There’s No Future Without Nature and Local Leadership is Driving National Protections of Public Land: A Welcome Message from Our New Chief Development Officer

Some of my earliest and most formative memories are on public lands in New Mexico, where I grew up camping under impossibly starry skies, hiking rocky canyons, and exploring every sunbaked arroyo in Santa Fe for lizards and other small critters. Growing up in the Southwest made me deeply aware of both the beauty and the fragility of these landscapes. I saw how fire, drought, and mismanagement could threaten not only ecosystems, but the health and well-being of the communities who depend on them.
Those experiences shaped me. They taught me that caring for wild landscapes isn’t passive, it’s a collective responsibility. That belief has guided my career and approach to leadership: philanthropy is fundamentally about stewardship, community, and creating the conditions for impact to scale.
It’s also what drew me to the Conservation Lands Foundation. Its clarity of mission, its commitment to community-led conservation, and its track record of protecting and expanding the National Conservation Lands represent the future of protecting nature, one rooted in collaboration, shared power, and long-term investment.

The Conservation Lands Foundation sits at the center of a powerful model: local leadership driving national impact. Our Friends Grassroots Network, from Alaska to New Mexico to the Great Basin and beyond, demonstrates this every day. When people who know a landscape best are resourced, connected, and supported they safeguard places in ways that are durable, equitable, and deeply rooted in community priorities.
This approach is strategic by design. By pairing national advocacy with place-based leadership, the Conservation Lands Foundation builds influence and impact from the ground up. We’re able to respond to threats quickly, cultivate trusted local partnerships, and advance long-term protections that endure. It’s an approach that doesn’t just protect land, it builds community capacity, shifts power, and strengthens the civic fabric that will determine the future of our public lands.
People connect with nature in different ways and although those experiences aren’t uniform they are powerful. What I’ve consistently seen is that when a landscape becomes part of someone’s story, they show up for it. That spirit is alive across our Friends Grassroots Network and is one of the clearest indicators of what’s possible when communities lead.

Conservation Lands Foundation staff with members of our Friends Grassroots Network in Washington D.C.
As I step into the role of Chief Development Officer, I’m energized by what’s ahead. My work has always focused on building and diversifying the revenue, relationships, and systems that allow organizations to grow, adapt, and deliver impact at scale. The Conservation Lands Foundation is ready for its next chapter and that readiness is reflected in its strategic approach, its partnerships, and its people.
But meeting the scale of this moment requires strengthening the infrastructure that supports it. Public lands are facing pressures we’ve never seen at this pace or intensity. The Friends Grassroots Network needs expanded tools and sustained support.
Because the truth is simple: there is no future without nature and attacks against our natural resources in the U.S. are increasing exponentially. The choices we make collectively will determine the landscapes we pass forward. And this moment calls for meaningful action.
Today I invite you to learn more, engage with our mission, and stand with the communities leading it. When communities lead, landscapes thrive and that’s the future we’re building together: one that holds our history, health, and humanity for generations.
I’m deeply honored to join this team, and I’m excited to partner with the donors, allies, and supporters who make this mission possible. The horizon ahead is big and what we decide to do together will define it.









