
Sustainability Consortium, to advance education and
action for sustainable development on university
campuses in the northeast and maritime region. Julie
also co-coordinates a sustainability working group of
the International Alliance of Research Universities. In
addition, Julie is a co-editor of the new
Sustainability: Journal of Record. Her research has
focused on the role of decision-making processes and
organizational behavior in institutionalizing
sustainability into higher education.
Julie’s introduction to sustainable development was as
an undergraduate student at the University of Michigan
while working on water quality issues in inner-city
Detroit and later in Kenya, Zimbabwe, Egypt, Israel and
Australia. She pursued her interest in this field by
working as an environmental management volunteer with
the Peace Corps in Guatemala. Since her return from
Guatemala she has had the opportunity to work with
colleagues around the world on issues of sustainability
and institutional change.
Julie holds a BS in Natural Resource Policy and
Management from the University of Michigan; an MS in
Environmental Policy and Biology from Tufts University;
and a Ph.D. in Natural Resources and Environmental
Studies from the University of New Hampshire.
Dr. Paul Reillo is
founding director of the Rare Species Conservatory
Foundation, a publicly supported 501(c)(3) wildlife
conservation organization based in Loxahatchee, Florida.
With a background in environmental engineering (B.A.,
Johns Hopkins) and ecological genetics (Ph.D.,
University of Maryland), Reillo has spent many years as
a field-oriented research zoologist. Early in his career
he traveled the world studying the genetics of
terrestrial invertebrates and the role of natural
selection in the evolution of color patterns and mating
systems. Today he focuses on the demography and genetics
of small populations of endangered wildlife, and
develops restoration strategies for flagship species.
When asked why he abandoned academic research to pursue
a career in wildlife conservation, he replied, “I simply
couldn’t continue esoteric, academic research on
individual species, while all around me the forests and
ecosystems they depended upon were vanishing.”
Over the past 17 years, Reillo and colleagues at the
Rare Species Conservation have taken a practical,
hands-on approach to biodiversity conservation,
concentrating on endangered species that effectively
leverage preservation of biodiversity-rich, tropical
ecosystems. A dedicated and tireless conservation
advocate, Reillo leads an atypical organization. Known
for being “lean and mean”, Reillo’s team manages to
accomplish what many larger conservation organizations
cannot—real-time conservation solutions for habitats and
species in peril.
Joseph Sempolinski is a
political science Ph.D. candidate at Yale University.
Advisory Board
Rocky Anderson served as the mayor of Salt Lake City,
Utah from 2000-2008.
David Barclay is
the Executive Director of NESEA, the Northeast
Sustainable Energy Association. NESEA advances the
adoption and practical application of sustainable and
low carbon energy practices in a 10-state region from
Maine to Pennsylvania. Barclay has held management
positions in the construction and manufacturing
industries. He is the former president and national
sales manager of a home furnishing company that he
founded. His 10-year public sector service includes
working as the senior aide to a state legislative leader
and several high-level executive branch positions
including transportation and economic development. He
has a BS in Journalism and a Masters Degree in Public
Administration from the University of Kansas.
David Beschen is
the president of GreenDisk, Inc., an electronics
recycling company based in Sammamish, Washington.
Judy Braus has been
actively involved in national and international
environmental education efforts for more than
twenty-five years. As the Vice President of Education
and Centers for the National Audubon Center, she
oversees the educational activities of a diverse and
active network, working with more than 50 education
centers, 480 Audubon Chapters, 24 state programs, and
BirdLife International, with more than 10 million
supporters internationally. Before coming to Audubon,
she was Director of Education for World Wildlife Fund-US
(WWF), where she managed a variety education
initiatives, including Windows on the Wild—a
biodiversity education program; the Russell Train
Education for Nature Program—an international
scholarship, fellowship, and capacity-building program;
a national Biodiversity Traveling Exhibition Program
supported by the National Science Foundation; and WWF’s
Community Outreach Program. Ms. Braus also provided
technical assistance to WWF’s regional programs
throughout the world.
Prior to WWF, Ms. Braus coordinated Peace Corps'
environmental education activities and conducted
workshops, assessments, evaluations, and programming
activities in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the South
Pacific, and Eastern Europe. Ms. Braus was also the
Director of School Programs at the National Wildlife
Federation (NWF) and the editor of NatureScope—an
award-winning, environmental education activity series
for educators. She was also a senior editor on Ranger
Rick—NWF's children's magazine, and the director of
Wildlife Week—a national environmental education program
reaching more than 500,000 educators annually.
Ms. Braus served on the Board of the North American
Association for Environmental Education (NAAEE), the
largest professional organization for Environmental
Educators, for more than 10 years and was president in
1999 and conference chair in 1995. She also serves on
the national education steering committee of Project
Learning Tree, the Board of Trustees for the American
Forest Foundation, the Board for the Northern Virginia
Regional Park Authority, the Emerging Wildlife
Conservation Leaders, and a variety of other advisory
groups. Ms. Braus has edited many educational
publications, written several children's books,
co-authored an environmental science textbook, and
co-authored a book for educators titled:
Environmental Education in the Schools: Creating a
Program That Works! She has also been a keynote
speaker and presenter at a variety of state, national,
and international conferences.
