Carl Chatfield, M.S., PMP
Board President (2011-2013)
Content Project Manager & Technical Writer, Microsoft Corporation
Carl brings to PBR a focus on project and process management in high-performing organizations. Carl holds a BA in the Liberal Arts from The Evergreen State College, an MS in Technical Communication from the College of Human-Centered Design and Engineering at the University of Washington, and a graduate certificate in Ecological Planning and Design from Antioch University Seattle.
Carl is a member of the Congress for the New Urbanism and has been an active citizen participant in land use planning efforts. Carl is a content project manager and technical writer at Microsoft and author of several books about Microsoft Project.
Carl’s family has the opportunity to practice permaculture and sustainable design principles on their small farm in rural King County, Washington.
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Jason Niebler, M.Sc.
Board Vice-President & Treasurer (2011-2013)
Director & Faculty Instructor, Sustainable Agriculture Education (SAgE) Program, Seattle Central Community College
Jason brings a wealth of experience to PBR, working in natural resource management, conservation, education, and research and development in the Pacific Northwest and Latin America, as Natural Resource Management & Conservation Consultant, Muyu Consultants International, La Paz, Bolivia.
While in the Pacific Northwest, he has concentrated on salmon habitat protection advocacy, backcountry forest management, recreation and restoration, urban ecological restoration, and biointensive organic farming where, in most cases, environmental education and training was a parallel programmatic theme. He obtained a graduate degree at the University of Washington – College of Forest Resources and conducted research on traditional agroforestry practices in Veracruz State, Mexico.
Upon completion of this degree, Jason taught tropical forest ecology, agroforestry, agroecology, conservation, and sustainable development at the Monteverde Institute, Costa Rica, for USA university study abroad courses and worked on community development projects in areas such as biological corridors, reforestation and ecological restoration, agro-eco-tourism, constructed wetland grey water treatment, and green building with bamboo, etc. In addition to his position as Faculty Instructor/Researcher, he served as the Monteverde Institute Academic Director and Interim Executive Director. Most recently, Jason co-developed and taught for the Council on International Educational Exchange – Sustainability & the Environment Program in Monteverde.
He is also the founding Program Director and a Faculty Instructor of the Sustainable AGriculture Education (SAgE) Program at Seattle Central Community College in Seattle, Washington. Funded in part by the National Science Foundation – Advanced Technological Education grant, SAgE is partnering with PBR to provide its students with professional internship opportunities in integrated bamboo-based agroforestry and related sustainable community development initiatives.
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Todd Ellis, M.A.
Board Secretary (2011-2013)
Vice President of Business Development, Imperium Renewables Inc. (IRI)
Todd connects his knowledge and experience of sustainable business and economic development to PBR initiatives. As Vice President with Imperium Renewables Inc. (IRI), a national leader in next generation biodiesel refining and manufacturing technology, Todd was one of the original employees of IRI and was instrumental in the development of the company including biodiesel and co-product sales, Western State policy development, federal and state government project management, corporate social responsibility and domestic feedstock acquisition and development.
Todd has also participated in numerous local, regional, and national biodiesel market developments and is an active participant of the Northwest Biofuels Association, Washington State Biofuels Advisory committee, and the National Biodiesel Board.
Todd has worked as an outdoor educator with the National Outdoor Leadership School. He holds a B.A. in Humanities from Fort Lewis College and a M.A. from Antioch University Seattle’s Environment and Community program.
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Kirsten Koba, M.A.
Board Member (2012-2014)
Kirsten joins PBR with over a decade of experience in non-profit research and development; editorial writing and styling; and green marketing and production (including brand development, ecologically-sound sourcing, and event management). It is a combination that helps her facilitate the wholistic design of sustainable organizations from best practice analysis to product and program creation to outreach and fundraising strategies—skills she is bringing to PBR as she shepherds its non-profit development process.
Kirsten is a Senior Associate at Comprehensive Prospect Research, where she conducts donor research and training for organizations that have included The Nature Conservancy, Sierra Club, and Environmental Defense. She recently worked with Sustainable Seattle to design a new program called The Leadership Lab, which empowers emerging leaders to drive change through a systemic and collaborative approach. As a facilitator of the Lab she used dialogue, asset mapping, and appreciative inquiry to engage diverse constituencies. Previously, she was the Director of Research and Development at agricult design (now Bahar Shahpar), a pioneer in sustainable fashion, which has been profiled in Elle and Vogue. Kirsten’s own writing has been published in numerous magazines including Ms., Shout, and Hemp Times.
Kirsten received her B.A. in Magazine Journalism from Drake University and her M.A. in Environment and Community from Antioch University, where she serves on the Alumni Advisory Council. She holds certifications in Integrated Skills for Sustainable Change, Ecological Planning & Design, and Permaculture Design.
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Jonathan M. Scherch, Ph.D., M.S.W.
Founder & Executive Director
Jonathan leads PBR collaborations with over 20 years of exploring, studying, and discussing themes of international bamboo cultures and related sustainable community, business and economic development innovations.
A returned U.S. Peace Corps Volunteer (Jamaica, 1991-93), his teaching, fieldwork and writing reflect collaborations that have led him and others to Bangladesh, China, India, Vietnam, and elsewhere. A frequent presenter on sustainability subjects, he was a Foreign Expert Keynote Speaker for the 2007 International Bamboo Workshop, convened at Zhejiang Agricultural & Forestry University in Lin’an, China. He gained International Training Certification on Bamboo Industrial Processing Technologies and Machines in 2006.
Since 1998, Jonathan has also served as Core Faculty (and formerly Director) of the Graduate Program in Environment & Community at Antioch University Seattle. Active with many for-profit and non-profit ventures over the years, he was a founding Board Member of Climate Solutions and served as Program Vice President for the Northwest Chapter of the Society for Ecological Restoration, involving members from across seven northwestern states.
Reflecting his interests in and engagement with appropriate technologies, Jonathan is also an avid amateur radio operator, holding an Extra Class license (KK7PW), connecting with people across the region and around the world. He volunteers with the Disaster Communications Team of the American Red Cross serving King & Kitsap Counties, and with the Auxiliary Communication Service within the City of Seattle’s Department of Emergency Management. His station and household electrical loads are powered by a solar photovoltaic energy system which he designed and installed.
A few recent publications referencing bamboo resources and sustainable development:
- Scherch, J. et al (2012). Sustainability in Exile: Tibetan Farmers Cultivating Compassion. Video documentary portraying collaboration on sustainable agriculture innovations with Tibetan government-in-exile and refugee settlement communities. Online: www.sustainabilityinexile.org
- Scherch, J. (2011). Getting the Word Out on Sustainability Innovations – via Amateur Radio Communications. In Christopher Mare & Max Lindegger’s (Eds.) Designing Ecological Habitats: Creating A Sense of Place. Hampshire, UK: Permanent Publications.
- Scherch, J. (2009). Whither Our Embrace of Bamboo: Observations from Forest, Farm and Factory. International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic and Social Sustainability, 5(4), pgs. 163-178. In association with the 5th Conference convened at University of Technology, Mauritius, January.
- Scherch, J. (2008). Poverty Alleviation and Urban/Rural Reciprocities: Designing, Learning, Collaborating for Eco-City Dhaka, Bangladesh. Paper accepted for EcoCity World Summit 2008, San Francisco, CA, April.
- Scherch, J. (2006). From Rhizome to Renaissance: Engaging Integral Bamboo Systems for Sustainable Development. International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic and Social Sustainability. 2(4), Pgs. 39-52.
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