Members of
the 2013-2014 Tennessee Equality Project (501c4/lobbying) board of directors are the
following: Robin Alberts-Marigza, Drew
Baker, Michelle Bliss, Jonathan Cole, Toby Compton, Bleu Copas, David Glasgow, Anne
Gullick, Yeshua Holiday, Ashford Hughes, Jeff Kirwan, Harry (Skip) Ledbetter, Mary
Littleton, Becky Lucas, Linda McFadyen-Ketchum, Felicia Oglesby, Chris Sanders,
Tommy Schlindwein, and Herb Zeman.
Officers
are Chris Sanders, chairman of the board/president; Bleu Copas, vice president;
Jeff Kirwan,
treasurer; Robin Alberts-Marigza, secretary; Michelle Bliss,
executive committee member at-large.
Members of
the the 2013-2014 Tennessee Equality Project Foundation (501c3/education) board
of directors are the following: Wes Aull, Susan
Compton, Bleu Copas, Jonathan Cole, Brian Copeland, Ryan Ellis, Anne Gullick,
Ellyahnna Hall, Erin Hughes, Becky Lucas, De’Andre T. Jones, Travis Parman, Tommy
Schlindwein, H.G. Stovall.
Officers
are H.G. Stovall, chairman of the board/president; Anne Gullick, vice
president; Wes Aull, treasurer; Ellyahnna Hall, secretary; Becky Lucas,
executive committee member at-large.
Biographies of the New Tennessee
Equality Project board members follow:
Toby Compton: Toby Compton is a fourth generation Nashvillian who
was recently chosen to lead the Nashville Sports Authority. He previously
served as the Director of Strategy for the Tennessee Department of Economic and
Community Development and as Mayor Karl Dean’s Senior Advisor specializing in
policy and legislation.
Toby holds an undergraduate degree
in political science from Lipscomb University and a master’s degree from
Cumberland University in public administration. He has previously served
on several boards and is currently on the board at Dismas, Inc. Last year, he
was chosen as one of “40 People Under 40” to watch by the Nashville Business
Journal.
Robin Alberts-Marigza: Robin currently serves as the Campaign Manager for Jim Cooper for Congress, where she is responsible for developing and implementing a winning campaign strategy for one of the lone congressional Democrats in the South, including messaging, communications, fundraising, and political outreach. She has served as a key operative and chief adviser to Congressman Cooper’s successful congressional campaign during two challenging electoral cycles.
As the campaign’s Finance Director,
she has created a modern campaign that fundraises year-round, increases
low-dollar, grassroots donations, attracts first-time donors, and implements
new technologies with data-driven results, raising over $1.5 million during her
tenure.
With Congressman Cooper, Robin is
currently working on a party-building project in collaboration with 50 state
Democratic leaders and stakeholders to implement a year-by-year path to
statewide victory by 2018.
Prior to her current position, she
worked as the Campaign Manager for Jeff Yarbro for State Senate, coming within
17 votes of unseating a 40-year incumbent in a Democratic primary election.
With her leadership, the campaign set a new standard of organization and
fundraising for state-level races by executing a campaign focused on
infrastructure and integrating fundraising, voter outreach and volunteer
efforts.
In her efforts to raise money,
coordinate volunteers, and contact voters, Robin has developed strong
coalitions and working partnerships in the Nashville community. Throughout her
campaign work, she has been committed to building an electoral infrastructure
that supports progress, and electing leaders that share her vision for an
equitable, inclusive Tennessee.
Robin double majored in Sociology
and Psychology at Tufts University in Boston, Massachusetts, where her studies
focused on the intersection of social media and social theory. She is a native
of Nashville, Tennessee—attending East Literature Magnet middle and high
schools—and currently lives in East Nashville. In her free time, she enjoys
gardening, cooking, and training to compete in her first triathlon.
Linda McFadyen-Ketchum: Linda McFadyen-Ketchum is a political consultant who
specializes in Davidson County races. She worked on the campaigns of
former Mayor Bill Purcell and Mayor Karl Dean, and managed campaigns for
Vice-Mayor Diane Neighbors, Chancellor Claudia Bonnyman, Chancellor Richard Dinkins
(now Appeals Court Judge Dinkins), Circuit Court Judge Amanda McClendon,
School Board Member Kathleen Harkey, and Metro Council candidate Nancy
VanReece. Linda has a special interest in identifying, encouraging, and
electing talented women to public office.
Though her primary focus is on local
races, Linda also believes that statewide and national races matter deeply to
the people of Davidson County. Accordingly she was the Front Desk Manager for
the Gore-Lieberman Campaign in 2000, worked on Phil Bredesen’s campaign for
Governor in 2002, managed the Davidson County canvassing operation for Harold
Ford, Jr.’s Senate race in 2006, and was particularly proud to work in Texas,
Pennsylvania, and Montana as a Field Organizer for Hillary Clinton in her 2008 presidential
campaign. After Barack Obama won the Democratic nomination in 2008, Linda
managed the phone-bank at the Nashville Obama Headquarters and operated a
state-wide absentee voting initiative for the Tennessee Democratic Party.
In 2012 Linda worked for the Tennessee House Democratic Caucus, coordinating
polling and mail programs for several targeted races.
A native of North Carolina, Linda
holds Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in special education from Peabody College
of Vanderbilt University. She taught Davidson County children and young
people with severe behavioral disorders and autism for twenty-five years.
She also served in supervisory/administrative positions and trained new staff
and student teachers. During her teaching years Linda was awarded two HCA
Teacher Awards for independent summer study and won Channel 5’s Golden Apple
teaching award and cash prize in 1994.
