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CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Victoria Owens

Victoria Owens is the Special Agent in Charge of the Investigations Unit and has worked with the OLE for the past 19 years. She began as a wildlife inspector trainee, progressed to a wildlife inspector, and eventually became a special agent where she worked in Ohio and Hawaii. Some of her main duties included enforcement of Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which is a multilateral treaty to protect endangered plants and animals and she has provided instruction at the International Law Enforcement Academy in Gaborone, Botswana. In this role, she liaisons with OLE’s International Attachés stationed in various locations worldwide and as a senior special agent she has worked projects, such as the Service’s Barrier Analysis team and the Targeted recruitment team. Owens has graduated from the Pacific Leadership Academy Senior Leader, FBI – LEEDA Supervisor Institute, and the U.S. Army’s Military Police Leadership School, where she later became a company commander and combat veteran. Owens has a B.S. in Animal Science from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff and is currently pursuing a master’s degree in Public Administration at Arkansas State University.

Victoria Owens is the Special Agent in Charge of the Investigations Unit and has worked with the OLE for the past 19 years. She began as a wildlife inspector trainee, progressed to a wildlife inspector, and eventually became a special agent where she worked in Ohio and Hawaii. Some of her main duties included enforcement of Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which is a multilateral treaty to protect endangered plants and animals and she has provided instruction at the International Law Enforcement Academy in Gaborone, Botswana. In this role, she liaisons with OLE’s International Attachés stationed in various locations worldwide and as a senior special agent she has worked projects, such as the Service’s Barrier Analysis team and the Targeted recruitment team.

Owens has graduated from the Pacific Leadership Academy Senior Leader, FBI – LEEDA Supervisor Institute, and the U.S. Army’s Military Police Leadership School, where she later became a company commander and combat veteran. Owens has a B.S. in Animal Science from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff and is currently pursuing a master’s degree in Public Administration at Arkansas State University.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Akiima Price

Akiima Price is an award-winning creative thinker and doer who links people, places, and programs with stressed, underserved communities. A Washington, D.C. native, Price is a nationally respected thought leader at the intersection of social and environmental issues and the relationship between nature and community well-being. Her innovative programming strategies feature nature as a powerful medium to connect stressed youth, adults, and families in meaningful, positive experiences that affect the way they feel about themselves, their communities, and their parks. From her early career experiences as a National Park Service Interpretation Ranger at Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Boulder City, Nevada, to her national work with environmental and social service organizations, she has cultivated her experiences into cutting-edge best practices in trauma-informed environmentalism. Currently, Price, as head of Akiima Price Consulting, consults with the National Park Foundation and the National Park Service to build a friends group for Anacostia Park which includes River Terrace Park, Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens, and the Frederick Douglass Historic Home. This group will ultimately use Anacostia Park to engage Wards 7 & Ward 8 families in activities that support mental health, physical health, and social well-being while using community assets to help support park challenges.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Akiima Price is an award-winning creative thinker and doer who links people, places, and programs with stressed, underserved communities. A Washington, D.C. native, Price is a nationally respected thought leader at the intersection of social and environmental issues and the relationship between nature and community well-being. Her innovative programming strategies feature nature as a powerful medium to connect stressed youth, adults, and families in meaningful, positive experiences that affect the way they feel about themselves, their communities, and their parks.

From her early career experiences as a National Park Service Interpretation Ranger at Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Boulder City, Nevada, to her national work with environmental and social service organizations, she has cultivated her experiences into cutting-edge best practices in trauma-informed environmentalism. Currently, Price, as head of Akiima Price Consulting, consults with the National Park Foundation and the National Park Service to build a friends group for Anacostia Park which includes River Terrace Park, Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens, and the Frederick Douglass Historic Home. This group will ultimately use Anacostia Park to engage Wards 7 & Ward 8 families in activities that support mental health, physical health, and social well-being while using community assets to help support park challenges.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Brenda Richardson

