Research Report: Local Climate Change 2010
The longer we wait, the harder the problem will be to solve. -John Kerry
The longer we wait, the harder the problem will be to solve. -John Kerry
Local Climate Change Experts
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Craig Appel
Director of Partner Relations Energy Foundation See Bio Craig Appel is the Director of Partner Relations at the Energy Foundation, which provides grants to institutions that most effectively leverage change for a clean energy future. He is also currently a trustee at San Francisco Waldorf School.Previously Craig was the San Francisco Regional Sales Coordinator at Green Mountain Energy Company.Craig received his Masters in Nonprofit Administration (MNA) from the University of San Francisco and his Bachelor from Michigan State University. |
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Dana Armanino
Sustainability Planner County of Marin See Bio Dana Armanino is a Planner on the Marin County Community Development Agency's Sustainability Team. The team has developed programs to promote renewable energy, tackle climate protection, encourage green building, certify green businesses and implement energy efficiency in Marin County schools, cities and special districts.Dana spent several years in Colorado leading outdoor tours. She also worked for the Aspen Skiing Company's Environmental Affairs department on green building and waste reduction programs. In 2000, Dana moved back to her native Marin County to run her family's commercial cabinet company. She joined the County of Marin staff in May 2003 to coordinate the County's Green Business, energy efficiency and solar programs.Dana received her undergraduate degree in Environment, Economics and Politics and a Masters degree from the Bren School of Environmental Science and Management at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her emphasis during her degree program was in water resource management and pollution prevention. |
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Blakely Atherton
Senior Director Alliance for Climate Education (ACE) See Bio Blakely Atherton is a Senior Director of ACE and member of the Executive Team. ACE is a national nonprofit dedicated to educating America's high school students about the science behind climate change and inspiring them to do something about it—while having fun along the way. Blakely is a marketing professional who has developed and managed effective programs for both for-profit and nonprofit organizations throughout her career. She has worked with start-ups as well as Fortune 500 organizations to develop effective strategies, articulate corporate positioning and value, implement direct marketing programs and drive revenues through effective communications and marketing programs. Blakely is also an expert at analyzing and assessing customer experiences and developing marketing programs to optimize those experiences. She is active in community service organizations including the Taproot Foundation, and works with a variety of philanthropic organizations on their fundraising and marketing programs, including Head-Royce School and Middlebury College. Prior to joining Alliance for Climate Education, Blakely ran her own consulting practice. She also has held marketing and marketing-related positions at Princeton University, iPix, VitesseLearning, and GetActive Software. Blakely holds a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in English Literature from Middlebury College, cum laude, and a Master of Science (MS) in Integrated Marketing Communications from Northwestern University. Blakely lives in Oakland with her husband and three children. |
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Diane Bailey
Senior Scientist Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) See Bio Diane Bailey is a Senior Scientist in the Natural Resources Defense Council's (NRDC) health program. Her research focuses on reducing exposure to diesel exhaust and other air pollutants.Before joining NRDC, Diane worked at Citizens for a Better Environment and a local transportation planning agency in Houston, Texas. Diane holds a B.A. in chemical engineering from Washington University and a master's degree in environmental engineering from Rice University. |
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David Bannister
Executive Director Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation (Laguna Foundation) See Bio David Bannister is the Executive Director of the Laguna Foundation, a placed based organization focused on the Laguna de Santa Rosa, the second largest wetlands in Northern California and Sonoma County’s richest wildlife area with over 200 species of birds along with many threatened and endangered species of plants and animals. David joined the Board of Directors of the Foundation in 2004 and by August of 2009 had served as Board President, Vice President and Secretary. At that time the Board requested that David take the open position of Executive Director and he agreed. David has a long history of business management and consulting as well as a long history of serving as a volunteer on environmental organizations. As Chair of the Sonoma Group of the Sierra Club he led the successful collaborative campaign with the grape growing industry and environmental community that resulted in the Vineyard Erosion Control Ordinance.David has in Masters of Public and Private Management (MBA) from the University of Kansas. |
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Jenny Bard
Regional Air Quality Director American Lung Association of California See Bio Jenny Bard is the Regional Air Quality Director of the American Lung Association of California, a nonprofit organization that works to prevent lung disease and promote lung health with educational programs about air quality, smoking, tobacco use and other causes. Jenny studied at California State University-East Bay. |
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Deborah Behles
Visiting Assistant Professor Golden Gate University See Bio Deborah Behles is a visiting assistant law professor at the Golden Gate University.Deborah was formerly a trial attorney with the US Department of Justice in Washington, DC, where she litigated and settled several civil environmental claims. She taught classes at the National Advocacy Center, received a Gold Medal from the US Environmental Protection Agency in 2008, and was a former editor of the Minnesota Law Review. Her publications include "A Wrong Turn Crushes Protective Air Regulations: American Trucking Association v. EPA," 85 Minnesota Law Review 319 (November 2000).Deborah holds a Bachelor of Science (BS) from Purdue University, and a JD from University of Minnesota School of Law. |
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Douglas Bevington
Forest Program Director Environment Now See Bio Douglas Bevington is the Director for the Forest Program at Environment Now, a nonprofit organization that creates environmental programs to protect and restore California's environment. In this role Douglas oversees the programs to protect California's forests. Dr. Bevington previously worked as the regional organizer for the John Muir Project of Earth Island Institute and as the biodiversity program assistant for the Foundation for Deep Ecology. He has also been active with the Bay Area Coalition for Headwaters, Center for Biological Diversity, Endangered Species Coalition, and Sierra Club. He has served on the board of advisors of the Student Environmental Center and is currently on the board of directors of the Fund for Wild Nature. Dr. Bevington is the author of The Rebirth of Environmentalism: Grassroots Activism from the Spotted Owl to the Polar Bear (Island Press, 2009), which chronicles the powerful impact of grassroots forest and biodiversity protection groups on environmental policies in the United States over the past two decades.Dr. Bevington holds a PhD in sociology from the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he taught courses on social movement studies. |
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May Boeve
Global Partnerships, Policy, Operations, and US/Canada outreach 350.org See Bio May Boeve is the Global Partnerships, Policy, Operations, and US/Canada outreach at 350.org, a nonprofit organization that is dedicated to building a movement to unite the world around solutions to the climate-crisis. At 350.org, May oversees partnership programs with nonprofit organizations, is responsible for coordinating activities for the campaign in the United States and Canada, and helps oversee operations. Previously, May worked on the Step It Up campaign, which helped change the debate about global warming policy in the U.S. May graduated from Middlebury College in 2007 where she studied political science. In the fall of 2004 she traveled the country as part of Project BioBus, an educational tour of the U.S. that visited 65 schools and gave presentations about climate change. She was awarded the Brower Youth Award in 2006. |
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Ashley Boren
Executive Director Sustainable Conservation See Bio Ashley Boren is the Executive Director of Sustainable Conservation, a San Francisco environmental group founded on the idea that the environmental movement was missing a major opportunity to work more collaboratively with the private sector. Ashley and her colleagues have proven not only that it's possible to break through long-standing animosities between decades-old feuds over water supplies, air quality, and pesticide, but that a collaborative, problem-solving approach to environmental challenges, one that involves businesses as partners rather than opponents, can succeed in ways that more traditional strategies of regulation and litigation may not. Ashley and her colleagues at Sustainable Conservation are addressing a range of California's major problems — including climate change, air and water pollution, and loss of wildlife — and helping entire industries shift toward environmental sustainability. Ashley was formerly a fund-raiser for the Nature Conservancy. Ashley has a Masters of Business Administration (MBA) from Stanford University. She blends a lifelong commitment to the environment with strong business acumen. For her practical, collaborative approach to solving some of the state's toughest environmental challenges, Ashley received the 2007 James Irvine Foundation Leadership Award. |
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Rose Braz
Climate Campaign Coordinator Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) See Bio Rose Braz is the Climate Campaign Coordinator at The Center for Biological Diversity, a nonprofit organization that is devoted to protecting biodiversity in different arenas through science; legal action; policy advocacy; negotiation with government and industry; and creative, strategic media and outreach. Rose coordinates the Climate Law Institute’s climate campaign and communications work.Rose has worked both in private practice and at the United Nations International Commission of Jurists in Geneva, Switzerland. Prior to coming to the Center, Rose helped found and was the campaign and media director for Critical Resistance, a national grassroots organization working to end society's reliance on prisons as an answer to social problems.Rose is a graduate of U.C. Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law. |
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Dave Brennan
Regional Climate Protection Coordinator Sonoma County See Bio Dave Brennan is the Regional Climate Protection Coordinator with the Sonoma County Transportation Authority who is in charge of organizing and focusing countywide efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Sonoma County to 25 percent below 1990 levels by 2015 and to ensure that local goals are in line with those mandated by AB 32 and SB 375. He works closely with the local leadership of the cities, county, Sonoma County Transportation Authority, the Sonoma County Water Agency, local nonprofits and others to define roles, develop partnerships, coordinate policy development and to leverage shared resources. Dave was previously the former Sebastopol City Manager. |
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Adam Browning