Linda represented District 24 on the
Davidson County Democratic Executive Committee for six years, and served as
Treasurer for three years. In 2006 she was honored as county Volunteer of
the Year at the 2nd Annual Gore Family Dinner.
Currently Linda works on gun
violence issues as a member of the steering committee for the Nashville/TN
chapter of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America.
Linda and her husband, Dr. Steve
McFadyen-Ketchum, have been married for 39 years. They have two adult
children and two granddaughters. In her spare time, Linda enjoys hiking,
identifying wild flowers, and choral music.
David Glasgow: David serves as Communications Director for the
state field office of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Rural Development. He
is responsible for internal, community and legislative outreach for an agency
that delivers and manages an active portfolio of $4.3 billion in financial
resources for job development, community infrastructure and affordable housing
in rural Tennessee.
David's work with USDA on national initiatives has been
recognized with the agency’s High Mark Award. He has twice been awarded
Presidential Volunteer Service Awards in recognition of more than 500 hours of
local community service in a year.
David currently serves as vice chair of the Metro Property
Standards and Appeals Board and as Vice Chair for Tennessee Conservation Voters
501c3 Board. He has previously served on the Metro Nashville Tourism and
Convention Commission, Convention and Visitors Bureau Strategic Planning
Committee, Metro Environment and Beautification Commission, and as Chair of the
Metro Tree Advisory Committee. David also serves as head coach of the Nashville
Grizzlies Rugby Football Team.
An advocate of healthy public green space, David has helped
raise money and coordinate more than 400 volunteers who together have planted
more than 3,500 trees and saplings in parks, green spaces in Hillsboro Village,
several Nashville Neighborhoods, Beaman Park at Bells Bend and communities
across Tennessee.
David earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from
Birmingham-Southern College and a Juris Doctor from the University of Alabama,
School of Law. He successfully completed the Program for Senior Executives in State
and Local Government at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.
David and partner Van Pond, Jr support numerous community
organizations including Nashville CARES, The Belcourt Theater, Tennessee
Conservation Voters, Greenways for Nashville, Conexión Américas and many
others. In 2010 they were honored by the Nashville GLBT Chamber with the Mark
Lee Taylor award for Community Service.
Ashford Hughes:
Ashford Hughes is a native son of Knoxville, TN. He holds a B.S Degree
in Political Science from Tennessee State University. While at Tennessee State
University, Ashford served as the V.P of the Africana Studies Society and well
as being a founding member and reestablishing the T.S.U College Democrats.
After graduating from Tennessee
State, Ashford worked as African American Outreach Coordinator for the Harold
Ford for U.S Senate Campaign in 2005-2006. Since then Ashford has gone on
to both manage and work as senior staff on various issue based and candidate
driven political campaigns in Tennessee, South Carolina, Virginia and
Mississippi. His main focus has been political strategy and organization
building.
Ashford recently served as the
Political Director at the Tennessee Democratic Party. He is currently the
Assistant Business Manager for the Southeast Laborers’ District Council. (LIUNA)
Ashford is one of the founding members of the Nashville affiliate of the
national New Leaders Council, where he serves as Chapter Co-Director. This is
an organization that seeks to train, educate and empower the next generation of
progressive political and professional industry leaders.
Ashford aspires to empower the
community he grew up in through political engagement and economic
empowerment. He serves on the Board of Directors for the Martha O’Bryan
Center, Fifty Forward and is a current fellow with the Truman National Security
Project.
Yeshua Holiday: Yeshua A. Holiday aka Joshua, has volunteered and
worked for non profit organizations such as Housing Works, Inc, the Sylvia
Rivera Law Project, New York Harm Reduction Educators and the National Black
Justice Coalition and others. He has advocated for public policy in NYC,
Louisville, KY, Atlanta, Ga and recently in Memphis and Nashville, TN. Yeshua's
passion, as a trans person, is the trans community and the issues that they are
faced with on a daily basis.
Skip Ledbetter: Bio for Harry (Skip) Ledbetter:
Former Eagle Scout , who as the adult Eagle Scout Coordinator helped 123 Boy Scouts achieve the Eagle Scout Award. Was awarded the Congressional Gold Award by the US Congress in 1997.I served as the Emergency Operation Coordinator during Hurricane Georges. I served as the corporate coordinator for the American Red Cross and the March of Dimes on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Between 2004 and 2011 I served 47 months of deployment with the US Army, most of that in Southwest Asia. Since returning from deployment I have volunteered with the Shelby County Democratic Party, registering voters, raising funds, developed strategy and administered polling places. I have been Host Committee with MidSouth Aids fund. My work with TEP has been as fulfilling as any of the work mentioned up to this time and I'm honored to continue this partnership for years to come.
Former Eagle Scout , who as the adult Eagle Scout Coordinator helped 123 Boy Scouts achieve the Eagle Scout Award. Was awarded the Congressional Gold Award by the US Congress in 1997.I served as the Emergency Operation Coordinator during Hurricane Georges. I served as the corporate coordinator for the American Red Cross and the March of Dimes on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Between 2004 and 2011 I served 47 months of deployment with the US Army, most of that in Southwest Asia. Since returning from deployment I have volunteered with the Shelby County Democratic Party, registering voters, raising funds, developed strategy and administered polling places. I have been Host Committee with MidSouth Aids fund. My work with TEP has been as fulfilling as any of the work mentioned up to this time and I'm honored to continue this partnership for years to come.
No comments:
Post a Comment