Stuart C. Buckner,
Ph.D. serves as the Executive Director of the
U.S. Composting Council, a national nonprofit
organization dedicated to the development and expansion
of the composting industry through research and
education. Dr. Buckner has also served as President of
the US Composting Council, as an advisor to the Japan
Organics Recycling Association and the Environmentally
Biodegradable Polymer Association (EBPA) of Taiwan, as a
consultant for the US Grains Council, California
Integrated Waste Management Board, Alameda County Waste
Management Authority, as well as many private clients.
Dr. Buckner is also the
president of Buckner Environmental Associates, a
consulting firm which provides environmental consulting
services specializing in composting and natural
resources management. Work has been done in all areas of
compost program development and implementation including
planning, permitting, facility and systems design,
procurement, operations management and product
marketing. Research efforts have focused on process
management, odor control, and composting system design
and development.
Dr. William Chameides
is the dean of Duke University's Nicholas School of the
Environment. Before joining the Duke faculty in 2007,
Chameides was Chief Scientist at Environmental Defense
and before that Regents Professor and Smithgall Chair at
the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is a member of
the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, a Fellow of the
American Geophysical Union, a recipient of the American
Geophysical Union’s Macelwane Award, and, “in
recognition of extraordinary service,” was named a
National Associate of the National Academies.
Chameides’ research
focuses on the atmospheric sciences; elucidating the
causes of and remedies for global, regional, and urban
environmental change and identifying pathways towards a
more sustainable future. His work helped lay the
groundwork for our understanding of the photochemistry
of the lower atmosphere, elucidated the importance of
nitrogen oxides emission controls in the mitigation of
urban and regional photochemical smog, and the impact of
regional air pollution on global food production. He has
authored or co-authored more than 130 scientific
publications, and 6 books, and blogs at TheGreenGrok (www.TheGreenGrok.com/
) and the Huffington Post ( www.huffingtonpost.com/bill-chameides/
).
Chameides’ past
professional activities include serving as: Editor of
the Journal of Geophysical Research; Chief Scientist for
the Southern Oxidants Study, a research program focused
on understanding the causes and remedies for air
pollution in the Southern United States; U.S.A. Study
Director of CHINA-MAP, an international research program
studying the effects of environmental change on
agriculture in China; Chair of the National Research
Council’s Committee of Air Quality Management in the
United States, commissioned by the United States’
Congress to evaluate the effectiveness of the Clean Air
Act; and Technical Advisor for the Ad Council’s Fight
Global Warming campaign involving the production of
television and radio public service announcements on the
need for personal actions to help avert the dangerous
consequences of climate change.
Leila Conners is the
president and co-founder of Tree Media Group. With
a background in international politics, Leila set out to
build a production company that creates media to support
and sustain civil society. Tree creates the space for
emergent and visionary ideas that then express
themselves in various media: from film, to television
and print. Leila is currently creating an think tank
called Sphere of the World and is set to direct her next
film on consciousness called Into Eden.
Most recently Leila directed, wrote and produced a
feature-length documentary, The 11th Hour, with Leonardo
DiCaprio and 54 leading thinkers and scientists about
the state of the world and the state of the human
condition. She has written 2 short films with Leonardo
DiCaprio on the environment called Global Warning and
Water Planet and a feature film script for Ridley
Scott’s Scott Free Productions on the state of the
oceans. Leila has also been published in newspapers and
magazines around the world including the International
Herald Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Yomiuri Shimbun and
Wired Magazine among others. Her article on Death and
American Culture was published in War, Media and
Propaganda, published by Rowman and Littlefield. Prior
to Tree Media, Leila was Associate Editor of New
Perspectives Quarterly, an international journal of
social and political thought, and Associate Editor of
Global Viewpoint of the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, an
internationally distributed op-ed column that reaches
200 papers.
In 1991, Leila translated Jacques Attali's book from the
French for Random House entitled, Millennium. Leila is a
life member of the Council on Foreign Relations. She is
also a member of the Pacific Council on International
Policy and is a member of the Writers Guild of America (WGAW).
Leila serves on the Board of Global Green USA and the
Entertainment Board for One Voice, a middle east peace
project. Leila is often invited to speak on issues of
sustainability and the environment and has served on
panels nationally and internationally. Leila lives in
Santa Monica with her son Aidan Michael.
Ann Elsen has 23
years experience in energy policy formulation and the
design and implementation of energy programs that
improve environmental performance in all sectors of the
economy. She specializes in work with local governments
and communities to provide advocacy at the state and
federal level, and to build sustainability initiatives
that incorporate the interests of all stakeholders.