Executive Director Vote Solar See Bio Adam Browning is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of Vote Solar, a nonprofit organization that works to build the economies of scale necessary to bring solar into the mainstream. Prior to Vote Solar, Adam spent eight years with the Environmental Protection Agency where he ran an award-winning pollution prevention program. |
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Cliff Chen
Program Associate Sea Change Foundation See Bio Cliff Chen is the Program Associate of Sea Change Foundation that provides grants that focuses on climate change. Cliff graduated with a Bachelor of Science (BS) in Earth Systems from Stanford University, and a Master of Science in Energy and Resources Group from University of California, Berkeley. |
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Linda Civitello
President and CEO Breathe California Golden Gate Public Health Partnership (Breathe California) See Bio Since 1992, Linda Civitello has been the President and CEO of Breathe California, a nonprofit organization that works to reduce the impact of lung disease through prevention, education, advocacy and patient services. Linda has extensive experience in community service, urban planning and government affairs. She was the founding director of the Tri Cities Children Center in Alameda County. She served as the Business and Community Liaison for the University of California, San Francisco for over 10 years, and she was the Senior Vice President of McL. Young, Inc., a management-consulting firm, for two years. Linda has a Master of Arts Degree in Political Science from San Francisco State University and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Public Administration from Antioch College. She attended the CORO Leadership Program in San Francisco. |
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Dustin Clark
Environmental Sustainability Coordinator City of Sunnyvale See Bio Dustin Clark is the Environmental Sustainability Coordinator at City of Sunnyvale. He has spent nearly a decade working for the City of Sunnyvale as an industrial waste inspector. Chief among Clark’s duties is inter-departmental coordination of the City’s environmental sustainability efforts.Dustin holds an undergraduate degree in environmental health and safety, and a graduate degree in public administration. |
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Ellie Cohen
President and CEO PRBO Conservation Science See Bio Ellie Cohen is the President and CEO of PRBO Conservation Science. She serves as an invited member of the US North American Bird Conservation Initiative (NABCI) Committee’s Policy and Legislative Subcommittee, as a management board member of both the San Francisco Bay (Immediate Past Chair) and the Central Valley Joint Ventures (USFWS), and as a member of NOAA’s Pacific Coast Ocean Observing System Governing Board. From 2002-2005, Ellie represented the US Shorebird Plan on the U.S. Committee of the North American Bird Conservation Initiative (NABCI) of the US Fish and Wildlife Service. She has been invited to speak at multiple conferences. In January 2009, she was an invited plenary speaker at the west coast-wide “Climate Change, Coastal Resources and Natural Resources Management” conference sponsored by the US Fish and Wildlife Service and US Geological Survey. In May 2008, she was the invited keynote speaker at the Southern California Wetlands Recovery Project. She was also invited on to the Policy Advisory Committee of the Evolutionary Change in Human-altered Environments International Summit (February, 2007, UC Los Angeles) and was an invited participant in The Climate Project trainings (January, 2007, Nashville). In March 2009, as part of National Women’s History Month, Ellie was among 100 women honored nationally under the theme of Women Taking the Lead to Save Our Planet. She was recognized for her contributions to understanding and addressing the negative impacts of rapidly accelerating environmental change on our ecosystems.Ellie received her undergraduate degree with honors in Botany (focus on ecology) from Duke University. Field studies in butterfly ecology brought her to California in 1979. She later received her Master in Public Policy degree from Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, where she was honored with the Policy Analysis Exercise Award for highly distinguished performance and the first annual Robert F. Kennedy Public Service Award. In 2001, she was awarded a fellowship to Stanford University’s Executive Program for Non-profit Leaders at the Graduate School of Business. |
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Stuart Cohen
Executive Director TransFormCA (TransForm) See Bio Stuart Cohen is Co-Founder and Executive Director of TransForm, an advocacy nonprofit that works to create world-class public transportation and walkable communities in the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond. Stuart has spearheaded a number of Transform's efforts such as their campaign on transportation sales tax, bringing together diverse coalitions, raising over $6 billion for sustainable and socially-just transportation, and initiating the Bay Area's Regional Smart Growth Strategy, which is a project that seeks to determine and lay out strategies for how the nine-county Bay Area can grow smarter and become more sustainable over the next 20 years and beyond. Stuart has been the primary author of eight TransForm reports, including the 120-page report on how counties can provide transit that is faster, more convenient, and more affordable than any other plan to date. Previously, Stuart worked with ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability as a researcher on the climate impacts of alternative transportation policies and fuels, and at NYPIRG (New York Public Interest Research Group) as a Toxics Campaign Coordinator and Statewide Canvass Director. Stuart received a Master's Degree in Public Policy (MPP) from the Goldman School of Public Policy at U.C. Berkeley. |
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Judith Corbett
Executive Director Local Government Commission (LGC) See Bio Judith A. Corbett is the founder and for the past 25 years has served as Executive Director of the Local Government Commission, a nonprofit organization working to build livable communities. With the Local Government Commission, Judith has published over 50 policy guidebooks for local government officials on topics including community water sustainability, hazardous waste reduction, recycling, energy conservation and alternative energy, sustainable economic development, and resource-efficient land use patterns. Judith has coauthored three books on resource efficient land use and building design, most recently Designing Sustainable Communities: Learning from Village Homes. She has served as a featured speaker at conferences throughout the United States, Mexico, and Europe. She was named by Time Magazine as a "Hero for the Planet" and in 2005 received the National Leadership in Planning Award from the American Planning Association. She serves as a Boardmember for the Rail-Volution Conference and was a member of the Board of Directors of the Congress for the New Urbanism for the past 15 years. Judith was also co-developer of the highly acclaimed Village Homes, a model for sustainable development located in Davis, CA.Judith holds a Masters of Science (MS) in Ecology from the University of California. |
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Eugene Cordero
Associate Professor, Department of Meteorology and Climate Change San Jose State University (SJSU) See Bio Eugene Cordero is an Associate Professor in the Department of Meteorology and Climate Change at San Jose State University. His research interests are aligned with understanding how the climate is changing as a result of both natural and anthropogenic processes. His investigations are performed using a variety of tools including global and mechanistic models of the atmosphere, and various observational networks. |
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Rory Cox
California Program Director Pacific Environment See Bio Rory Cox is California Program Director at Pacific Environment, a nonprofit organization that works to protect the living environment of the Pacific Rim by promoting grassroots activism, strengthening communities, and reforming international policies. Rory leads Pacific Environment's campaign, "Keep California's Clean Energy Promise" to reduce fossil fuel use in California's energy grid by opposing all imports of Liquefied Natural Gas into the state, while supporting efficiency and renewable development. He is also the lead facilitator of the statewide clean energy coalition "Ratepayers for Affordable Clean Energy."Rory was first involved with Pacific Environment in the summer of 1996 as an intern, and joined the staff in June 1998 as the Communications Coordinator. He is the founding editor of Pacific Environment's newsletter "Pacific Currents On-Line," has authored or edited several reports, and has led several media campaigns and strategies for the organization.Rory has a master's degree in International Relations from San Francisco State University, where he authored his masters thesis, "Paper Tigers," on the impact of the Asian paper industry on forests worldwide. He received his Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Public Communication from California State University in Chico. |
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Steve Crooks
Director, Climate Change Services Philip Williams and Associates, Ltd. See Bio Steve Crooks is the Director of Climate Change Services at Philip Williams & Associates, Ltd.Previously, Steve was the Associate, then Senior Associate at Philip Williams & Associates, Ltd. He also served as Senior Research Associate at University of East Anglia. |
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Carleen Cullen
Co-Founder and Executive Director Cool the Earth See Bio Carleen Cullen is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of Cool The Earth, a grassroots program that educates K-8 students and their families about global warming and inspires them to take simple actions to conserve energy.Carleen draws from a wealth of experience, having previously created an international company in the technology field. Her entrepreneurial endeavors began in 1986 when she moved to New York City to become a partner in a start-up venture with her brother. Together they grew the business, Ovid Technologies, into a successful global information technology giant in the medical and scientific markets. After expanding to include 120 employees at 5 international offices, Ovid went public (Nasdaq) in 1994 and was successfully sold in 1998. In 2006, after moving to California with her husband Jeff, Carleen co-founded Cool the Earth, Inc.Carleen has a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in English Literature from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, CA and graduated in 1986. |
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Kevin Danaher
Executive Director Global Exchange See Bio Dr. Kevin Danaher is the Executive Director of the Global Citizen Center, a nonprofit organization whose mission is to educate the public about our need to engage in new economic practices — as consumers, businesses, and communities — that are environmentally sustainable and socially just. In this capacity, Dr. Danaher is responsible for establishing and developing the Center's overall vision. With over 25 years of non-profit leadership experience, Dr. Danaher is widely recognized as one of the civil sector’s most insightful and inspirational advocates for social justice and environmental sustainability. In 1988, Dr. Danaher co-founded Global Exchange, an international human rights organization whose present annual operating budget is approximately $9MM. He also was Founder and Executive Producer of the GreenFestival, which brings together over 400 socially responsible enterprises, a full program of world reknown speakers, and 25,000 attendees for weekend-long celebrations of the emerging green economy. In addition, Dr. Danaher launched and served as the initial board chair of TransFair, USA, and international fair trade organization whose certifications have established national benchmarks for domestically distributed coffee and cocoa products. Dr. Danaher is a highly sought after public speaker and author of 10 published books on topics ranging from international economic policy to grass roots, community organizing.Dr. Danaher received his PhD in sociology from the University of California at Santa Cruz, after which he held a fellowship at the prestigious Washington D.C. think tank, The Institute for Policy Studies. |