Brenda Richardson is an eco-feminist and has been working on environmental justice, economic development, health issues, and welfare reform for the past 25 years. Richardson helps lead the group, Friends of Oxon Run Park, and is also a member of the Anacostia Park and Community Collaborative. She is passionate about using nature as a source of connection and healing, and attends a forest bathing group that meets in Oxon Run. She is also an environmental justice advocate and works on connecting people to Oxon Run Park. She serves as the President of Chozen Consulting, LLC, a consulting company that focuses on community engagement, facilitation, training, and government relations, and is the principal for “Women Like Us,” an initiative that focuses on design thinking for women. Richardson was formerly the Deputy Chief of Staff for Councilmember Marion Barry. She also served as the Managing Director of the Metropolitan Dialogue, a group of people of faith who met monthly to discuss civic issues in D.C. for many years. She is a former board member of A Greater Washington, Anacostia Watershed Society, Congress Heights Main Streets, DC Commission of Women, DC Public Library Trustee, DC Water Trustee. She has a B.A. in Political Science from the University of Michigan and a Master’s of Social Work from the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

Brenda Richardson is an eco-feminist and has been working on environmental justice, economic development, health issues, and welfare reform for the past 25 years. Richardson helps lead the group, Friends of Oxon Run Park, and is also a member of the Anacostia Park and Community Collaborative. She is passionate about using nature as a source of connection and healing, and attends a forest bathing group that meets in Oxon Run.

She is also an environmental justice advocate and works on connecting people to Oxon Run Park. She serves as the President of Chozen Consulting, LLC, a consulting company that focuses on community engagement, facilitation, training, and government relations, and is the principal for “Women Like Us,” an initiative that focuses on design thinking for women. Richardson was formerly the Deputy Chief of Staff for Councilmember Marion Barry. She also served as the Managing Director of the Metropolitan Dialogue, a group of people of faith who met monthly to discuss civic issues in D.C. for many years.

She is a former board member of A Greater Washington, Anacostia Watershed Society, Congress Heights Main Streets, DC Commission of Women, DC Public Library Trustee, DC Water Trustee. She has a B.A. in Political Science from the University of Michigan and a Master’s of Social Work from the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Alan Spears

Alan Spears is the Resident Historian and Senior Director for Cultural Resources at the National Parks Conservation Association in Washington, DC. He uses real-life stories and a conversational style to connect with his audiences to promote NPCA’s advocacy and the critical role the National Park Service plays in protecting, interpreting, and managing this nation’s historic and cultural resources. A veteran advocate and member of the Government Affairs department, his recent victories include joining with NPCA colleagues, partners and allies to win the designation of the Fort Monroe, Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad, Colonel Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers, Pullman, and Birmingham Civil Rights National Monuments. Spears currently manages NPCA’s defense of the Park Service’s National Heritage Area program and serve as NPCA’s lead lobbyist for the campaign to establish a Julius Rosenwald & Rosenwald Schools national park site. He remains the only NPCA staff member to ever be rescued from a tidal marsh by a U.S. Park Police helicopter.

Alan Spears is the Resident Historian and Senior Director for Cultural Resources at the National Parks Conservation Association in Washington, DC. He uses real-life stories and a conversational style to connect with his audiences to promote NPCA’s advocacy and the critical role the National Park Service plays in protecting, interpreting, and managing this nation’s historic and cultural resources.

A veteran advocate and member of the Government Affairs department, his recent victories include joining with NPCA colleagues, partners and allies to win the designation of the Fort Monroe, Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad, Colonel Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers, Pullman, and Birmingham Civil Rights National Monuments.

Spears currently manages NPCA’s defense of the Park Service’s National Heritage Area program and serve as NPCA’s lead lobbyist for the campaign to establish a Julius Rosenwald & Rosenwald Schools national park site. He remains the only NPCA staff member to ever be rescued from a tidal marsh by a U.S. Park Police helicopter.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Subria Spencer

Subria Spencer is a public health professional serving as Deputy Liaison and Communication Specialist for the National Park Service (NPS) Office of Public Health (OPH) in Washington, D.C. In her role, Spencer leads and coordinates communications and education efforts to advance the goals of all programs within the OPH. Before joining the Park Service full-time, she completed a two-year assignment with the OPH as part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Public Health Associate Program (PHAP), and served as a co-producer of the film, Twenty & Odd. Through digital storytelling, Spencer and the creative team highlighted parks as places for education, recreation, health and healing while honoring the beauty, experiences, and values of Black culture that have helped to shape America. Spencer is a native of Auburn, AL and currently resides in Washington, D.C.

Subria Spencer is a public health professional serving as Deputy Liaison and Communication Specialist for the National Park Service (NPS) Office of Public Health (OPH) in Washington, D.C. In her role, Spencer leads and coordinates communications and education efforts to advance the goals of all programs within the OPH. Before joining the Park Service full-time, she completed a two-year assignment with the OPH as part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Public Health Associate Program (PHAP), and served as a co-producer of the film, Twenty & Odd. Through digital storytelling, Spencer and the creative team highlighted parks as places for education, recreation, health and healing while honoring the beauty, experiences, and values of Black culture that have helped to shape America.