Prior to founding Elsen Energy Associates, Ms. Elsen led
state and local government efforts to develop and
implement energy policy and climate protection policy,
incentive programs, public/private partnerships and
energy purchases. She has been an active participant in
legislative and regulatory proceedings on electric
utility deregulation, including comments and testimony
on renewable portfolio standards, environmental
disclosure, tracking of generation attributes, consumer
education and consumer protection. She has also provided
direct technical assistance to industrial and commercial
energy end users on environmental compliance, energy
purchasing, energy efficiency, best practices in
renewable energy, and emissions markets.
Suzy Friedmann is
a Project Manager, Agricultural Projects, for the Center
for Conservation Incentives at Environmental Defense
Fund, where she has worked since January 2001. Her work
focuses on developing and implementing incentive-based
conservation projects with farmers, conservation
organizations, producer organizations, state and federal
agencies, and other local partners with the goal of
advancing cooperative conservation efforts on
agricultural lands. Her particular areas of interest are
water quality, nutrient management, and innovative
approaches to manure and litter management.
Carol Goodstein
is the Senior Manager of Publications & Marketing for the Rainforest Alliance,
an international conservation organization based in New
York. For most of the past ten years, Goodstein has
served as in-house editor and advisor to the
organization’s global offices and programs and been
responsible for overseeing all publications including
brochures, fact sheets, profiles, annual report,
speeches, videos and other communication tools. She has
conceptualized and executed the development of
innovative marketing tools including www.rainforest-alliance.org/branding, a Web site section
designed to help partner companies promote themselves in
concert with the Rainforest Alliance, and the Virtual
House, an online showcase of environmentally and
socially responsible products with a virtual tree house
featuring games designed by PBS.
Goodstein has written for organizations including the
Pew Center on Global Climate Change, the World Wildlife
Fund, the Council on Economic Priorities and the
National Park Service. Her articles on the environment
have appeared in publications including Natural History,
Nature Conservancy, E and Elle.
Merrilee Harrigan,
Vice President for Education, Alliance to Save Energy,
has directed the Alliances’ educational programs for 19
years. Her accomplishments include developing the
Alliance’s successful Green Schools and Green Campus
Programs and directing their implementation in seven
states and India, Ghana and Serbia. She has designed and
conducted research on innovative approaches to consumer
energy education and designed field tests and pilot
projects that have established the effectiveness of
consumer energy education in reducing energy
consumption, both in the short and long term. Ms
Harrigan has been trained in Community Based Social
Marketing and has used its principles in program design
over the past 15 years. Prior to her tenure at the
Alliance, Ms. Harrigan educated consumers and students
through the Tennessee Valley Authority, Edison Electric
Institute, and the University of Massachusetts Energy
Office.
Elenor Hodges has
served as the Executive Director of Arlingtonians for a
Clean Environment since 2000. Ms. Hodges has been
working in the environmental field for over 18 years and
has a Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Science from the
University of Virginia and a Masters of Education from
George Mason University. She has extensive experience
managing environmental education and community programs.
Past work experience includes overseeing a national
classroom education program at the National Wildlife
Federation, environmental consulting for the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, and coordinating an
international youth training program.
Timothy Juliani
is the Manager of BELC Relations and Senior Markets &
Business Fellow at the Pew Center on Global Climate
Change. He manages the Center's Business Environmental
Leadership Council (BELC), the largest US-based
association of companies devoted to climate-related
policy and corporate strategies, comprising 42 major
corporations with combined market capitalization of $2.8
trillion. He also participates in the Pew Center’s
analytic work on climate-related markets and investment
issues and is a staff representative for the Center’s
involvement in the United States Climate Action
Partnership (USCAP). Mr. Juliani first came to the Pew
Center in May 2005. He has also worked at the U.S. EPA
to develop a voluntary corporate partnership program to
reduce high global warming potential gases.
Mr. Juliani earned his M.A. in International Economics,
Energy and Environment at The Johns Hopkins School of
Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington,
D.C. During that time, he also worked as an independent
consultant, writing an analysis of energy cooperation
within ASEAN for USAID and the SARI-Energy program. Mr.
Juliani is also currently writing the official
institutional history of Johns Hopkins SAIS.
Before his graduate work at SAIS, Mr. Juliani worked for
several years in the non-profit community in Seattle. In
addition to his M.A. from Johns Hopkins, he completed a
post-baccalaureate program at the University of
Washington, and graduated with a B.A. in Religion,
magna cum laudee with Highest Honors, and a minor in
Medieval History from Middlebury College in Vermont.
Joe Keyser is
the President of GreenMan Communications, an
environmental and media communications firm based in
Arlington, Virginia. Joe has been known by many monikers
over the years, once as "America's Compost King," while
at the American Horticultural Society, and later as the
"GreenMan" owing to his eponymous newspaper column,
radio "EcoMinutes," and his award-winning "GreenMan
Show" on cable television. Until 2006, Joe was the
environmental education specialist for the Montgomery
County Department of Environmental Protection, where he
developed a series of public outreach programs that won
more than 40 international, national, and regional
awards.