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Neal De Snoo
Energy Program Officer City of Berkeley See Bio Neal De Snoo is the Energy Program Officer of City of Berkeley. |
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Amanda Eaken
Policy Analyst Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) See Bio Amanda Eaken is a Policy Analyst with the Natural Resources Defense Council's (NRDC) energy program. Amanda's primary focus is reducing transportation sector's greenhouse gas emissions through improved land use and transportation planning and policy. Her recent work has focused on implementing California’s landmark Global Warming Solutions Act through administrative and legislative advocacy. Aiming to create a model for state involvement in land use planning, Amanda has recently worked on SB 375, a bill that will provide state transportation funding and regulatory incentives for implementation of regional growth plans that achieve state-assigned emissions reductions targets.Amanda received her Master’s degree in Transportation and Land Use Planning from U.C. Berkeley’s College of Environmental Design, and her Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Environmental and Evolutionary Biology from Dartmouth College. |
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Erica Etelson
Blogger Self Employed See Bio Erica Etelson is a Berkeley journalist, former environmental attorney and oil independence activist. Her work has appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Bay Guardian and LA Times. She is also a stay-at-home-and-write mother and recovering attorney. |
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Garrett Fitzgerald
Sustainability Coordinator City of Oakland See Bio Garrett Fitzgerald is the Sustainability Coordinator of the City of Oakland. |
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Megan Fluke
Grassroots Organizer Sierra Club See Bio Megan Fluke is the Grassroots Organizer of Sierra Club. She was also recently elected as Chapter Executive Committee (ExCom) member. Megan served as the Director of the Environmental Resource Center at San Jose State University where she coordinated 22 student volunteers. She was also the Community Director at GenerationEngage, an organization that promotes long-term engagement through volunteerism. |
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Steve Goldbeck
Deputy Director for Climate Change, Water & Legislation San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission (SFBCDC) See Bio Steven Goldbeck is the Deputy Director for Climate Change, Water & Legislation at San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission.Steven has been the Commission’s lead staff member on dredging issues for over 15 years, where he has specialized in policy and management of technical planning issues, including water quality, sediment management and climate change. He was promoted to a Career Executive Assignment 1 position in 1992. He has served as Co-chairman of the San Francisco Estuary Project’s Dredging and Waterway Modification Committee, Manager of the LTMS reuse/upland studies, and Chair of the LTMS Reuse/Upland Work group. Steven has also served as the staff legislative coordinator for over a decade. He was appointed as Deputy Director for legislation and climate change in December 2007. In addition to authoring legislation and Bay Plan amendments, he has presented at numerous professional conferences.Steven holds a Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Planning and Public Policy from the University of California at Santa Cruz. |
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Marianna Grossman
Executive Director Sustainable Silicon Valley (SSV) See Bio Marianna Grossman is President and Executive Director of Sustainable Silicon Valley, which is a collaboration of businesses, governments, and non-governmental organizations that are identifying and addressing environmental and resource pressures in Silicon Valley. From 1994-2009 she was a partner of Minerva Consulting responsible for the Sustainability and Innovative Practice. From 2000-2009 she was a partner in the Silicon Valley Social Venture Fund (SV2) where she was co-liaison for a three-year grant to The Natural Step, Rocky Mountain Institute, and Natural Capitalism, Inc., to integrate their work and to bring sustainability thinking to the technology industry. She founded the Green Committee at Congregation Kol Emeth in Palo Alto, which is working to reduce its climate impact, and founded and was past chair of the Sustainable Schools for Palo Alto committee, where she wrote successful grant applications for two solar photovoltaic (PV) systems for Ohlone and Escondido elementary schools. Marianna has a Masters of Business Administration (MBA) degree from Yale University School of Management. She received a Bachelor of Arts cum laude, with distinction in Policy Studies (the Policy of Social Change) at Dartmouth College, and was a National Merit Scholar. |
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Andrew Gunther
Executive Director Center for Ecosystem Management and Restoration (CEMAR) See Bio Andy Gunther is the Executive Director of Center for Ecosystem Management and Restoration (CEMAR), a nonprofit organization that was founded by scientists committed to working with stakeholders to integrate state-of-the-art research into environmental policy.Andy has more than 20 years of experience in the application of science to environmental policy. He served as the Assistant Chief Scientist for the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Restoration Program, managed the first program established by the State of California to measure toxic pollution in San Francisco Bay, and for the last several years has been assisting the California State Coastal Conservancy with the restoration of steelhead trout along the coast of California. He is the Executive Director of the Center for Ecosystem Management and Restoration and a member of the Board of Directors of the Union of Concerned Scientists.Andy received his Ph.D. in Energy and Resources from the University of California at Berkeley in 1987. |
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John Haig
Division Head, Energy & Sustainability County of Sonoma See Bio John D. Haig, Jr, is employed by the County of Sonoma, General Services Department, as the Division Manager for Energy and Sustainability. He currently manages the County Greenhouse Gas Emissions reduction strategy, directs operations for the Sonoma County Energy Independence Program Property Assessed Clean Energy Program funding program, helps steer the County's Comprehensive Energy Building Retrofit Project and Renewable Energy Projects, and is involved in many other green initiatives.John is a graduate of U.C. Berkeley (1977) and Golden Gate University School of Law, and has a varied background in Corporate Operations at Gap, Inc and in Facilities Management, holding the prestigious International Facility Management Association Certified Facility Manager (I.F.M.A. C.F.M/C.F.M.J.) certifications. He lives in Sonoma County with his wife and two children, has a passion for sustainable practices generally, and enjoys volunteering in the community in his spare time. |
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Ann Hancock
Executive Director and Co-Founder Climate Protection Campaign See Bio Ann Hancock is the Executive Director and Co-Founder of the Climate Protection Campaign, a nonprofit organization that supports and accelerates the work of Sonoma's cities to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions as part of a worldwide effort led by the nonprofit, International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI).Ann has over 25 years in community leadership, education, and fundraising. She has been a Sustainability Planner for the County of Marin, commentator for TomPaine.com, human sexuality instructor at Humboldt State University, and real estate broker.Ann has a Master in Public Health Administration and Planning (MPA) from University of California, Berkeley. |
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Carroll Harrington
President Harrington Design See Bio Carroll Harrington is the owner of Harrington Design and coordinator of Palo Alto Goes Green/Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce.In 1970 Carroll Harrington became an advocate for environmental conservation as co-author and coordinator of If You Want To Save Your Environment…START AT HOME Environmental Handbook Project through the Palo Alto branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW). She appeared on the Steve Allen Show in September, 1971 to discuss the Environmental Handbook Project and how to save your environment. Carroll Harrington was one of 25 AAUW members invited to attend the first national environmental conference in Washington, D.C. in May, 1971 that was co-sponsored by AAUW and the Environmental Protection Agency. She received the Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce Women in Business Athena Award for Outstanding Woman in Business and in the Community and was one of seven women honored at the 1975 National AAUW Convention. |
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Sarah Henry
Program Director Next 10 See Bio Sarah Henry is a Program Director at Next 10, an independent, nonpartisan organization that educates, engages and empowers Californians to improve the state’s future.Sarah was previously the Program Manager at California Center for Regional Leadership, and EA at PricewaterhouseCoopers.Sarah studied at San Francisco State University. |
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Bruce Hirsch
Executive Director Clarence E Heller Foundation See Bio Dr. Bruce Hirsch is the executive director for Clarence E. Heller Charitable Foundation. The family foundation is based in San Francisco and its mission is to protect and improve the quality of life through support of programs in the environment, human health, education, and the arts. Dr. Hirsch is also a Co-Chair for the Steering Committee of Sustainable Agriculture Food Systems Funders, which is a broad national network of grant makers that works to foster communication, shared learning and information exchange about issues connected to sustainable agriculture and food systems.Dr. Hirsch holds a phD. |
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Bonnie Holmes-Gen
Senior Policy Director American Lung Association of California See Bio Bonnie Holmes-Gen has been the Senior Policy Director for the American Lung Association of California (ALAC) in Sacramento since January 2000. In her role at ALAC, Bonnie is responsible for advocating the public policy concerns of ALAC and the California Thoracic Society before the California Legislature and state agencies such as the California Air Resources Board and the California Energy Commission. In her advocacy work at the lung association, she has specialized in air quality and environmental health issues including: global warming and AB 32 (Nunez/Pavley) implementation; heavy-duty diesel pollution; alternative fuel and zero emission vehicle programs; electricity generation and air pollution; indoor air pollution; and statewide and local air pollution control programs. Bonnie also provides information and resources on ALAC public policy positions and priority issues to staff and volunteers in the 10 local lung association offices throughout California. Prior to her work with the American Lung Association of California, Bonnie was the Senior Legislative Representative for Sierra Club California (1/96-1/2000) in Sacramento and the Senior Consultant for the consulting firm of V. John White Associates (9/89-9/95).Bonnie has a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental Policy Analysis and Planning from the University of California at Davis (June, 1982) and a Master of Arts degree from New College Berkeley (August, 1993). |
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Heather Hood
