Introducing Taylor Lundberg: Clean Wisconsin Guest Blogger

Taylor Lundberg recently joined our staff as a water program intern and will be writing guest blog posts over the next number of months. We’ve asked Taylor to introduce herself, talk about her work, and give a teaser for the upcoming blog posts. Here’s what she had to say:

Hi everyone! My name is Taylor Lundberg, and I’m one of the new interns working at Clean Wisconsin this fall. I hail from a small northern suburb of Chicago called Deerfield, and I’m a sophomore at the great UW-Madison. I’m planning on majoring in Environmental Studies, International Studies, and Political Science. My interests vary depending on the day, but the overarching theme that always seems to apply is my passion for the environment. Whether it’s running up to Picnic Point, relaxing on the Terrace, or riding my bike along the lakeshore path, both nature and the environment play an integral role in my life.

During my last semester of high school, I took an environmental science class (not out of interest, I admit, but out of the fact that it had a reputation for being an easy A). Luckily, in my quest for the perfect GPA, I had encountered what has become my life’s passion: the betterment of the environment.

Coming to Madison as a freshman, I wanted to jump right in and get involved with environmental issues, but I had no clue where to start. Should I work with alternative energy? Recycling initiatives? Environmental education? The possibilities were endless, and I dabbled in a couple different things last year. As a sophomore, however, I wanted to do something more meaningful, more concrete. That opportunity came to me in the form of this Clean Wisconsin internship, which promised the ability to do meaningful research and to work with others who are well informed about the issues.

When I started as an intern at Clean Wisconsin, I took on the task of researching and profiling something about Wisconsin’s environment that was special to people. Out of all of Wisconsin’s natural resources, I chose to focus on the Great Lakes, specifically Lake Michigan. I’ll be doing research about the economic benefits Wisconsin receives from Lake Michigan, conducting interviews with people who have stories and memories from their recreational activities on the Lake, and taking some photographs that will tie all of these components together.

In the first segment of this project, I’ll be blogging about a trip I took to a beach near my hometown, close to the Wisconsin-Illinois border. I talked to a few people about their connection to Lake Michigan and how it has impacted their quality of life. I’ll also be exploring some ideas such as beach health and invasive species, and sharing this research on the Clean Wisconsin blog.

Please stay tuned!

 

Meet the Staff: Tracy Marks-Geib

The second blog-installment of our Meet the Staff series: Tracy Marks-Geib, Clean Wisconsin’s new Grants Manager!

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Summer in Wisconsin is a captivating time of year, enticing us outside to explore the lakes, state parks and natural beauty all around. I think it is especially fitting that at the start of this season dedicated to all things outdoors, I joined the Clean Wisconsin staff, an organization dedicated to protecting all things outdoors. A new adventure to be sure, I come to Clean Wisconsin with a background in fundraising, mainly for the arts. With experience in annual fund development, major gift work and grant writing, I have raised funds for Chicago Botanic Garden and Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, and most recently served as the executive director of Madison Youth Choirs.
Here at Clean Wisconsin, my role as grants manager involves raising foundation, corporate and government support for our many programs dedicated to clean water, clean air and clean energy. And while it is true I have a bit to learn about environmental advocacy, the mission of Clean Wisconsin resonates deeply as I enjoy a long hike along Lake Michigan or take in a Wisconsin River sunset.
Away from the office, I can be found enjoying the summer with my husband and one-year old daughter, curled up with a good book or taking a yoga class.

Meet the Staff: Tyson Cook

Today we begin a new weekly blog series simply called “Meet the Staff.”

Now, this isn’t your typical biography that rehashes work experience and education history. Instead, we’ve asked staffers to write an autobiography with plenty of personality. Because we have a lot of that around Clean Wisconsin.

Without further ado, we kick off the lamely named Meet the Staff series with a not-so-lame autobiography by one of our newest staffers, Tyson Cook, staff scientist.

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I remember one day, as part of a class project in early elementary school, writing my dream job on a construction-paper star: I wanted to be a naturalist. Actually, I think it was something to the effect of “½ football star, ½ naturalist.” The first half didn’t pan out; I ended up playing hockey instead of football. But I’ve always loved being in the great outdoors.

Later on in life, a couple less-than-thrilling biology courses in high school caused me to lose that direction a bit. I spent my time in college bouncing around the physics department studying everything that seemed interesting: industrial engineering, computational neuroscience, plasma fusion, complex systems. It wasn’t until my senior year that I took an “Environmental Science” course and got back on track; I went on to get a master’s in civil and environmental engineering from Stanford University.

After finishing school, I headed to an energy efficiency consulting firm, where I worked to increase the production of solar electricity through the statewide California Solar Initiative and pushed for advancements in efficient LED lighting. After some other career twists and turns that included a summer in rural Tanzania installing a solar water system, I landed as the staff scientist here at Clean Wisconsin.

You won’t see me in the Monday Night Football line-up, but I’ve finally found my dream job — working across Clean Wisconsin’s wide range of programs to protect the clean air and clean water we all rely on, and to help move us toward clean energy that will keep them that way for generations to come.