Joe holds graduate and undergraduate degrees from
Georgetown University, serves on the Board of Trustees
for the Maryland Association for Environmental and
Outdoor Education, and teaches classes for the Virginia
Cooperative Extension Service, among other venues. He
and his wife, Dr. Linda Migl Keyser, an Assistant
Professor at the Georgetown University School of
Medicine, have tended an edible landscape and habitat
garden on their rooftop in Arlington for more than 20
years.
Dr. Sharon Krag
received a B.S. in chemistry and biology from Texas
Lutheran College, received her Ph.D. in biochemistry
from Johns Hopkins University, and completed
postdoctoral work at the Center for Cancer Research at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She joined the
faculty of the Department of Biochemistry at the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in 1976. She
served as the Associate Dean for Graduate Education and
Research at the Bloomberg School for fifteen years. She
is currently a professor emeritus in the Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Her research focuses
on glycobiology; in particular, her lab studied lipid
intermediates (dolichol) in N-linked glycosylation, an
important process in cell-surface interactions. Her
current work involves strategies to increase glycan
occupancy in glycoprotein therapeutics. She teaches a
required course in responsible conduct of research and
taught courses in Molecular Biology of Disease and
Public Health Biology at the Bloomberg School of Public
Health. She is an Executive Editor of BBA-General
Subjects.
Jennifer Krill is the
program director for Rainforest Action Network (RAN). Joining RAN in
1999, Jennifer served as an organizer on the group’s
campaign to eliminate products from old-growth forests
in the US. Jennifer organized external pressure
campaigns and boardroom negotiations that resulted in
commitments from several companies—including Home Depot,
Lowe’s, Menards, Lanoga and Boise Cascade. She was
elevated to director of RAN’s Old Growth campaign in
2002, serving in that position until taking the reins of
the organization's Zero Emissions campaign in 2004.
Jennifer’s expertise includes developing media and
public relations strategies, grassroots organizing,
outreach strategies, and formulating successful
policies. Before joining RAN, she worked at Earth Island
Institute's Sea Turtle Restoration Project and for
Greenpeace. Jennifer received bachelor’s degrees in
Landscape Architecture and History from Ball State
University in 1995.
Kerry Krumsiek is the
Executive Director for the Carolina Recycling
Association (CRA). He has worked in the recycling
industry for over 18 years and became the Executive
Director of the Association in February of 2003.
Starting in 1994, Krumsiek worked for the Marriott
Corporation for eight years as a facilities manager in
the divisions of higher education and corporate
services. He arrived in North Carolina in May of 2000,
where he worked as solid waste and recycling manager for
Nortel Networks located in Research Triangle Park.
Formerly a resident of New Mexico, Kerry developed two
of the state’s first recycling programs. Beginning in
1989, he worked for the (New Mexico) Lincoln County
Solid Waste Authority, one of the first regional solid
waste authorities formed in the Southwest, where he
developed the county’s first drop-off and buy-back
recycling system. Three years later, Kerry created an
award-winning waste management program at New Mexico
State University, utilizing in-house, on-campus
collection and processing systems for the new recycling
and composting operations. As a founding member of the
New Mexico Recycling Coalition (NMRC), Kerry served as
NMRC’s President and first Executive Director.
Dr. Michael E. Mann
is a member of the Penn State University faculty,
holding joint positions in the Departments of
Meteorology and Geosciences, and the Earth and
Environmental Systems Institute (ESSI). He is also
director of the Penn State Earth System Science Center (ESSC).
Dr. Mann received his undergraduate degrees in Physics
and Applied Math from the University of California at
Berkeley, an M.S. degree in Physics from Yale
University, and a Ph.D. in Geology & Geophysics from
Yale University. His research focuses on the application
of statistical techniques to understanding climate
variability and climate change from both empirical and
climate model-based perspectives. Current areas of
research include paleoclimate data synthesis and
statistical climate reconstruction using climate "proxy"
data networks, and model/data comparisons aimed at
understanding the long-term behavior of the climate
system and its relationship with possible external
(including anthropogenic) "forcings" of climate. Other
areas of active research include development of
statistical methods for climate signal detection, and
investigations of the response of geophysical and
ecological systems to climate variability and climate
change scenarios.
Dr. Mann was a Lead Author on the "Observed Climate
Variability and Change" chapter of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Third Scientific
Assessment Report. He has been organizing committee
chair for the National Academy of Sciences 'Frontiers of
Science' and has served as a committee member or advisor
for other National Academy of Sciences panels. He served
as editor for the 'Journal of Climate' and has been a
member of numerous international and U.S. scientific
advisory panels and steering groups. Dr. Mann has been
the recipient of several fellowships and prizes,
including selection as one of the 50 leading visionaries
in Science and Technology by Scientific American, the
outstanding scientific publication award of the National
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and
recognition by the Institute for Scientific Information
(ISI) for notable citation of his refereed scientific
research. He is author of more than 100 peer-reviewed
and edited publications..