Initiative Officer, Great Communities Collaborative San Francisco Foundation (SFF) See Bio Heather Hood is the Initiative Officer at The San Francisco Foundation. She directs the foundation’s work with the Great Communities Collaborative, a 25-partner initiative in the Bay Area that promotes quality transit-oriented development with compact development that blends income levels, homes, businesses, and community amenities together. Hood has 18 years of experience as an architect, city planner and educator. Previous to working in philanthropy, she was a lecturer in UC Berkeley’s Department of City and Regional Planning, and the co-founder and director of its Center for Community Innovation. She has co-authored reports about urban revitalization, housing and community development, and has served on several boards, including the American Institute of Architects, the Center for Urban Family Life, and the California Architecture Foundation. |
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Yvonne Hunter
Program Director, California Climate Action Network, Communities for Healthy Kids Institute for Local Government See Bio Yvonne Hunter is Program Director of two of Institute for Local Government’s programs- the California Climate Change Action Network and the Communities for Healthy Kids Program. The Institute for Local Government is a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the quality of local government nationally.Before joining the Institute in January 2007, Yvonne worked for the League of California Cities for 24 years, and the last fifteen years as a lobbyist emphasizing environmental and community services issues. In total, She has worked on environmental and energy issues for over thirty years.Yvonne has a Bachelor of Arts (BA) and a Masters of Arts (MA) from the University of California, Davis. |
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Rosalind Jackson
Director, Communications & Development Vote Solar See Bio Rosalind Jackson is the Director of Communications & Development for Vote Solar, a nonprofit organization that works to build the economies of scale necessary to bring solar into the mainstream. In this position, Rosalind manages media, member and donor relations for Vote Solar. Previously Rosalind spent five years directing and implementing public relations campaigns for all manner of clean energy and sustainable business innovators. Rosalind has a degree in Environmental Science and Mass Communications from UC Berkeley. |
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Jesse Jenkins
Director of Energy and Climate Policy The Breakthrough Institute See Bio Jesse Jenkins is Director of Energy and Climate Policy of The Breakthrough Institute, a leading public policy think tank. Jesse is one of the country's leading energy and climate policy analysts and advocates, managing the Institute's analytical and policy development programs. Jesse is the lead author or co-author of: the Breakthrough policy framework, "Make Clean Energy Cheap;" the reports "Rising Tigers, Sleeping Giant: Asian Nations Set to Dominate Clean Energy Race by Out-Investing United States" and "Jumpstarting a Clean Energy Revolution with a National Institutes of Energy"; the "National Energy Education Act" policy proposal, and widely cited analysis of the Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act. Jesse has written for the San Francisco Chronicle, Baltimore Sun, Yale Environment 360, Forbes.com Grist.org, and HuffingtonPost.com. His research and analysis has been cited by Time, Newsweek, Fortune, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Times, New York Times and other major media outlets. Jesse previously co-directed Breakthrough Generation, the Institute's youth leaders initiative, and prior to joining Breakthrough in June 2008, he worked at the Renewable Northwest Project to advance the development of the Pacific Northwest's abundant renewable energy potential. He is founder and chief editor of WattHead - Energy News and Commentary and is a featured writer at theEnergyCollective.com. Jesse is a graduate of the Clark Honors College at the University of Oregon (magna cum laude), where he completed an interdisciplinary course of study in computer science, philosophy, political science & energy studies. |
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Doug Johnson
Senior Planner Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) See Bio Doug Johnson is the Senior Planner of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission. |
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Helen Kang
Director Golden Gate University See Bio Helen Kang is the Director of the Environmental Law and Justice Clinic and is also an Associate Professor of Law at Golden Gate University.Helen was a former partner in the San Francisco law firm Goodman Kang. She was a former Trial Attorney with the US Department of Justice, Environmental Enforcement Section, and has successfully litigated numerous significant environmental cases. She is a member of the California Bar. |
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Tom Kelly
Director KyotoUSA See Bio Tom Kelly is the Founder and Director of Kyoto USA, an all volunteer, grassroots organization that encourages U.S. cities and their residents to reduce the global warming greenhouse gas emissions for which they are responsible. His organization persuaded the City of Berkeley to meet the goals set by the Kyoto protocol. By the fall of 2005, the city of Berkeley reduced its CO2 emissions by 14 percent through programs, which is double the target set by the Kyoto protocol. The city was able to achieve this goal through programs such as converting all the city's diesel vehicles to biodiesel, replacing 15 conventional automobiles with a half-dozen hybrids that are used by city employees during the week and available for use by Car Share members on weekends, giving all city employees free bus passes and discounts on BART, the region's commuter rail system, retrofitting energy-saving devices in city buildings, and converting all stoplights to light-emitting diodes.Tom used to work as a health investigator, trying to puzzle out environmental causes of ailments such as asthma and autism. Kelly wondered if he could find something that would show people that they can make a difference as individuals. In January 2005, Kelly and his wife, Jane, with help from the owner of the company Tom had worked for, launched Kyoto USA. The idea is to persuade cities, counties, universities, businesses -- any institution, large or small -- to pledge to meet the goals set by the Kyoto protocol that the US under George Bush walked away from. |
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Daniel Kessler
Senior Media Officer Greenpeace See Bio David Kessler is the Senior Media Officer of Greenpeace. He has served on the San Francisco Bay Trail Project Board of Directors since 1992.He studied at UC Berkeley. |
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Emily Kirsch
Lead Organizer, Green-Collar Jobs Campaign Ella Baker Center- Human Rights See Bio Emily Kirsch is the Lead Organizer of Green-Collar Jobs Campaign at the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in California, a nonprofit strategy and action center based in Oakland, California whose stated aim of the center is to work for justice, opportunity and peace in urban America. Emily is building cross-sector partnerships between green businesses, labor, environmental and community based organizations to create local partnerships, policies and pilot programs that create green-collar jobs for low-income people, people of color and women. Emily convenes the Oakland Climate Action Coalition, the Oakland Apollo Alliance and in on the Steering Committee of the Local Clean Energy Alliance.Emily has a Bachelor of Arts (BA) from San Francisco State University in Urban Health & Sustainability. She is passionate about creating solutions that save both lives and our planet. |
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Gary Knoblock
Program Officer, San Francisco Bay Area Program Gordon And Betty Moore Foundation (Moore Foundation) See Bio Gary Knoblock is a Program Officer for the San Francisco Bay Area Program at Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.Before joining the foundation, Gary served as the Executive Director of the Point Reyes National Seashore Association, where he led programs for endangered species protection, habitat restoration and oversaw environmental education programs. He has served in leadership positions in two San Francisco nonprofit organizations serving the homeless, worked for an international school of business in France and for the American Association of Museums in Washington, DC.Gary holds a Bachelors of Arts (BA) from Grinnell College, Iowa, and completed Masters-level coursework at Indiana University. |
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Joe LaClair
Chief Planning Officer, Bay Conservation and Development Commission State of California See Bio Joe LaClair is the Chief Planning Officer with the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission in San Francisco. He is a licensed landscape architect and an urban and regional planner. He has more than 20 years of experience, specializing in public space design and planning, land use, recreation and trail planning, and wildlife and recreation compatibility. He has served on the San Francisco Bay Trail Project Board of Directors since 1992.Joe received his Masters of Landscape Architecture and Masters of City and Regional Planning from the University of California at Berkeley. |
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Kara LaPierre
Vice President and Executive Director Joint Venture- Silicon Valley Network See Bio Kara LaPierre joined Joint Venture in August 2007 and serves as Executive Director of the Silicon Valley Economic Development Alliance. She also serves as coordinator of California Competes and is liaison to the government and development community on building code issues. Kara has 10 years of experience in the government and non-profit sectors, where she has worked on a broad range of public policy issues.Prior to Joint Venture, she was Director of Economic Vitality and Health Policy at the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, a trade association representing over 200 employers. In that capacity she worked on federal, state and local policy issues. Kara was formerly a consultant and government program analyst in Sacramento, where she worked with state agencies and county governments on management and technology projects. Kara moved to California after 4 years in the Washington, DC area, where she worked for government associations and contractors.Kara holds a Master of Public Administration (MPA) from the University of New Hampshire and a Bachelor of Arts (BA) from Plymouth State University. |
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Jessica Leas
Development Associate ClimateWorks Foundation (ClimateWorks) See Bio Jessica Leas is the Development Director at ClimateWorks Foundation, which is an international philanthropic network dedicated to achieving low-carbon prosperity. Jessica and the foundation are working to secure large foundations to systematically combat climate change.Jessica was previously an environmental advisor at Sewalanka Foundation, where she advised on making community development project environmentally sustainable, and provided assistant to government on biodiversity plan and reforestation plan. Between 2003-2007, Jessica was Director of Foundation and Corporate Gifts at Rails-To-Trails Conservancy, and managed relationships with foundations and corporate funders.Jessica received her masters in Environmental Science and Policy from John Hopkins University and her Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Government and Law from Lafayette College. |
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Adam Lenz
Sustainability Coordinator City of Richmond See Bio Adam Lenz is the Sustainability Coordinator of the City of Richmond. |
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Leslie Leslie
