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Diana Abbott Diana Abbott is currently working full time as the Operations Manager for Public Policy Virginia, a new 501-c-3 non-profit corporation focused on grass roots communication. She has a degree in Sociology. During and after raising two daughters, she worked as a preschool teacher and then substitute teacher in Fairfax and Albemarle counties. She has volunteered for two school systems, the Red Cross, Girl Scouts, and the Wildlife Center of VA. Currently she is very active in the Albemarle Democratic Party. She is a member of SFA, SELC, PEC and many world wide environmental and health organizations.
Gib Akin Gib Akin is Professor of Organizational Behavior at the McIntire School of Commerce, University of Virginia. He joined the faculty in 1976 after completing a PhD at UCLA. Dr. Akin also consults in strategic planning, organizational design and improvement, as well as team building. He has published extensively on team building and organizational change.
Jim Bonner Jim has been a resident of Albemarle County for nearly 30 years, having raised his family here on two farms. He has a daughter who will soon graduate from the University of Virginia. An Agricultural Economics major himself at Oregon State University, Jim was well prepared for the farm and estate brokerage business he has successfully developed, known as The Land Office at Roy Wheeler Realty Co. While participating in transactions totaling over 28,000 acres, Jim has sought to preserve and protect the area's natural, historic and cultural resources by educating newcomers about the area, and by encouraging landowners to put conservation easements, where possible, on Virginia's beautiful countryside.
Pete Cross Whitman ("Pete") Cross II, EdD, is a geoscientist who spent over 35 years in the eastern U.S. teaching the earth sciences at secondary and college levels and serving as the director of a natural history museum. His graduate work at the University of Virginia centered on determining the availability and location of ground water resources in western Albemarle County, VA, home to Charlottesville and the ASAP organization. Upon his return to this area, in 1998, he resumed an active role in educating the public as to the unique geologic conditions limited the availability of ground water and surface water supplies and the importance of limiting growth to prevent future water shortages.
Nick Evans Nick Evans, PhD, is Chairman of the Thomas Jefferson Soil & Water Conservation District and President of Virginia Groundwater LLC, a water supply consulting and drilling company. He has worked for many years with State and local governments in the arena of sustainable water use and watershed protection. Most recently, Nick has orchestrated establishment of the Thomas Jefferson Water Resources Protection Foundation, which works with landholders to establish easements on lands critical to water quality. He lives with his family amid three streams and a pond on a small farm in northern Albemarle County.
John Hermsmeier John Hermsmeier is a founder and director of the Environmental Education Center, a non-profit organization dedicated to linking educators and curricula to the people and issues of the Charlottesville/Ablemarle region as it strives to become a sustainable community. The seeds of John’s interest in making these connections were sown as he was growing up in Fairfax County, where opportunities for designing the relationship between people and nature disappeared as fast as the landscape. For John, ASAP represents an honest attempt to address the practical and ethical consequences of population as a major driver of our community’s capacity to chart, rather than simply passively await, its fate. Initially drawn to the area to pursue a degree in Environmental Sciences from the University of Virginia, John has made the conversion to a “townie” who recognizes that everyone is ultimately a “come here” with equal rights to define what a community will become.
Janis Jaquith Janis Jaquith is a writer. Her radio commentaries have been broadcast locally on NPR-station WVTF since 1997. She's been heard nationally on PRI's "Marketplace," and NPR's "Day to Day." After six years as a columnist for The Daily Progress in Charlottesville, Jaquith's columns have found a new home at Charlotteville's weekly newspaper, The Hook. She is the author of Birdseed Cookies: A Fractured Memoir, a collection of her radio essays. Jaquith grew up near Boston, earned a BA from the University of Massachusetts, studied at the Sorbonne, and attended the University of Pennsylvania as a graduate student of linguistics. She has lived in Free Union since 1992.
Harry Levins Over the last 30 years, Harry Levins has worked in management information systems, management consulting, and accounting. He spent several years as an analyst and project manager in Price Waterhouse's national retail management consulting division, specializing in geographic market and store location analyses. He received an MBA and a Master’s in Social Work from Ohio State University. He is a member of the Sierra Club, the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, and the Piedmont Environmental Council and has been appointed to a number of local government committees.
Mark Lorenzoni Mark Lorenzoni has lived in Albemarle County since 1978. Together with his wife, Cynthia, Mark owns the Ragged Mountain Running Shop and spends a good part of every day helping exercisers (ranging from 6-90 years old) stay comfortably on their feet. A tireless community steward, Mark believes that a healthy community benefits everyone. He has served on numerous non-profit boards and committees and has directed several hundred running and racing events over the past two and a half decades. Mark feels fortunate to be living, working and raising his family in such a special place.
Marvin Moss Marvin "Bud" Moss graduated from West Point and served in the US Army for over 10 years including a tour in Vietnam. He received his MA in International Relations while in the Army specializing in Sub-Saharan Africa. After leaving the Army, he embarked on a political career working first for a Democratic House member in Washington. From 1977-1995, he was chief-of-staff to Senator Paul Sarbanes (D.Md). He retired to his historic home, Glen Burnie, in Fluvanna County in 1995 and became active in heritage and open space preservation efforts in this region.
Deborah Murray Deborah Murray is a Charlottesville resident and a senior attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center. SELC is a non-profit environmental organization dedicated to protecting the natural resources of the Southeast through direct legal action, policy reform, and public education. Deborah received a B.A. in History with highest distinction from the University of Virginia and a J.D. from the UVA School of Law. Prior to joining SELC in 1988, she worked as an attorney with a law firm in Washington, D.C.
John Stack John Stack is a ten year resident of Albemarle County and a Real Estate broker with the largest firm in this part of Virginia. His wife is a Professor at the University of Virginia. Prior to moving to Virginia, John was a business consultant in Florida and earlier was a marketing and business manger for Fortune 500 firms in the U.S. and Latin America. Johns is a graduate of Northwestern University and also holds an MBA degree. He served in the Army National Guard in Illinois, California and New York.
Peggy Thome Margaret “Peggy” Thome was born in Washington, DC, the day Roosevelt signed the Yalta Agreement. She lived in Denver, Woonsocket, SD, and Ogden, UT, graduating from Weber State College in Ogden. Peggy came home to DC, to work as an administrator in the U.S. Treasury, Navy, U.S. Information Agency, Peace Corps, and retired from USAID as Director of Administration in 2000. Peggy and her husband David bought the 163-year-old Perry Hill Farm in Buckingham in 1999 and Peggy began giving tours at Monticello in 2001. She has an avid interest in historical properties, and both Perry Hill and Peggy’s DC residence are National Landmarks.
Jane Williamson Jane Williamson holds an undergraduate degree in Political Science from Radcliffe College and a graduate degree from the University of Virginia in Health Promotion. For the past 20 years, in addition to volunteering, she has been a self-employed health educator working in venues both local and out of town. While she has been a longtime supporter of various worldwide environmental organizations, increasingly her interests have turned to issues closer to home. Most recently she has been active as an officer in her neighborhood association which has been involved in a near decade- long struggle with developers. Both her birth and marriage families have owned businesses that have a combined history of over eighty years in operation in Charlottesville and Albemarle County. The fact that one of these businesses is road building does not deter Jane or her family from being enthusiastic proponents of preserving the beauty and quality of life in Albemarle County.
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