Pauline Martinson
oversees the development and implementation of recycling
and waste reduction, pollution prevention, resource
conservation, and community enhancement projects for I
Love A Clean San Diego (ILACSD). She directed the
development of ILACSD’s comprehensive Recycling online
database and the re-design of ILACSD’s website. Prior to
ILACSD, Pauline worked for successful local and
multi-national corporations in account management.
Pauline holds a degree in environmental management, is a
certified SCUBA instructor, and has a vast hands-on
knowledge of San Diego’s marine and coastal environment
and the myriad environmental challenges facing this
region. Pauline enjoys taking dive trips with her
husband, excursions to dog beach with their two dogs,
practicing yoga, and playing tennis.
David Mizejewski
is presently with National Wildlife Federation, where he
teaches the American public how to help wildlife and
connect with nature in their own neighborhoods and
beyond. David is also a national media personality. He
is the host and co-producer of Backyard Habitat
on Animal Planet, a television series airing since 2005
that shows people how to transform their yards and
gardens into thriving habitats for birds and other local
wildlife. David has also made numerous other television
appearances, including on ABC’s Good Morning America;
NBC’s Weekend Today Show and iVillage Live;
HGTV’s Gardening by the Yard and Curb Appeal; Fox’s
Mike
and Juliet Show; CNN’s Headline News. He is a regular
guest on The Martha Stewart Show.
David has been interviewed and profiled in many local
and national publications, including Entertainment
Weekly, Out, Sunset, Organic Gardening and
National
Wildlife magazines as well as U.S.A Today, The Christian
Science Monitor, Washington Post, and countless local
newspapers. He also does numerous radio appearances
annually and has been featured on NPR’s Marketplace and
All Things Considered, Martha Stewart Sirius Radio and
dozens of major market radio stations in programming
running the gamut from morning commute shows to evening
news to weekend talk formats.
Prior to working for National Wildlife Federation and
hosting shows on Animal Planet, David worked as a
naturalist at the Chattahoochee Nature Center in Georgia
and Long Branch Nature Center in Virginia and directed
an urban forestry grant program for the National Tree
Trust in Washington, DC. He holds a degree in Political
Science with a co-major in Human and Natural Ecology
from Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.
Dr. William Moomaw
is Professor of International Environmental Policy at
the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts
University, where he founded the International
Environment and Resource Policy Program and co-founded
the Global Development and Environment Institute. He is
also Senior Director of the, interdisciplinary,
university-wide, Tufts Institute of the Environment. He
is a physical chemist, who works to translate science
and technology into policy terms using interdisciplinary
tools. He was a coordinating lead author of the Year
2001 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change chapter
on greenhouse gas emissions reduction, and has been a
lead author of previous IPCC reports. He provides advice
to fuels and power sector companies and governments on
environmentally significant issues. He was the first
director of the Climate Energy and Pollution program at
the World Resources Institute, and directed the Center
for Environmental Studies and taught chemistry at
Williams College. As a Congressional Science Fellow, he
worked on legislation that eliminated the use of CFCs to
protect the ozone layer in a cost effective manner, and
worked on energy and forestry legislation. Moomaw
currently also serves on the Board of Directors of
Earthwatch (a conservation research and education
organization), Consensus Building Institute and Clean
Air-Cool Planet (addressing climate change and air
quality). He recently co-edited with Barbara Baudot a
book on population and the environment entitled, People
and their Planet: Searching for Balance, and with
Lawrence Susskind of MIT and Kevin Gallagher,
Transboundary Environmental Negotiations. He has also
co-edited nine volumes of papers for the Program on
Negotiations at Harvard Law School. He is currently
working to develop an international reactive nitrogen
pollution assessment program. He has also facilitated
sessions with negotiators of international treaties,
other diplomats and government, business and
non-governmental representatives.
Martin Ogle
holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in Wildlife Biology from
Colorado State University and Virginia Tech,
respectively. Mr. Ogle has been Chief Naturalist for the
Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority since 1985.
During this time, he has developed a number of new
features including solar energy and energy efficiency
features and education, a demonstration organic garden,
and a number of community events. Since 1990, Mr. Ogle
has promoted a widespread understanding of the Gaia
Theory – the scientific view of Earth as a single living
system – through lectures and courses at the park,
schools, universities, the Smithsonian Institution, the
U.S.D.A. Graduate School, libraries, and other venues.
Mr. Ogle was born and raised much of his younger life in
South Korea. He and his wife, Lisa, live in Arlington,
Virginia.