Grant Director Fred Gellert Family Foundation See Bio Leslie Leslie is currently the Grant Director for The Fred Gellert Family Foundation. She also serves on the Steering Committee of the WELL Network and on the Advisory Board of Permacouture Institute and China Rivers Project.Prior to her work with the Gellert Foundation, Leslie served as a Program Coordinator for the Resource Renewal Institute (RRI), assisting in research, event planning and program development. She currently continues to consult with RRI and assists in raising funds for a number of nonprofit organizations. She has co-founded three schools, including the Mountain School, a Waldorf pre-school in Corte Madera. For over 13 years, she helped lead fundraising efforts for the Waldorf School in San Francisco and was a co-founder of the S.F.Waldorf High School pre-school in Corte Madera. |
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Joel Levin
Vice President, Business Development California Climate Action Registry See Bio As the Climate Action Registry's Vice President of Business Development, Joel Levin is responsible for strategic development of the California Registry and has overseen the development of the Climate Action Reserve from inception to its current status as the recognized environmental standard for carbon offset projects in the United States. He is the California Registry’s primary liaison to the business community and is a frequent and popular speaker on the Registry’s programs and other climate change topics. Joel has served as staff to the California Market Advisory Committee and the California Climate Action Team. Prior to working at the California Registry, Joel worked at Feeva Wireless in Berkeley and APX in Santa Clara. He has also served on the Capitol Hill staff of Senator Timothy E. Wirth (D-Colorado). Joel is a member of the Sierra Club’s National Global Warming and Energy Committee and former chair of Energy Committee in both the San Francisco Bay and Los Angeles Chapters of the Sierra Club. In these roles, he has been active in promoting renewable energy and energy efficiency as key elements in California’s energy future. Joel holds a Masters of Business Administration (MBA) from the Haas School of Business at U.C. Berkeley and an M.A. in International Economics from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS). |
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Mark Levine
Group Leader, China Energy Group Lawrence Berkeley National Lab See Bio Mark Levine is Group Lead of the China Energy Group at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, an organization that conducts unclassified research across a wide range of scientific disciplines, and where eleven scientists associated with Berkeley Lab have won the Nobel Prize and 55 Nobel Laureates either trained here or had significant collaborations with the Laboratory. Dr. Levine is also Director of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy and the Center for Clean Air Policy, and has authored more than 100 publications. Dr. Levine previously served as Director of the Environmental Energy Technologies Division and was head of the Lab’s Energy Analysis Program. Earlier in his career, he was a Senior Energy Policy Analyst at SRI International and worked for the Ford Foundation Energy Project.Dr.Levine has a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in chemistry from Princeton University and a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley. |
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Jeremy Madsen
Executive Director Greenbelt Alliance See Bio Jeremy Madsen is the Executive Director of Greenbelt Alliance, California's San Francisco Bay Area land conservation and urban planning nonprofit organization. He sets and implements the organization's strategic goals and manages its operations. He is the leader of Greenbelt Alliance's policy and advocacy efforts to protect the Bay Area's open spaces and promote the creation of vibrant urban places.Jeremy comes to Greenbelt Alliance from The San Francisco Foundation, where he helped to launch the Great Communities Collaborative and supported social equity, affordable housing, and smart growth efforts around the Bay Area. From 2001 to 2005, Jeremy was Greenbelt Alliance's Field Director, leading the organization's policy campaigns and supervising the work of all its field offices. Previously, Jeremy served as Field Director for Washington state’s Transportation Choices Coalition, coordinated fair trade campaigns for the Washington, DC-based Citizens Trade Campaign, and ran get-out-the-vote efforts for candidate and ballot measure campaigns.Jeremy has a Master of Science (MS) in Environmental Studies from the University of Oregon, and a Bachelor of Arts (BA) from George Washington University. |
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Edward Mainland
Co-Chair, Energy-Climate Committee Sierra Club See Bio Edward Mainland is the Co-Chair of Sierra Club's California-Nevada Regional Conservation Committee (CNRCC) Energy-Climate Committee since 2005. He is also a Senior Conservation Fellow at the national Sierra Club since 2000.Edward's background is in organizing and leading local sustainability groups, with focus on climate protection and local green power. He was formerly vice chair of Global Environmental Security and Survival at the national Sierra Club from 2001 to 2002. |
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Connie Malloy
Director of Programs Urban Habitat See Bio Connie Galambos Malloy is the Director of Programs of the Urban Habitat Program, a nonprofit organization that builds power in low-income. As Director of Programs, Connie leads the organization's climate, transportation, land use and affordable housing work and advances Urban Habitat's agenda on key partner coalitions. She led the Bay Area Social Equity Caucus through a 10 year Evaluation and Strategic Plan, resulting in Urban Habitat's launch of the State of the Region, Boards and Commissions Leadership Institute, and Speakers and Writers Bureau programs. On behalf of Urban Habitat, Connie has completed the Women's Foundation of California's Women's Policy Institute training, the University of Southern California's Ross Program in Real Estate, and the National Development Council's Real Estate Finance Certification. Prior to her years at Urban Habitat, Connie coordinated the Regional Sustainability Initiative at Redefining Progress. Through a fellowship from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Connie has worked with a variety of California organizations on urban planning issues, including the Earned Asset Resource Network (EARN), Unity Council, and Strategic Actions for a Just Economy (SAJE). She has also worked as a planner and funding liaison for United Way of the Inland Valleys in Riverside, CA and as a Peace Corps volunteer leading sustainable tourism development projects in Bolivia’s Amazon Basin. Connie is a founding board member of AFAAD: Adopted & Fostered Adults of the African Diaspora and has directed the Children's Program at Pact Camp, training families adopting and fostering children of different races. She previously served on the board of the California Planning Foundation, and is currently serving as Diversity Director on the California Chapter of the American Planning Association’s Northern Section board. Connie earned her Master's of City Planning (MCP) in City and Regional Planning from the University of California, Berkeley and a Bachelors Degree in Communications & Spanish from La Sierra University. |
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Rachel Massaro
Associate Director, Climate Initiatives Joint Venture- Silicon Valley Network See Bio Rachel Massaro is the Associate Director of Climate Initiatives at Joint Venture Silicon Valley Network, an organization that provides analysis and action on issues affecting our region's economy and quality of life. Rachel joined Joint Venture in 2009 to assist with the Climate Prosperity Initiative, the Climate Protection Task Force and related projects.Rachel was previously a data analyst, researcher and field operations coordinator for three years with the Department of Oceanography at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.Rachel earned her Master of Science degree in geochemical oceanography in 2008. She was accepted into the program on an Oceanography Department Research Assistantship and a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Sea Grant-funded Traineeship. Her research was focused on global climate change and the role of the coastal ocean, specifically with respect to carbon dioxide dynamics. Rachel completed her Bachelor of Science degree in physical geography with a minor in geology at the University of California at Santa Barbara. She specialized in geospatial data analysis, Geographic Information Systems and global climate change. Rachel has volunteered her time with community organizations such as Sustainovation, Operation Care & Comfort and Habitat for Humanity. She was born and raised in Palo Alto, California. |
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Julian Meisler
Baylands Program Manager Sonoma Land Trust See Bio Julian Meisler is the Baylands Program Manager of Sonoma Land Trust, a local nonprofit organization that works with private landowners and public governmental agencies to protect environmentally significant land in and around Sonoma County. Previously, Julian was the Restoration Program Director for Laguna Foundation. He was responsible for overseeing the Foundation’s restoration projects including the Ludwigia Control Project. Prior to coming to California in 1999 Julian worked throughout the United States as a field biologist. Previous to the Foundation, he spent five years as a conservation planner and biologist with the Solano Land Trust implementing restoration and land management on 10,000 acres of wildlands. Julian holds a Master’s degree in Botany (Field Naturalist Program) from the University of Vermont and a Bachelor’s degree in Natural Resource Management from Colorado State University. |
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Lisa Micheli
Executive Director Pepperwood Foundation See Bio Lisa Micheli is the Executive Director of The Pepperwood Foundation, which is a beautiful nature sanctuary north of Santa Rosa. In this position, she directs the expansion of Pepperwood’s extensive conservation, education and research programs into the education cent.A Switzer Environmental Leader since 2002, Dr.Micheli brings with her more than 20 years of experience in environmental research, policy and community conservation program development. Previously, she worked at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 9 watershed program in San Francisco.Dr.Micheli received her masters degree at University of California, Berkeley, and her post-doctoral degree at University of California, Davis, where her research was on the Sacramento River that helped to guide the Nature Conservancy’s large-scale restoration effort. |
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Patricia Monahan
California Office Director and Deputy Director, Clean Vehicles Program Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) See Bio Patricia Monahan is the Director of the California office and Deputy Director for Clean Vehicles at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), a nonprofit organization that combines independent scientific research and citizen action to develop innovative, practical solutions and to secure responsible changes in government policy, corporate practices, and consumer choices. Patricia has published numerous studies on the benefits of reducing pollution from cars, trucks, buses, and heavy equipment. She has worked on federal and California-specific legislation and regulations to reduce pollution from vehicles and fuels. Before joining UCS in 2001, Patricia spent eight years as a scientist working on air pollution and toxics at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in Washington DC, and San Francisco. She spent several years as an energy analyst at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, where her research encompassed industrial energy use and efficiency, projections of energy use and pollution, and international strategies for reducing heat-trapping gas emissions. Patricia has a bachelor's degree in environmental science from the University of California at Berkeley and a master's degree in energy analysis and policy from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. |
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Brian Moura
Assistant City Manager & Green Programs Coordinator City of San Carlos See Bio Brian Moura is the Assistant City Manager & Green Programs Coordinator at City of San Carlos. |
