Welcome to our series celebrating our fantastic board members! Their bios are here, but there's so much more to know about their service, skills and passion below. Karen is a recently retired nonprofit Executive Director, with a 31-year career at the Clark Fork Coalition. She is a founding member of the Climate Smart Missoula board, which officially gained 501 c 3 status in 2019. How would you like to introduce yourself to folks, when it comes to serving on the Climate Smart Missoula board? I served from 2007 to 2024 as the Executive Director of the Missoula-based Clark Fork Coalition, a river conservation group working to protect and restore the historically hard-working Clark Fork watershed. Early in my stint as E.D., my organization became concerned about an emerging new threat – namely, the fundamental shift in Montana’s climate and its intensifying impacts on the health of the watershed. Our response included launching a stream restoration program, doubling-down on state water policy reform, and sparking dialogue in Missoula about what climate change means for our hometown rivers and the communities they sustain. We were pleased that the conversation not only struck a chord in the community, but that it expanded far beyond water, and helped bring about the solutions-oriented work of Climate Smart Missoula. It’s been deeply satisfying to be a part of this vital effort since the start! What skills / perspectives are you proud to bring to the board? Given my career in the world of water, I bring perspectives on how climate change impacts community water supplies and waterways, which is one of the most profound and tangible ways western Montanans experience a warming West. As a former nonprofit E.D., I also have skills in calibrating organizations for innovation and impact through strategic planning, governance, and outreach. I have a “swing for the fences” mindset and am wired to be proactive and positive. What is your favorite part about serving? And / or what program at Climate Smart Missoula gets you most excited? It’s deeply satisfying to serve on the board of Climate Smart Missoula. The work of the organization is important, meaningful, and based on giving back, and the team is energetic and action-oriented, with moonshot aspirations. Between the mission, the people, and the collaborative approaches, Climate Smart Missoula has created a space that is exciting and rewarding to be a part of. What is your hope for our community, related to your goals and our work at Climate Smart Missoula? My hope is that we keep thinking beyond yesterday’s toolbox and work together to infuse climate resilience and climate equity into everything we do as a community.
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Welcome to our series celebrating our fantastic board members! Their bios are here, but there's so much more to know about their service, skills and passion below. For the last 15 years, Pat taught at the Wild Rockies Field Institute and University of Montana in the Philosophy Department, the Davidson Honors College and the Restoration Ecology Program. He is now retired and has served on the Climate Smart Missoula board since 2023. Why did you decide to serve on the Climate Smart Missoula board? I decided to serve on the board because of my desire to do something effective and pragmatic locally regarding the climate crisis. I have taught many classes on the climate crisis over the last 15 years. However, that sometime seems too theoretical and lacks the feeling of local, real-world effects. What skills / perspectives are you proud to bring to the board? I bring to the board a broad understanding of the climate crisis and what large-scale global and individual changes are needed. However, Climate Smart Missoula offers the possibility of doing something at the community level for the city that I love. I, also, have an extensive background in the development and management of environmental organizations. What is your favorite part about serving? And / or what program at Climate Smart Missoula gets you most excited? I find Electrify Missoula, the Footprint Fund, Trees for Missoula - and the tours of Missoula demonstration projects - to be the most interesting. What is your hope for our community, related to your goals and our work at Climate Smart Missoula? My hope is that we can gain even more momentum toward achieving our goals of electrification, having renewable power available to the entire community, and a healthy and greatly expanded urban forest. Thank you for your service, Pat!
Welcome to our series celebrating our fantastic board members! Their bios are here, but there's so much more to know about their service, skills and passion below. Christine served as the science director for the Clark Fork Coalition for 16 years. She is now retired and has served on our board since 2020. How would you like to introduce yourself to folks, when it comes to serving on the Climate Smart Missoula board? My interest in and concern with the warming of our planet began in the mid 1990’s when I took, and later taught, a class in global climate change at the University of Montana while working on my Ph.D. It really opened my eyes. What skills / perspectives are you proud to bring to the board? I bring a scientific understanding of climate change. Although my time at the Clark Fork Coalition focused mainly on cleanup of water pollution and the removal of Milltown Dam, I also co-authored a primer on local effects of climate change called Low Flows, Hot Trout. We presented heat-related trends in western Montana along with perspectives from affected stakeholders. Also, through partnership contracts with the Lolo National Forest, I designed and coordinated a new year-round continuous stream temperature monitoring network and co-authored a Forest-wide climate vulnerability assessment. Why did you decide to serve? I was involved in a few of [now Executive Director] Amy Cilimburg’s community visioning sessions (pre-Climate Smart Missoula) and when Climate Smart Missoula became an official nonprofit, I knew I wanted to be involved. Climate change is overwhelming, yet there are real and positive steps toward mitigation and adaptation that can be accomplished locally. I appreciate the local perspective of Climate Smart Missoula. What is your favorite part about serving? And / or what program at Climate Smart Missoula gets you most excited? I love all the work that Climate Smart Missoula does, and I love the energy and commitment that staff bring. If I have to pick a favorite program it is the Footprint Fund (missoulafootprintfund.org). This is a carbon offset program for businesses or individuals with offset donations, realized as local energy-saving improvements in affordable housing that would not otherwise occur. You can estimate your carbon footprint with an online calculator and donate accordingly, or simply donate to the Fund, knowing that your donation will be used in the greater Missoula area. The Human Resource Council helps us find deserving projects. It’s such a great intersection of environmental justice and carbon mitigation. I also love that Climate Smart Missoula donates fans, HEPA filters, and air purifiers to help folks cope with our increasingly smoky summers. What is your hope for our community, related to your goals and our work at Climate Smart Missoula? My hope is that more and more Missoulians will recognize the good work that Climate Smart Missoula is doing toward climate mitigation and adaptation, and that more people in Montana and beyond recognize the potential for similar work in their communities. I think the adage to “think globally and act locally” applies. Thank you for your service, Christine!