Leana Pitkevits
currently works as the Living for the Future Program
Coordinator at the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable
Future (CLF). Her work at the CLF focuses on campus
sustainability, understanding and addressing the food
system’s contribution to climate change and water
quality issues, specifically within the Chesapeake Bay
Watershed. She received a Masters in Environmental
Sciences and Policy from Johns Hopkins in 2007 and a
Bachelor of Arts in Public Policy from St. Mary’s
College of Maryland in 1998. Prior to working for the
CLF, she spent many years as an environmental educator
for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, The Friends of the
National Zoo and the Maryland Department of Natural
Resources. Her current affiliations include member of
the Johns Hopkins Sustainability Committee, Chair of the
Energy Conservation sub-committee of the Bloomberg
School of Public Health Environmental Stewardship
Committee, member of the Patapsco-Back River Tributary
Team and Friends of Patterson Park member and volunteer.
Dr. Charles Redman
has been committed to interdisciplinary research since
as an archaeology graduate student he worked closely in
the field with botanists, zoologists, geologists, art
historians, and ethnographers. Redman received his BA
from Harvard University, and his MA and PhD in
Anthropology from the University of Chicago. He taught
at New York University and at SUNY-Binghamton before
coming to Arizona State University in 1983. Since then,
he served nine years as Chair of the Department of
Anthropology, seven years as Director of the Center for
Environmental Studies and, in 2004, was chosen to be the
Julie Ann Wrigley Director of the newly formed Global
Institute of Sustainability. In July 2007, Redman became
the inaugural director of ASU’s School of
Sustainability. Redman's interests include human impacts
on the environment, sustainable landscapes, rapidly
urbanizing regions, urban ecology, environmental
education, and public outreach. He is the author or
co-author of 14 books including Explanation in
Archaeology, The Rise of Civilization, People of the
Tonto Rim, Human Impact on Ancient Environments and,
most recently, co-edited three books: The Archaeology
of Global Change, Applied Remote Sensing for Urban
Planning, Governance and Sustainability, and
Agrarian Landscapes in Transition. Redman is
currently working on building upon the extensive
research portfolio of the Global Institute of
Sustainability to develop the new School of
Sustainability which is educating a new generation of
leaders through collaborative learning,
transdisciplinary approaches, and problem-oriented
training to address the environmental, economic, and
social challenges of the 21st Century.
Capt Philip
Renaud, USN(ret) has served as the Living Oceans
Foundation Executive Director since 2004. Prior to
joining the Living Oceans Foundation, he served 25 years
in the U.S. Navy as an Oceanographic Officer. Captain
Renaud’s final assignment in the Navy was Commander,
Naval Oceanographic Office, responsible for operations
of the Navy’s seven deep ocean survey vessels. Phil
Renaud has earned master’s degrees in Oceanography,
Meteorology, Business Administration, and Strategic
Studies. The focus of Living Oceans Foundation is to
conduct scientific analysis of coral ecosystems, create
high resolution baseline habitat maps, and design
networks of Marine Protected Areas. At the helm of the
Living Oceans Foundation, Phil Renaud is establishing
cutting-edge programs of remote sensing and SCUBA
surveys of global coral reef ecosystems with the primary
objective of advancing coral reef conservation
initiatives.
Celeste Royer is
the Director of the California Regional Environmental
Education Community (CREEC) Network. The CREEC Network’s
mission is to develop a communication network which
provides educators with access to high quality
environmental education resources to enhance the
environmental literacy of California students. Celeste
collaborated with many environmental educators to create
and launch the CREEC Network in 1997 with the support of
the CA Department of Education. She served as a Regional
Manager for several years and then became the Statewide
Director in 2005. Celeste provides direct support to all
20 CREEC Coordinators in the project and works closely
with the local educational agencies that house the CREEC
Network in 11 different regions. She has formed many
partnerships with federal, state, and local agencies and
businesses to support the work of the CREEC Network to
provide educators with the access they need to high
quality EE resources. Celeste was the Coordinator of the
Rancho El Chorro Outdoor School in San Luis Obispo
County for 12 years prior to assuming her statewide
leadership role in environmental education.
Stephen H.
Schneider, Ph.D., M.S. the Melvin and Joan Lane
Professor for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies,
has been a professor of Biological Sciences and
Professor by Courtesy in the Department of Civil
Engineering at Stanford University since September,
1992. He is a Senior Fellow in the Woods Institute for
the Environment. In 1975, he founded the
interdisciplinary journal, Climatic Change and continues
to serve as its Editor. Dr. Schneider was elected a
member of the National Academy of Sciences in 2002. He
has served on numerous National Research Council
committees, including the Committee on the Human
Dimensions of Global Change and the Institute of
Medicine Committee on Decisionmaking Under Uncertainty.
He has been a Coordinating Lead Author in Working Group
II of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
since 1997, and was a Lead Author in Working Group I
from 1994-1996. He was also a lead author of the IPCC
guidance paper on uncertainties. He was a member of the
California Climate Change Advisory Committee to advise
the Governor and state agencies on climate change
policy. Dr. Schneider received both the National
Conservation Achievement Award from the National
Wildlife Federation and the Edward T. Law Roe Award of
the Society of Conservation Biology in 2003. Dr.