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Calla Rose Ostrander
Climate Action Coordinator City and County of San Francisco See Bio Calla Rose Ostrander has been the Climate Change Coordinator at City and County of San Francisco since October 2008.Previously Calla was the Global Warming Project Coordinator at the City of Aspen for two years. From 2005-2006, she was a fellow at the Local Economic Development and Communications at Rocky Mountain Institute, and from 2004-2005 she was a Communications and Outreach Coordinator at the International Society for Environmental Economics.Calla graduated from the University of Puget Sound with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in International Political Economy. She wrote her thesis on the political economy of environmental policy in the United States. |
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Angus Parker
Program Director WiserEarth See Bio Angus Parker is the Program Director of WiserEarth, an online community with the world's largest free and editable international directory of non-governmental organizations and socially responsible organizations that encourages people and organizations to connect, collaborate, share knowledge and build alliances. Previously, Angus was the former Director of Operations for The Nature Conservancy's Asia Pacific Region and former Chief Operating Officer of Island Conservation, a science-driven, non-profit organization dedicated to preventing extinctions and protecting island ecosystems. Angus holds a Masters of Business Administration (MBA) from the Wharton School of Business, a Masters of Arts (MA) with Honors in International Management from the Joseph H. Lauder Institute, and a Master of Science (MSc) in Environmental Science from the Johns Hopkins University. |
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Cymie Payne
Lecturer in Residence; Director, Global Commons Project; Associate Director, Center for Law, Energy, and the Environment University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) See Bio In addition to teaching at Boalt, Cymie serves as the associate director of the Center for Law, Energy, and the Environment (CLEE) and as director of the Global Commons Project, which seeks to extend the influence of environmental law on global policy. Cymie is an expert in natural resource and environmental law, and joined the Boalt Hall faculty in 2006 after working for international and domestic entities engaged in environmental regulation and advocacy. Cymie was employed from 1999 to 2005 by the United Nations Compensation Commission. As a senior attorney, she was responsible for an international team of lawyers and technical experts assessing claims of damage to the environment and public health from conflict in the Persian Gulf. In this position, she supported a panel of commissioners involved in landmark decisions that granted war reparations for environmental damage. Following graduation from Boalt with an environmental certificate, Cymie served as an attorney-advisor in the Solicitor's Honors Program at the U.S. Department of the Interior, where she advised a host of governmental agencies on land claims, endangered species protection, tribal rights and other issues. She also worked in the environmental department of Goodwin Procter's offices in Boston. Before law school, Cymie served as the executive director of Earth Access, a nonprofit forest conservation organization that she founded in Cambridge, Mass. Payne received her M.A. at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (1993) and her J.D. at UC Berkeley (Boalt Hall) (1997). |
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Brent Plater
President and Executive Director Wild Equity Institute See Bio Brent Plater is the Executive Director of Wild Equity Institute, a nonprofit organization that accelerates the transition to a more equitable world through innovative education programs, nature-inspired design, science-based petitions, and vigorous enforcement of environmental laws. |
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Stephanie Reyes
Policy Director Greenbelt Alliance See Bio Stephanie Reyes is the Policy Director for Greenbelt Alliance, California's San Francisco Bay Area land conservation and urban planning nonprofit organization. She is responsible for coordinating efforts to protect open space and create livable communities on a regional and state level. She works with citizens, elected officials, and diverse groups to protect the greenbelt of open space and improve the livability of existing communities through grassroots organizing, coalition building, policy analysis, political strategizing and local advocacy.Stephanie has a Bachelor of Science (BS) in Computer Science from Brown University. |
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Rafael Reyes
Program Director Bay Area Climate Collaborative (Silicon Valley Leadership Group) See Bio Rafael Reyes is the Program Director of the Bay Area Climate Collaborative, a collaborative that brings together leaders from government, the business community, academia, and nonprofit advocacy groups to address the challenge of climate change across the region. Rafael is also on the Sierra Club board of directors and is Program Manager for EcoAmerica. At EcoAmerica Rafael leads large scale for-profit and non-profit partnership projects to reach mainstream Americans on the benefits of environmental progress. Among Rafael's projects with EcoAmerica are the collaboration with Monster.com to create GreenCareers, a green jobs service which shows that environmental progress leads to economic opportunity, and with the Princeton Review, Rafael led the development of the College Green Rating, which makes college green practices relevant to mainstream students by showing how they improve campus quality of life and career preparation. As an award-winning volunteer leader with the Sierra Club, he has led numerous initiatives, most recently the Cool Cities which encourages local innovation to reduce climate impacts and spur the green economy. Rafael has had 15 years of experience in high tech project management, systems architecture design and business consulting. He is fluent in Spanish, and has presented "An Inconvenient Truth" in both English and Spanish. Rafael was born in Peru, is a graduate from UC Berkeley. His blog on Northern California climate crisis topics is www.ClimateAtBay.net. |
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Bruce Riordan
Climate Consultant Joint Policy Committee (JPC) See Bio Bruce Riordan currently serves as the Climate Consultant for the Joint Policy Committee, which consists of The Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), the Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD), the Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC) and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC). Bruce Riordan is also the co-chair of Climate Bay Area, formed by the Joint Policy Committee and the Bay Area Council Economic Institute.For eleven years, Bruce Riordan has provided expert guidance and assistance to a series of Bay Area clients including Next Ten, BART, MTC, BAAQMD, Alameda County, Santa Clara County, the Marin Community Foundation, California Food Policy Advocates and more. |
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Carmen Rojas
Manager of Strategic Grantmaking Mitchell Kapor Foundation See Bio Carmen Rojas is the Manager of Strategic Grantmaking in Mitchell Kapor Foundation, a private foundation with the mission to ensure fairness and equity, especially in low-income communities of color.Dr.Rojas has spent the last 10 years working as an activist, organizer, and researcher for some of the leading environmental and economic justice organizations in the region, including Urban Habitat and the Lower San Antonio (Oakland) collaborative.Dr. Rojas has a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Politics from the UC Santa Cruz and a doctorate in City and Regional Planning from UC Berkeley. |
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Dave Room
Co-Founder and Local Clean Energy Coordinator Bay Localize See Bio Dave Room is the Co-Founder and Local Clean Energy Coordinator of Bay Localize, a nonprofit organization working to build a more socially equitable and sustainable Bay Area. He also coordinates the Local Clean Energy Alliance. Dave also does solo performance theater (The Monkey Trap) and Green Pill Workshops to awaken and activate mainstream audiences, people of color, and youth. Dave coined the term “Energy Preparedness” and served on the Oil Independent Oakland by 2020 Task Force. Dave holds a Master of Science (MS) in Engineering-Economic Systems and a Bachelors of Science (BS) in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University. |
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Sam Ruark
Program Manager, Energy Watch County of Sonoma See Bio Sam Ruark is the Energy & Sustainability Coordinator of the County of Sonoma. He is a LEED Accredited Professional and a Certified Permaculture Designer. |
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Maria Sanders
Environmental Analyst City of El Cerrito See Bio Maria Sanders is the Environmental Analyst at the City of El Cerrito. |
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Mike Sandler
Co-Founder Climate Protection Campaign See Bio Mike Sandler is the Co-Founder of Climate Protection Campaign, a nonprofit organization that supports and accelerates the work of Sonoma's cities to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. He has worked with 9 North Bay cities to quantify and reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, and helped the Bay Area Air Quality Management District in the creation of its new Climate Protection Program.In the late 1990's Mike co-founded the SEE Green Program and SEE Green Directory, a program promoting green businesses north of San Francisco Bay. He has also worked on several local government sustainability programs. From 2002-2006, Mike was Program Coordinator of the Community Clean Water Institute, working on water and climate issues. While there, Mike helped form the Redwood Empire Environmental Center, and sits on the Board of Town Hall Coalition, which works to protect forests and watersheds, and encourages citizen involvement in local participatory democracy. From 2004-2006, Mike was a Planning Commissioner for the City of Sebastopol. He is a charter member of the U.S. Society for Ecological Economics. From late 2006 to January 2008, Mike was Southern California Outreach Director for California Interfaith Power and Light. In this position, he worked with congregations to address global warming by educating and encouraging the faith community's use of energy efficiency and renewable energy. In 2007, Mike worked alongside author Peter Barnes and the Climate Protection Campaign to promote public trust characteristics in any proposed market mechanisms in California's implementation of AB32, the Global Warming Solutions Act. His research was featured in "Climate Solutions: A Citizen's Guide" and "Carbon Capping: A Citizen's Guide." Mike is also researching the per capita distribution of greenhouse gas emissions shares directly to California citizens, which he calls Carbon Share.Mike holds a degree in Political Economy from the University of California at Berkeley, and completed his Master's Program in Urban Planning at UCLA. He lives in San Rafael, California with his wife Regina. |
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Marcus Schneider
Climate Program Director Energy Foundation See Bio Marcus Schneider is a Senior Program Officer at the Energy Foundation, a private foundation whose mission is to promote a sustainable energy future through increased energy efficiency and renewable energy. Marcus oversees the Climate Program, which seeks to spur state and regional climate change actions. He is also co-chair of the Climate and Energy Funders Network.Previously, Marcus was a Research Associate at the Energy Foundation, and from 1994 to 1996 he was a Program Associate for the foundation’s utilities, renewables, and buildings programs.Marcus holds an Masters of Science (MS) in Energy and Resources from the University of California at Berkeley and a Bachelor of Arts (BA) from Oberlin College. |
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Stephen Schneider