Spencer is a native of Auburn, AL and currently resides in Washington, D.C.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Jason Ward

Jason Ward is a birder, science communicator, and host of the award-winning Birds of North America, “a web series that aims to provide a fresh take on birds and birding.” Born and raised in the Bronx, Ward’s love for wildlife began at a young age, as he fell in love with dinosaurs. This infatuation provided him with an escape from the obstacles that growing up in the south Bronx presented. Ward's mission is to “impact, inspire and infect” those around him with a greater appreciation for wildlife, and to blaze a trail for future generations of conservationists growing up in underrepresented communities. In early 2020, Ward was named one of the Grist 50, an annual list of emerging leaders from across the U.S. who are working on “fresh, real-world solutions to our world's biggest challenges.” In 2020, Ward co-organized the launch of Black Birders Week, a week of events celebrating diversity in birding, and currently works for the American Bird Conservancy.

Jason Ward is a birder, science communicator, and host of the award-winning Birds of North America, “a web series that aims to provide a fresh take on birds and birding.” Born and raised in the Bronx, Ward’s love for wildlife began at a young age, as he fell in love with dinosaurs. This infatuation provided him with an escape from the obstacles that growing up in the south Bronx presented. Ward's mission is to “impact, inspire and infect” those around him with a greater appreciation for wildlife, and to blaze a trail for future generations of conservationists growing up in underrepresented communities. In early 2020, Ward was named one of the Grist 50, an annual list of emerging leaders from across the U.S. who are working on “fresh, real-world solutions to our world's biggest challenges.”

In 2020, Ward co-organized the launch of Black Birders Week, a week of events celebrating diversity in birding, and currently works for the American Bird Conservancy.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Beattra Wilson

Beattra Wilson is the new Assistant Director for Urban & Community Forestry at the U.S. Forest Service in Washington, D.C. She previously worked as National Urban and Community Forestry Program Manager at the Forest Service, providing program guidance, budget coordination, grants management and strategic planning leadership for national, regional and state urban and community forestry programs. As a diversity strategist, Wilson co-chairs the Executive Committee of the USDA 1890 Task Force-- convening USDA Senior Officials and 1890 Land Grant HBCU Presidents and Agriculture Deans to advance the partnership and vision for historically Black land grant institutions and the communities they serve. Wilson served three years on the Forest Service Environmental Justice Board, promoting initiatives that improved access and awareness of federal programs to minority communities and stakeholders and generated a pipeline of new minority and millennial students pursuing forestry and natural resources careers. In 2016, Wilson served as Deputy Associate Director of Forests and Public Lands at the White House Council on Environmental Quality, where she was responsible for forest management policy, wildfire suppression budgets, and federal agricultural an environmental workforce diversity. Wilson holds a Bachelor’s degree in Urban Forestry from Southern University and a Master’s degree in Public Administration from Kennesaw State University.

Beattra Wilson is the new Assistant Director for Urban & Community Forestry at the U.S. Forest Service in Washington, D.C. She previously worked as National Urban and Community Forestry Program Manager at the Forest Service, providing program guidance, budget coordination, grants management and strategic planning leadership for national, regional and state urban and community forestry programs.

As a diversity strategist, Wilson co-chairs the Executive Committee of the USDA 1890 Task Force-- convening USDA Senior Officials and 1890 Land Grant HBCU Presidents and Agriculture Deans to advance the partnership and vision for historically Black land grant institutions and the communities they serve. Wilson served three years on the Forest Service Environmental Justice Board, promoting initiatives that improved access and awareness of federal programs to minority communities and stakeholders and generated a pipeline of new minority and millennial students pursuing forestry and natural resources careers.

In 2016, Wilson served as Deputy Associate Director of Forests and Public Lands at the White House Council on Environmental Quality, where she was responsible for forest management policy, wildfire suppression budgets, and federal agricultural an environmental workforce diversity. Wilson holds a Bachelor’s degree in Urban Forestry from Southern University and a Master’s degree in Public Administration from Kennesaw State University.

