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Upper Valley Trails Alliance adds two new board members.
Summary
The Upper Valley Trails Alliance announced that Adair Mulligan of Orford, N.H., and Dr. Ashley Doolittle of Norwich, Vt., have joined its board, bringing conservation and trauma-informed care backgrounds to the organization.
Content
The Upper Valley Trails Alliance (UVTA) has added two new members to its board of directors. Adair Mulligan of Orford, New Hampshire, and Dr. Ashley Doolittle of Norwich, Vermont, join the regional trail organization. Their professional backgrounds align with UVTA’s mission to connect people with outdoor spaces and support stewardship of regional trail systems. UVTA works across Vermont and New Hampshire to build, maintain, and promote trails for recreation and conservation.
Key facts:
- UVTA announced the appointments of Adair Mulligan and Dr. Ashley Doolittle to its board.
- Adair Mulligan is an environmental biologist and writer who recently retired as the first full-time executive director of the Hanover Conservancy; she has overseen conserved lands, worked on trail building and restoration projects with UVTA, serves on the Orford Conservation Commission, and holds a master’s degree in environmental biology from Smith College.
- Dr. Ashley Doolittle is a somatic psychotherapist who has worked with people facing trauma and life transitions, including youth aging out of foster care, hospice patients, incarcerated individuals, and college students; she previously served as associate director at the Dartmouth Center for Social Impact and holds degrees from Trinity University and Duke University.
- UVTA’s Executive Director Russell Hirschler said the new members strengthen the organization’s ability to serve the community by combining conservation leadership with a holistic understanding of how trails support wellbeing.
- UVTA’s work spans Vermont and New Hampshire and focuses on building, maintaining, and promoting trails to enhance access to the outdoors and support conservation.
Summary:
The board additions bring conservation experience and a trauma-informed, community wellbeing perspective to UVTA’s leadership, according to the organization. Undetermined at this time.