Melvin and Joan Lane Professor for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies, Professor of Biological Sciences, Professor (by courtesy) of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and a Senior Fellow in the Woods Institute for the Environment Stanford University See Bio Dr. Stephen Schneider is the Melvin and Joan Lane Professor for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies, Professor of Biological Sciences, Professor (by courtesy) of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and a Senior Fellow in the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford University. He is currently counseling policy makers, corporate executives and other stakeholders in industry and the nonprofit sectors regarding possible climate-related events. Dr. Schneider has consulted with federal agencies and/or White House staff in the Nixon, Carter, Reagan, G.H.W. Bush, Clinton and G.W. Bush administrations. Dr.Schneider has been actively involved with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) since its origin in 1988. He has been a contributor to all four IPCC Assessment Reports and is currently a Coordinating Lead Author. He has authored or co-authored over 400 scientific papers, proceedings, legislative testimonies, edited books and book chapters, and over 200 book reviews, editorials and other pieces for popular media. Dr.Schneider has served as Co-Director of the Stanford Center for Environmental Science and Policy from 2002 to 2007 and Co-Director of Stanford's Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources from 2003 to 2005.Dr. Schneider received his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering and Plasma Physics from Columbia University in 1971. He was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in 1972 and was a member of the scientific staff of NCAR from 1973-1996, where he co-founded the Climate Project. Dr. Schneider, along with four generations of IPCC authors, received a collective Nobel Peace Prize for their joint efforts in 2007. Other awards he has received include the American Association for the Advancement of Science/ Westinghouse Award for Public Understanding of Science and Technology, the MacArthur Fellowship award, the Edward T. Law Roe Award of the Society of Conservation Biology, the 2003 National Conservation Achievement Award from the National Wildlife Federation and the Banksia Foundation's 2006 International Environmental Award in Australia. |
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Ryan Schuchard
Manager, Research & Innovation Business for Social Responsibility (BSR) See Bio Ryan Schuchard leads Business for Social Responsibility (BSR) practice in climate change in the position of Manager of Research & Innovation. BSR is an organization that works with member companies to develop sustainable business strategies and solutions through consulting, research, and cross-sector collaboration. Using a strategic lens, Ryan drives innovative business solutions for climate change—from driving supply chain energy efficiency to engaging in public climate policy to managing sustainable adaptation. His recent work includes launching Wal-Mart’s global supply chain energy-efficiency program based at their global procurement headquarters in Shenzhen, leading global climate policy intelligence for a US$30 billion+ extractives company, and driving analysis and reporting for BSR's own global footprint. Ryan has co-authored chapters in Corporate Responses to Climate Change (Greenleaf Publishing) and Carbon Trading (ICFAI Books), in addition to numerous reports and articles. Ryan is also an advisor to standards-building initiatives such as the Greenhouse Gas Protocol’s Scope 3 Initiative, the Electronics Industry Citizenship Coalition's Supply Chain Carbon Reporting System, the World Economic Forum’s Task Force on Low-Carbon Prosperity, and the China Energy and Climate Registry. Ryan has a Masters in Business Administration (MBA)from Thunderbird School of Global Management and a Bachelor of Science (BS) in Finance from Oregon State University. He served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Central Asia and is proficient in Russian. |
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Linda Schuck
Senior Advisor and Director of the Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Project California Institute for Energy and Environment (CIEE) See Bio Linda Schuck is a Senior Advisor and Director of the Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Project at the CIEE. CIEE's mission is to support public-interest energy research in California. Linda's work is focused on expanding behavior and decision research and its use in energy and climate policy and technology commercialization. At CIEE, she founded and chairs the Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Conference, which now involves 200 speakers and over 800 attendees, and, in 2007, convened the first Summit on Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Research.Linda has 25 years of experience working on energy, technology commercialization and climate change issues. Prior to joining CIEE, Linda directed the California Climate Change Project at Stanford University, an inter-university collaboration to facilitate the use of research in the design, adoption and implementation of strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. She has held managerial positions at the US Department of Energy, PG&E Company and the Alliance to Save Energy and has served as a management consultant to the California Energy Commission, Southern California Edison, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, PG&E and other organizations. Linda has extensive experience managing social science-based research and conducting experimentally designed research programs. She founded the Utility Customer Research Network, served on the advisory board of the International Energy Program Evaluation Conference and on the organizing committee for ACEEE Summer Study for many years. She also works on clean technology commercialization and serves on the Advisory Board of the Environmental Business Cluster, a clean energy technology incubator.Linda has an Masters of Public and Private Management MBA from Stanford University Graduate School of Business, a MA from Antioch Graduate School and a BA from Stanford University. |
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Peter Schultze-Allen
Environmental Analyst City of Emeryville See Bio Peter Schultze-Allen is the Environmental Programs Analyst for the City of Emeryville. |
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Kirsten Schwind
Program Director Bay Localize See Bio Kirsten Schwind is the Program Director of Bay Localize, a nonprofit organization working to build a more socially equitable and sustainable Bay Area. At Bay Localize Kirsten focuses on program and organizational development. She has worked with a number of Bay Area nonprofits including as Program Director at Food First, and currently serves on the City of Berkeley’s Energy Commission. Kirsten has over eleven years of organizing, research, and program development in the fields of social justice, global trade, food policy, labor organizing, clean energy, and local resources. Her writings on localization have been widely reprinted in several languages, and she enjoys speaking with groups of all sizes. She co-authored the report Tapping the Potential of Urban Rooftops, which won an award from the American Planning Association's California Chapter. Kirsten holds a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Economics and Public Policy from Swarthmore College and a Masters of Science (MA) in Natural Resources Management from the University of Michigan. Kirsten lived for several years in Latin America and is fluent in Spanish. |
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Joe Sciortino
Project Director Schmidt Family Foundation See Bio Joe Sciortino is Executive Director of The Schmidt Family Foundation. He oversees all facets of the foundation's programs, including The 11th Hour Project, a project that the Foundation sponsors to educate the public about global warming solutions and to empower individuals to take actions in everyday life to reduce emissions and to use our natural resources wisely. He led The 11th Hour Project as Project Director for four years. Joe is currently on the Board of The Regeneration Project and active in several organizations, including Environmental Grant makers Association and the California Academy of Sciences. A former Director of the ecommerce division of Williams-Sonoma, Joe has spent many years as a volunteer for environmental groups in the Bay Area, including leadership of a team monitoring populations of harbor seals in the Gulf of the Farallones Marine Sanctuary. Joe has a Masters of Science (MS) in Environmental Management from The University of San Francisco and a Bachelors of Science (BS) in finance and marketing from New York University. |
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Jason Scorse
Associate Professor of Chair of the International Environmental Policy Program Monterey Institute of International Studies (MIIS) See Bio Jason Scorse is currently Associate Professor and Chair of the International Environmental Policy Program at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. He is also currently the Lead Non-Market Economist for the National Ocean Economics Program. Dr. Scorse also sits on the board of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Research Activities Panel and The Otter Project. In addition to his scholarly work and consulting, he writes for the Grist blog and the Environmental Economics blog. Dr. Scorse previously was Assistant Professor for the Monterey Institute of International Studies, and a postdoctoral fellow for University of California, Berkeley in the summer of 2005. Dr. Scorse has consulted for numerous environmental organizations, including the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Sierra Club. He has published articles in American Economic Review, California Management Review, and for books published by the Brookings Institution and Routledge Press. His book, What Environmentalists Need to Know About Economics, is slated for publication in 2010.Dr. Scorse received his Ph.D. in Agricultural & Resource Economics from UC-Berkeley in 2005. He has a Master of Science (MS) in Applied Economics & Finance and Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Environmental Studies from University of California, Santa Cruz. |
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Kassie Siegel
Senior Counsel, Climate Law Institute Director Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) See Bio Kassie Siegel is the Senior Counsel of Climate Law Institute Director at The Center for Biological Diversity, a nonprofit organization that is devoted to protecting biodiversity in different arenas through science; legal action; policy advocacy; negotiation with government and industry; and creative, strategic media and outreach. Kassie develops and implements campaigns for the reduction of greenhouse gas pollution and the protection of plants and animals threatened by global warming, including the Center’s petition to protect the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act.Prior to working for the Center for Biological Diversity, Kassie was a natural-history guide leading wilderness trips in Alaska.Kassie attended Berkeley’s Boalt Hall School of Law. |
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Christina Sloop
Conservation Science Program Director Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation (Laguna Foundation) See Bio Dr. Christina Sloop is the Conservation Science Program Director of the Laguna Foundation. She joined the Foundation staff in June 2006. Using science to address the critical problems facing biodiversity Dr. Sloop’s research program evaluates and constructs workable solutions to issues of invasive species, habitat loss, degradation & connectivity, endangered species recovery, water quality impairment, and sedimentation within the Laguna de Santa Rosa watershed.Dr.Sloop's extensive experience spans across multiple disciplines and includes research on the conservation ecology of rare and endangered species, the population dynamics of invasive species, conservation ecology and population genetics of vernal pool plant species, public-access impacts on bird diversity, restoration efficacy of riparian plantings, water quality modeling and monitoring, invasive species control, endangered species recovery, and conservation planning. Dr. Sloop holds a Ph.D. in Ecology from UC Davis, and a M.A. degree in Conservation Biology from San Francisco State University. |