Schneider's current global change research interests
include: climatic change; climatic modeling; global
warming; ecological and economic implications of
climatic change; integrated assessment of global change
policy; uncertainties; dangerous anthropogenic
interference with the climate system, and abrupt climate
change. Dr. Schneider received his Ph.D. in 1971 in
Mechanical Engineering and Plasma Physics from Columbia
University.
Gary Skulnik co-founded
Clean Currents, LLC after several years of working in
the non-profit environmental field as an advocate for
clean energy solutions to global warming. He founded the
Clean Energy Partnership in 2004, a non profit green
business group based in Maryland, where among other
things, he led efforts to market global warming
solutions to small businesses. Gary formerly worked with
both The Sierra Club and Greenpeace in a legislative
capacity to promote sustainable energy alternatives. A
graduate of Vassar College and University of Miami
Graduate School, he has a background in public relations
and marketing, as well as television news writing,
including CNN's Headline News. Gary is well known to
energy field due to his renewable energy knowledge and
testimony on the subject in legislative and regulatory
settings.
Stephanie Smith serves
as education program manager for the Alliance for the
Great Lakes. Her responsibilities include outreach to
students of all ages. Responsible for developing and
implementing Great Lakes educational curriculum and
programming for the Alliance, Stephanie recently
developed Great Lakes in My World, a comprehensive K-8
educational resource. She also implements the Great
Lakes Adopt-a-Beach program and the Illinois and Indiana
September Adopt-a-Beach Cleanup events.
Stephanie received a
master's degree in environmental science, with a
concentration in environmental education, from Antioch
New England Graduate School in Keene, N.H. She also
earned a teaching certificate in middle school general
science. After graduate school, Stephanie taught
hands-on 8th grade science in Lowell, Mass.
Betsy Taylor is a
co-founder and Board President of 1Sky. She is also a
philanthropic consultant, public speaker and author on
climate and sustainability issues. She founded and
served as president of the Center for a New American
Dream, a national organization that helps Americans live
and consume wisely for a better world. During her
tenure, the Center was featured in the media over 1,000
times, built an action network of over 100,000 citizens,
launched the Responsible Purchasing Network, an
association of socially and environmentally responsible
purchasers representing over $50 billion in buying
power, and earned numerous awards including winner of
the Washingtonian Magazine’s top fifty places to work in
the D.C. metropolitan area. Betsy has appeared
frequently on national television and radio and is the
author of three books including co-author of Sustainable
Planet: Solutions for the 21st Century. She previously
served as Executive Director of the Merck Family Fund,
Stern Fund, and Ottinger Foundation and has consulted
with numerous foundations & donors including the Energy
Foundation, Quixote Foundation, and Better Tomorrow
Fund. She serves on several non-profit and foundation
boards. Ms. Taylor’s philanthropic consulting &
organizational leadership focus on innovative strategies
for addressing climate change and creating a rapid pivot
toward a sustainable and more equitable society. She has
an M.P.A. from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of
Government and a B.A.from Duke University.
Ellen Telander
graduated in 1996 with a BS in Environmental Health from
Colorado State University and continued her education in
Solid Waste Management at the University of Minnesota.
Ellen was the Executive Director at Minnesota Waste
Wise, a Minnesota Chamber program that helps businesses
reduce waste voluntarily. Her work for Minnesota Waste
Wise included developing the largest district-wide
compost project for School District 196. She also
designed and created the most successful state-wide
recycling program for mercury switches from scrap cars.
The program model is now used on a national level to
manage mercury switches. Another successful voluntary
program created was the It's in the Bag program which
recycles nearly 500,000 pounds of bags each year in
Minnesota. The program created 30+ meaningful jobs for
adults with disabilities.
Ellen currently resides
as the Executive Director position at the Recycling
Association of Minnesota. One of the new programs she
created is called Message in a Bottle. This away from
home recycling program recycles from gas stations, car
wash facilities and other 'away from home' locations.
This program is currently being expanded to many parts
of Minnesota as a viable way to recycle otherwise
disposed of recyclables.
Jennifer Thorne Amann
is a Senior Associate in ACEEE’s Buildings and Equipment
Program. Since joining ACEEE in 1997, she has authored
dozens of publications and articles on residential
appliances, commercial lighting, equipment installation
practices, emerging residential and commercial building
technologies, and the progress of market transformation
initiatives, among others. In addition, she is lead
author of ACEEE’s popular Consumer Guide to Home
Energy Savings,
now in its ninth edition. Her current work includes
promoting improved commercial building performance,
exploring behavioral approaches to improving energy
efficiency, valuing the energy and non-energy benefits
of whole house retrofits, analyzing the impacts of
stronger appliance efficiency standards, and exploring
new targets for market transformation efforts. She also
leads program development for the annual National
Symposium on Market Transformation. She brings to ACEEE
several years experience in the environmental technology
field including evaluation of state, federal and private
energy and environmental technology deployment programs,
research on options for international cooperation on
environmental technology issues, and analysis of the
impacts of regulatory policy on technology development.