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Dr. Karen Wilson-AmaEchefu

Dr. Karen Wilson-Ama’Echefu is a Harlem native who engages in public speaking. Hmmm. Public speaking? More like public humming, singing, skipping, dancing, tripping, questioning, challenging, inspiring, inciting, chuckling, telling, quelling, woofing, hoofing, winkling, twinkling, traveling, messin' 'round, tweeting, elucidating, howling, equivocating, trilling, thrilling, pontificating, poetry-making, risk-taking, reporting, cavorting, and telling the truth as she understands it to be. Karen also sings music across the historical spectrum of the African Diaspora in the United States including spirituals, calls, jazz, blues, and rhythm and blues. She curated, wrote and premiered, “A Tribute to Blueswomen: Beauty and the Blues” with her group, Blue Wave – New York. In collaboration with her musical director Stephen Vaughan, she developed a new genre called Story Cabaret for Blue Wave West, presenting original, traditional and contemporary stories all wrapped up in jazz, blues and singable tunes. Dr. Wilson-Ama’ Echefu has traveled and performed with Pete Seeger and her performance of Paul Laurence Dunbar's "The Party" was broadcast on PBS as part of their "Favorite Poem Project." She was a featured presenter at the 2010 Blues and Spirit Symposium alongside legendary Hip Hop Artist Chuck D, and other notable music and history giants, and has spoken and presented on the intellectual and cultural life in the African American Slave Quarter Community on college campuses across the United States. Dr. Wilson-Ama’ Echefu's research interests include African cultural and religious history, eighteenth and nineteenth-century enslavement in the United States, leadership and strategy in slave quarter communities, and the philosophies and theologies of Africans and their descendants in the Western Hemisphere as identified through their song, story and dance.

Dr. Karen Wilson-Ama’Echefu is a Harlem native who engages in public speaking. Hmmm. Public speaking? More like public humming, singing, skipping, dancing, tripping, questioning, challenging, inspiring, inciting, chuckling, telling, quelling, woofing, hoofing, winkling, twinkling, traveling, messin' 'round, tweeting, elucidating, howling, equivocating, trilling, thrilling, pontificating, poetry-making, risk-taking, reporting, cavorting, and telling the truth as she understands it to be. Karen also sings music across the historical spectrum of the African Diaspora in the United States including spirituals, calls, jazz, blues, and rhythm and blues. She curated, wrote and premiered, “A Tribute to Blueswomen: Beauty and the Blues” with her group, Blue Wave – New York. In collaboration with her musical director Stephen Vaughan, she developed a new genre called Story Cabaret for Blue Wave West, presenting original, traditional and contemporary stories all wrapped up in jazz, blues and singable tunes.

Dr. Wilson-Ama’ Echefu has traveled and performed with Pete Seeger and her performance of Paul Laurence Dunbar's "The Party" was broadcast on PBS as part of their "Favorite Poem Project." She was a featured presenter at the 2010 Blues and Spirit Symposium alongside legendary Hip Hop Artist Chuck D, and other notable music and history giants, and has spoken and presented on the intellectual and cultural life in the African American Slave Quarter Community on college campuses across the United States. Dr. Wilson-Ama’ Echefu's research interests include African cultural and religious history, eighteenth and nineteenth-century enslavement in the United States, leadership and strategy in slave quarter communities, and the philosophies and theologies of Africans and their descendants in the Western Hemisphere as identified through their song, story and dance.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

TNB-2021-Template

Dr. Sacoby Wilson is a professor, an environmental health scientist, and an outstanding environmental justice activist. As a professor within the Maryland Institute for Applied Environmental Health and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the University of Maryland, College Park School of Public Health, he brings his 15 years of experience as an environmental health scientist to the lives of many. He collaborates primarily with community based organizations to understand and address environmental justice issues. His primary research focuses are issues that relate to socially disadvantaged, underserved, environmental justice issues, and health disparity related communities. These issues include air pollution, housing disparities, climate change, drinking water, built environment, food justice, industrial animal agriculture, sewer and water infrastructure, and many more. He has worked with many community  groups throughout the South to address these issues, including the Low-Country Alliance for Model Communities in North and South Carolina, and the Graniteville Community Coalition in South Carolina. Dr. Wilson’s environmental justice work has taken him to Houston, Texas; Savannah, Georgia;  and Uniontown, Alabama. He now directs the Community Engagement, Environmental Justice, and Health Laboratory, which provides technical assistance and research support to communities in the DMV and across the nation, whom are fighting against environmental injustices . Under his direction, the lab has done meaningful research on the health effects to those who recreate and fish on the Anacostia River, environmental hazards and health impacts on those living in Brandywine, MD, and environmental injustices in South Baltimore, to name a few. He is a 2018 Taking Nature Black National Environmental Champion.