Welcome to our series celebrating our fantastic board members! Their bios are here, but there's so much more to know about their service, skills and passion below. Paul is the Vice President of Sustainability at Clearwater Credit Union and has served on the Climate Smart Missoula board since we gained nonprofit status in 2019. How would you like to introduce yourself to folks, when it comes to serving on the Climate Smart Missoula board? I’m a long-time climate nerd and lover of wild places, excited to do work I care about in a place I love. Why did you decide to serve? A strong community is important to me personally, and responding to climate change is important to me professionally. Climate Smart Missoula sits right at the intersection of the two. What skills / perspectives are you proud to bring to the board? Climate Smart Missoula’s staff and board are an extraordinary group of people with a really diverse set of skills and perspectives. To the extent that I can offer something additional, I think it is my background in climate science and bent for quantitative analysis. What is your favorite part about serving? And / or what program at Climate Smart Missoula gets you most excited? I enjoy the chance to have a direct impact on the community I live in, on an issue I care deeply about. Climate change mitigation and adaptation, affordable housing, and strong communities all overlap, and I’m excited to work on programs that touch all three, like Climate Smart Missoula’s Footprint Fund. What is your hope for our community, related to your goals and our work at Climate Smart Missoula? My hope is that the work Climate Smart Missoula is doing will have a direct, material benefit on the lives of people in our community, and that we can demonstrate how to do this to others around the country. Thank you for your service, Paul!
Welcome to our series celebrating our fantastic board members! Their bios are here, but there's so much more to know about their service, skills and passion below.
Why did you decide to serve? My children, and those generations yet to come, are the most compelling reasons to work on solutions for the climate crisis. What skills / perspectives are you proud to bring to the board? As an Indigenous woman, I am proud to offer perspectives from that lens, and also as a person born and raised in my beloved hometown of Missoula. What is your favorite part about serving? And / or what program at Climate Smart Missoula gets you most excited? I appreciate the coalition of people that Climate Smart Missoula brings together. I feel more hopeful when I reflect on the meaningful relationships in my life and hope that our organization has also been able to act as a catalyst and bridge for bringing together people from all walks of our community and region. What is your hope for our community, related to your goals and our work at Climate Smart Missoula? That we continue to collaborate with, and support, each other during difficult times ahead. Thank you for your service, Gwen!
Welcome to our series celebrating our fantastic board members! Their bios are here, but there's so much more to know about their service, skills and passion below. Beth is the Chief Environmental Stewardship Officer for Providence and was a founding member of the Climate Smart Missoula board, which officially gained 501 c 3 status in 2019 (though she was involved with our work well before that!). Her job keeps her extremely busy, but she made time to answer a few questions about her service: How would you like to introduce yourself to folks, when it comes to serving on the Climate Smart Missoula board? I have been concerned about the natural world since childhood. In my career as a nurse, I learned about the many ways pollution harms health, and how planetary health, including the functions of Earth’s systems, is crucial for human health and that of other species. I’ve been chipping away at trying to improve this for 3 decades. Why did you decide to serve? When Climate Smart Missoula was forming, it was clear that it was a vibrant, evidence-based, action-oriented approach to knitting together community partners to help ensure a healthy Missoula in the face of climate change. I wanted to be a part of that. What skills / perspectives are you proud to bring to the board? Content knowledge, organizational experience, leadership skills, strong work ethic. What is your favorite part about serving? And / or what program at Climate Smart Missoula gets you most excited? I like supporting the fabulous staff, and helping make sure the organizational pieces are in order. I like all of the programs – the staff respond to what is needed in the community, often setting the tone and pace for Missoula’s progress. I’m excited about the effectiveness of Climate Smart Missoula. What is your hope for our community, related to your goals and our work? That as a community, we continue to anticipate solutions that address health and safety related to climate change, and insight on equity and justice. Climate Smart Missoula has demonstrated its commitment to this progress again and again. We will need to keep going in this direction for decades to come as the impacts of climate change proceed. I hope that Missoula continues to be a creative, vibrant community of solutions, support, and safety in the face of climate change. Thank you for your service, Beth!
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AuthorsAbby Huseth Archives
October 2024
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