She also has experience in community organizing and
education on a variety of environmental and consumer
issues. Jennifer earned a Master of Environmental
Studies degree from the Yale School of Forestry and
Environmental Studies and a Bachelor of Arts in
Environmental Studies from Trinity University.
Marcel Van Ooyen
earned degrees in Social Ecology from the University of
California Irvine and from the Seattle University School
of Law specializing in Environmental Law. After
graduating form law school, Mr. Van Ooyen worked for the
Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council in Washington
State, where he conducted the environmental review of
proposed power plants. Upon moving to New York City, Mr.
Van Ooyen worked for the New York City Council as the
Chief of Staff to City Council Member Gifford Miller and
then as Legislative Director for the City Council. As
Legislative Director, Mr. Van Ooyen, ensured the passage
of over 30 environmental Local Laws, including the
city’s landmark green buildings legislation, lead bill,
clean air codes, environmental purchasing laws, and many
more. Mr. Van Ooyen now serves as the Executive Director
of the Council on the Environment, and environmental
non-profit in the Mayor’s Office, which promotes
community gardens, environmental education, recycling
and waste reduction and operates the
Greenmarket/farmers’ markets.
Dr. Polly Walker is
the Associate Director for the Johns Hopkins Center for
a Livable Future and Research Associate in Environmental
Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health. She is a graduate of Radcliffe College,
Harvard Medical School and received a Masters in Public
Health degree from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health. Her career has included clinical
pediatrics; science and math teaching in the public
schools; initiating and coordinating successful land
preservation campaigns in Baltimore County, Maryland;
initiating and organizing the first household hazardous
waste collections in Baltimore City and Baltimore
County, Maryland; and helping launch the Johns Hopkins
Center for a Livable Future, now in its 12th year.
Dr. Walker’s current
responsibilities are coordinating projects, research and
programs for the Center for a Livable Future, as the
Associate Director; and serving a one of the two primary
course instructors for the CLF on-line course, “Food
Production, Public Health and the Environment.” She
helped found the Johns Hopkins Ad Hoc Committee for the
Greening of Johns Hopkins, a university committee for
increasing environmentally sustainable practices at the
university that has now been replaced by the official
JHU Sustainability Committee.
Dr. Darryn Waugh
is the Morton K. Blaustein Professor and Chair of the
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at the Johns
Hopkins University. His research interests include
understanding the fluid motions and composition of
Earth's atmosphere and oceans. This research is focused
on understanding global environmental issues, including
stratospheric ozone depletion and climate change.
He has participated in several NASA-lead international
aircraft campaigns examining stratospheric ozone
depletion and has participated in international
assessments, including being lead author of a chapter in
the most recent WMO/UNEP ``Scientific Assessment of
Ozone Depletion''. Waugh graduated from the University
of Waikato, NZ in 1985. He earned his Ph.D. at Cambridge
University in 1991.
Lance Webster
helped found and run Earth Communications in its startup
years (1989-90), has served on its Board of Directors,
and is now it's Administrator. He also served as VP of
PR for Eco Expo in the early 1990's. He has spent more
than 12 years working in various aspects of public
information with the PBS television network, has worked
and led seminars for Landmark Education Corp., and also
currently serves as Executive Director for the
Television Publicity Executives Committee (TPEC) and
edits the annual TPEC Media Guide used by all television
network publicists. Lance teaches public relations and
public speaking courses for the UCLA Journalism & Public
Relations extension program, and is a long-time member
and some time officer with Toastmasters International.
His own business, LW Communications, focuses on personal
productivity and communication training and corporate
executive media training.
Michele Weingarden
joined Mayor Hickenlooper’s Office as the new Director
of Greenprint Denver this past September. Weingarden
brings a wealth of experience to the position, having
most recently served in U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer's San
Francisco office as her advisor on environmental issues
statewide and as her liaison to local governments,
businesses and the public in nine Northern California
counties.
Prior to working as
advisor to Senator Boxer, Weingarden served as a
coalition builder and community organizer for political
campaigns and environmental nonprofit organizations. As
Senior Account Executive for Stearns Consulting and
Campaign Manager for Save the Bay, Weingarden developed
and implemented strategic plans and led campaigns to
advance environmental policies in the City and County of
San Francisco. Earlier, she served as Coalition
Organizer for the Sierra Club’s California field office
and Illinois chapter. She also served on the board of
the San Francisco League of Conservation Voters.
Weingarden has a
master’s degree in Public Policy from the University of
Michigan and a bachelor’s degree in Journalism from the
University of Wisconsin.
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