Dr. Sacoby Wilson is a professor, an environmental health scientist, and an outstanding environmental justice activist. As a professor within the Maryland Institute for Applied Environmental Health and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the University of Maryland, College Park School of Public Health, he brings his 15 years of experience as an environmental health scientist to the lives of many. He collaborates primarily with community based organizations to understand and address environmental justice issues. His primary research focuses are issues that relate to socially disadvantaged, underserved, environmental justice issues, and health disparity related communities. These issues include air pollution, housing disparities, climate change, drinking water, built environment, food justice, industrial animal agriculture, sewer and water infrastructure, and many more. He has worked with many community  groups throughout the South to address these issues, including the Low-Country Alliance for Model Communities in North and South Carolina, and the Graniteville Community Coalition in South Carolina.

Dr. Wilson’s environmental justice work has taken him to Houston, Texas; Savannah, Georgia;  and Uniontown, Alabama. He now directs the Community Engagement, Environmental Justice, and Health Laboratory, which provides technical assistance and research support to communities in the DMV and across the nation, whom are fighting against environmental injustices . Under his direction, the lab has done meaningful research on the health effects to those who recreate and fish on the Anacostia River, environmental hazards and health impacts on those living in Brandywine, MD, and environmental injustices in South Baltimore, to name a few. He is a 2018 Taking Nature Black National Environmental Champion.

Categories
CONFERENCES Taking Nature Black

Dr. Sacoby Wilson

Dr. Sacoby Wilson is a professor, an environmental health scientist, and an outstanding environmental justice activist. As a professor within the Maryland Institute for Applied Environmental Health and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the University of Maryland, College Park School of Public Health, he brings his 15 years of experience as an environmental health scientist to the lives of many. He collaborates primarily with community based organizations to understand and address environmental justice issues. His primary research focuses are issues that relate to socially disadvantaged, underserved, environmental justice issues, and health disparity related communities. These issues include air pollution, housing disparities, climate change, drinking water, built environment, food justice, industrial animal agriculture, sewer and water infrastructure, and many more. He has worked with many community  groups throughout the South to address these issues, including the Low-Country Alliance for Model Communities in North and South Carolina, and the Graniteville Community Coalition in South Carolina. Dr. Wilson’s environmental justice work has taken him to Houston, Texas; Savannah, Georgia;  and Uniontown, Alabama. He now directs the Community Engagement, Environmental Justice, and Health Laboratory, which provides technical assistance and research support to communities in the DMV and across the nation, whom are fighting against environmental injustices . Under his direction, the lab has done meaningful research on the health effects to those who recreate and fish on the Anacostia River, environmental hazards and health impacts on those living in Brandywine, MD, and environmental injustices in South Baltimore, to name a few. He is a 2018 Taking Nature Black National Environmental Champion.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Dr. Sacoby Wilson is a professor, an environmental health scientist, and an outstanding environmental justice activist. As a professor within the Maryland Institute for Applied Environmental Health and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the University of Maryland, College Park School of Public Health, he brings his 15 years of experience as an environmental health scientist to the lives of many. He collaborates primarily with community based organizations to understand and address environmental justice issues. His primary research focuses are issues that relate to socially disadvantaged, underserved, environmental justice issues, and health disparity related communities. These issues include air pollution, housing disparities, climate change, drinking water, built environment, food justice, industrial animal agriculture, sewer and water infrastructure, and many more. He has worked with many community  groups throughout the South to address these issues, including the Low-Country Alliance for Model Communities in North and South Carolina, and the Graniteville Community Coalition in South Carolina.

Dr. Wilson’s environmental justice work has taken him to Houston, Texas; Savannah, Georgia;  and Uniontown, Alabama. He now directs the Community Engagement, Environmental Justice, and Health Laboratory, which provides technical assistance and research support to communities in the DMV and across the nation, whom are fighting against environmental injustices . Under his direction, the lab has done meaningful research on the health effects to those who recreate and fish on the Anacostia River, environmental hazards and health impacts on those living in Brandywine, MD, and environmental injustices in South Baltimore, to name a few. He is a 2018 Taking Nature Black National Environmental Champion.