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Susan Stephenson
Executive Director Regeneration Project See Bio Susan Stephenson is the Executive Director of The Regeneration Project and its Interfaith Power and Light campaign, which is a unique coalition of Episcopal churches aggregated to purchase renewable energy. She has been involved with California Interfaith Power and Light since its inception in 2000.Susan has over twelve years experience with developing and implementing issue-advocacy and electoral campaigns for environmental and other public interest organizations. Prior to joining The Regeneration Project, she served as Vice President of the Oakland-based campaign consulting firm, The Next Generation. Beginning in 1999, she organized and coordinated the California Global Warming Campaign, which implemented a proactive strategy resulting in several landmark legislative victories.Susan received her Bachelor of Arts (BA) in English Literature from the University of North Carolina. |
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Laura Tam
Sustainable Development Policy Director San Francisco Planning & Urban Research Association (SPUR) See Bio Laura Tam is the Sustainable Development Policy Director for San Francisco Planning & Urban Research Assocation (SPUR). Laura coordinates SPUR's work in five major policy areas: green buildings, water supply, wastewater, energy and climate change.Prior to joining SPUR, Laura worked for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Office of Inspector General, where she conducted research and analysis that produced recommendations for the EPA to better manage environmental problems. In this position, she worked on a variety of policy issues, such as enforcing the Clean Water Act and managing electronic waste. She previously worked for the Northern Forest Center on rural development and conservation in the Northeast. She is the author of the book, At Home in the Northern Forest.Laura earned a Master’s degree in environmental management from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, and received her Bachelor of Arts in Geography from Dartmouth College. Originally from Honolulu, Laura has lived in San Francisco since 2003, and in her free time, enjoys running, yoga, and spending time in San Francisco’s natural areas with her family. |
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Elizabeth Tan
Director of Development and Planning Urban Habitat See Bio Elizabeth Tan is the Director of Development and Planning for the Urban Habitat Program, a nonprofit organization that builds power in low-income communities. |
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Lynne Trulio
Department Chair, Environmental Studies San Jose State University (SJSU) See Bio Lynne Trulio joined the Department of SJSU in 1991 as an assistant professor and is now a full professor and the Department Chair of the Environmental Studies. Dr. Trulio teaches a wide range of courses including Introduction to Environmental Studies and Globalization and the Environment. Dr. Trulio conducts research investigating human impacts to species and habitats and seeks effective methods to mitigate or eliminate those impacts. Specific research with colleagues and graduate students includes studies of tidal salt marsh restoration in the San Francisco Bay, the effects of recreation on wildlife, and the ecology and recovery of the western burrowing owl in California. She has been a committee member or chair for scores of Environmental Studies master of science students. She is also the faculty advisor to the Environmental Resource Center, a student-run center for sustainability action in the Department. In addition to her professorship, Dr. Trulio was the Lead Scientist for the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project during its planning phase, from 2003-2008. For this position, she directed the Project's science program and was a member of the Project Management Team. In 1999, she was selected as an American Association for the Advancement of Science Environmental and Engineering Fellow. In that capacity, from August 1999 to December 2000, Dr. Trulio was a visiting environmental scientist in the Wetlands Division, Office of Wetlands, Oceans and Watersheds of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, DC. Dr.Trulio received her Ph.D. in Ecology from the University of California, Davis (1988) and her undergraduate degree in Biology from Goucher College in Towson, MD (1979). |
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Barry Vesser
Deputy Director Climate Protection Campaign See Bio Barry Vesser is the Deputy Director of the Climate Protection Campaign, a nonprofit organization that supports and accelerates the work of Sonoma's cities to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions as part of a worldwide effort.Barry began working with the Climate Protection Campaign in 2005. Prior to this, Barry directed a nonprofit in the Sierras and built the organization from total resources of less than $8000 to in excess of $2,103,000 in less than seven years. He also worked as director of a nonprofit promoting organic agriculture in Nepal and as a Peace Corps volunteer in the Philippines.Barry has an M.A. in International Public Administration. |
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Bill Waldman
Executive Director Island Conservation See Bio Bill Waldman was selected as Executive Director of Island Conservation in July, 2008. Island Conservation is a nonprofit organization that prevents extinctions by working where the concentration of species extinction is greatest – islands – and by removing one of the greatest threats to the continued existence of plants and animals there – introduced invasive species.Prior to joining Island Conservation, Bill had a 30 year career as a non-profit leader, including 23 years with The Nature Conservancy. From 1988 through 2005, Bill served as the State Director and Vice-President of The Nature Conservancy in New Mexico. In this capacity he restored financial and operational stability to the organization and led it to significant achievements. Among these were the protection of 1.3 million acres of ecologically significant lands in New Mexico, the negotiation for and acquisition of the 500 square mile Gray Ranch in New Mexico, and successful lobbying for the passage of three state-wide land protection acts. Bill also served the Nature Conservancy by managing complex regional and international initiatives in the Great Plains of North America and in Kenya, and as manager of a newly formed global team charged with supporting the integration of The Nature Conservancy’s 2015 Conservation Goal. |
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Michael Wara
Assistant Professor, Law; Center Fellow, Woods Institute Stanford University See Bio Michael Wara is an Assistant Professor in Law at Stanford University, and a Center Fellow of the Woods Institute. Michael is an expert on environmental law and policy. His research focuses on climate policy and regulation, both domestically and internationally. Professor Wara’s current scholarship addresses the performance of the emerging global market for greenhouse gas and mechanisms for reducing emissions, especially in developing countries after the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012. Professor Wara is a research fellow at the Program in Energy and Sustainable Development in Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. |
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Terry Watt
Owner Terry Watt Planning Consultants See Bio Terrell Watt has been the owner of Terrell Watt Planning Consultants since 1989, a firm specializing in planning and implementing projects that promote resource conservation and sustainable development patterns which are significant to the region. Terrell is an expert in general and specific planning, open space and agricultural land conservation and environmental compliance. Her role also includes facilitation, public outreach, and negotiation. Terrell has a wide variety of clients throughout California including non-profit organizations, government agencies and foundations. In 2005, on behalf of Friends of Harbors, Beaches and Parks and its environmental coalition she negotiated $243.5 million in an Orange County transportation measure to comprehensively mitigate for habitat impacts due to freeway projects. Prior to forming her own consulting group, Terrell was the staff planning expert with the environmental and land use law firm Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger. |
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Stuart Weiss
CEO and Chief Scientist Creekside Center for Earth Observation See Bio Stuart Weiss is the Chief Scientist and Chief Executive Officer of Creekside Center for Earth Observation, which is an ecology and conservation biology, scientific consulting firm.Dr.Weiss was previously a research assistant professor at the Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California at Santa Barbara. He was a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Conservation Biology at Stanford University from 1996-1999. He has published multiple articles in Ecology and Society, Earth Interactions, and Conservation Biology.Dr.Weiss received his Ph.D. in Biological Sciences in 1996 from Stanford University. His dissertation was about "Weather, Landscape Structure and the Population Ecology of a Threatened Butterfly, Euphydryas editha bayensis". He also received his B.S. in Biological Sciences from Stanford University with honors. |
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Jim Williams
Chief Scientist E3: Energy & Environmental Economics (E3) See Bio Dr. Jim Williams is the Chief Scientist for E3: Energy & Environmental Economic (E3), an energy research and consulting organization. In this position, Dr. Williams leads E3’s practice in climate change policy and greenhouse gas reduction. He is the lead analyst on the E3 team modeling implementation of AB32 (California’s Global Warming Solutions Act) for the California Public Utilities Commission. With more than 20 years experience in the energy industry, he is a specialist in regulatory policy and clean energy technologies, resources, and costs. His practice areas include carbon pricing and market design, renewable generation and transmission, retail rate design for energy efficiency and demand response, and economic modeling/analysis of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, energy storage, and distribution automation. Dr. Williams is also Associate Professor at the Monterey Institute of International Studies, where he teaches energy and environmental policy, with a focus on energy markets and regulation in Asian developing countries.Dr. Williams received his Bachelor of Science (BS) in Physics from Washington and Lee University, and his PhD in Energy and Resources from U.C. Berkeley. |
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Miya Yoshitani
Associate Director Asian Pacific Environmental Network (APEN) See Bio Miya Yoshitani is the Associate Director for the Asian Pacific Environmental Network, a nonprofit organization that seeks to empower low-income Asian Pacific Islander communities to achieve environmental and social justice. Miya studied at University of Illinois. |
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Abby Young
Principal Environmental Planner Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) See Bio Abby Young is the Principal Environmental Planner at Bay Area Air Quality Management District, a regional government agency that regulates sources of air pollution within the nine San Francisco Bay Area Counties. Previously, Abby was the Director of the U.S. Cities for Climate Protection Campaign, a program of ICLEI Local Governments for Sustainability, where she directed a national program to assist local governments in measuring and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Abby studied in John Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies. |
Craig Appel
Dana Armanino