Who We Are

Leadership Bios

Staff

Dorothy Barnett

Executive Director

email: barnett at climateandenergy dot org

phone: (785) 424-0444

As Executive Director of the Climate + Energy Project, Dorothy Barnett is leading the effort to address the Heartland’s energy future. Grounded in an approach based on common ground solutions, Barnett has been successful in convening diverse voices in a conservative region of the country. Barnett has coordinated winning campaigns to protect the Kansas Renewable Portfolio Standard from special interest groups attacks during four legislative sessions, allowing the wind industry to grow to 40% of the state’s power generation in just a decade. Mrs. Barnett has been recognized with national media attention, including MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow and is frequently invited to speak on a range of clean energy topics including a presentation at Yale for a public forum of “The ‘C’ Words: Addressing Climate Change Without Talking About Climate Change – a Regional Perspective.” Barnett provides expert testimony at regulatory proceedings and has been published in the Electricity Journal. In 2014 Barnett received the Advocacy Leadership Award from the U.S. Clean Energy, Education and Empowerment (C3E) program, run by the U.S. Department of Energy and the MIT Energy Initiative.

Prior to her position as Executive Director, Barnett served for 4 years as CEP’s Director of Energy and Transmission. This work put Dorothy on the ground in energy policy work at the local, state and regional level. Under Barnett’s leadership, CEP continues to innovate and reach new audiences with projects like WEALTH: Water, Energy, Air, Land, Transportation and HEALTH, Climate + Energy Voters Take Action, the Kansas Environmental Leadership project and the Clean Energy Business Council, a multi-sector business group focused on the advanced energy economy.

Barnett got her start in wind energy with the Reno County Wind Energy Task Force, which was awarded the Governor’s Energy Award for Energy Education in 2008. Dorothy attended Friends University.

Teri Kriege

Operations Director

email: kriege at climateandenergy dot org

As Operations Director for Climate + Energy Project, Teri Kriege works to build a solid organizational foundation upon which CEP’s mission can continue to thrive and grow. Teri brings 25+ years of professional experience in nonprofit management and a passion for environmental sustainability to this role. She holds an undergraduate degree in architecture from the University of Michigan and a master’s degree in public administration from the University of Missouri – Kansas City. Throughout her career, she has flourished while leading cross-functional teams to achieve and exceed goals in operations, program management, communications, fundraising, financial administration and strategic planning. She’s an organized planner who is skilled at simultaneously managing multiple projects and truly enjoys the challenge of goal-setting and figuring out how to get from point A to point B. And she is a firm believer that teamwork, relationship-building, and creating a shared vision lead to success. Teri lives in Kansas City where she and her husband, Bill, are still figuring out how to live as “empty nesters” now that their two amazing children have moved onto college and work!

Jessica Travis

Program Director

email: travis at climateandenergy dot org

Jessica Travis is a Program Director at the Climate + Energy Project with a focus on building community-driven pathways to Energy Justice and Climate Resilience. An advocate for equity in outdoor recreation, natural resources, and water conservation for nearly 20 years, Jessica has led the state of Kansas in building community partnerships for outdoor recreation, creating aquatic education programs for urban families, reducing the impacts of agricultural production on water resources, and achieving the designation of the Arkansas River in Kansas as a National Water Trail by the National Park Service. She lives in Pratt, Kansas and calls the Arkansas River Watershed and Ninnescah River Valley home.

Allison Thomas

Program Director

email: thomas at climateandenergy dot org

Allison Thomas is a Program Director at the Climate + Energy Project with a focus on wind and solar energy outreach. In 2017, Allison received a Bachelor of Arts in Public Relations with a concentration in Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies at Kansas State University. There, she combined her knowledge of both areas of study to co-found and manage a student organization, Wildcats Against Sexual Violence, which provided education and outreach regarding Title IX investigations on campus. Allison discovered a passion for advocacy and outreach work through this experience.

Following graduation, Allison worked as a full time tutor and mentor to youth in the KC metro area with City Year Kansas City. During her time at CYKC, she made the decision to pursue a master’s degree in social work at the University of Kansas (Edwards Campus) in order to expand her skill set in working directly with clients in nonprofit settings. After graduating with her MSW in 2020, Allison continued her career in trauma counseling at Sheffield Place in Kansas City. Through her direct work with clients, Allison continued to find fulfillment in nonprofit work and eventually realized her interest in combining the knowledge gained through her variety of experiences on micro and macro levels. Allison found a balance in her interdisciplinary skills through her work at CEP and is passionate about social justice, relationship building, and honoring the dignity and worth of individuals and communities.

Outside of work, she loves to cook, travel, and spend time with her dog.

Lindsay Hamilton

Program Director

email: hamilton at climateandenergy dot org

Lindsay Hamilton is a Program Director at the Climate + Energy Project with a focus on environmental justice. Lindsay brings a diverse skill set to CEP. She has worked in the corporate world , founded a not-for-profit business , and served in a number of volunteer positions focusing on social justice issues and civic engagement. She also has a background in nature and STEM education. With a passion for servant leadership, the environment, and social justice, Lindsay is excited to help empower communities to build climate resilience and a brighter future for all Kansans.

Lindsay lives in Wichita with her husband and 5 children. She holds both a Bachelor and Master of Science in Biological Sciences with an emphasis in Environmental Science and Ecology from Wichita State, and she double minored in Spanish and Anthropology. More recently, Lindsay completed her Master of Business Administration (MBA) through Western Governors University.

Christina Haswood

Program Director

email: haswood at climateandenergy dot org

Christina Haswood, a proud member of the Diné (Navajo) Nation, serves as the Program Director at the Climate + Energy Project, specializing in Integrated Voter Engagement (IVE) and public health initiatives. She began her academic journey at Haskell Indian Nations University, earning an Associate of Science in Community Health. Christina then transferred to Arizona State University, where she obtained a Bachelor of Science in Public Health, followed by a Master of Public Health (MPH) from the University of Kansas Medical Center, graduating in May 2020.

With extensive experience in government and politics across Kansas, Christina is dedicated to enhancing the representation of Native American and Indigenous youth in leadership roles. Her public health work spans Arizona, Washington, D.C., and the Midwest, where she has engaged with federal, state, and Tribal agencies. Notably, during her tenure at the Kansas State House, she spearheaded advocacy efforts on Native American policy, successfully leading the passage of Kansas’ first Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples legislation (HB 2008) in 2021.

In 2023, Christina was honored to be selected as a Fellow of the Obama Foundation Leaders USA program, further enhancing her leadership skills and commitment to community service. She has shared her expertise on various panels, including SXSW (South By Southwest), and has been recognized as a recipient of the Kansans NextGen 30 Under 30 award. Additionally, she received the Climate + Energy Project’s 2022 Climate Leadership Award for her contributions to environmental policy advocacy. Christina is also well-known for her engaging TikTok content, which encourages folks nationwide to participate actively in civic engagement through popular trends and cultural teachings.

Abigail Graham

Project Coordinator

email: graham at climateandenergy dot org

Abigail Graham serves as the Project Coordinator for the Climate and Energy project, where she plays a vital role in coordinating project activities, resources, and stakeholder engagement. With a focus on empowering communities around Wichita, Abigail collaborates with local stakeholders and community members. She also assists in the preparation of project work plans, timelines, and schedules, ensuring that initiatives are executed effectively.

With approximately five years of experience in nonprofit work, Abigail is passionate about helping Kansas build climate resilience. Born and raised in Wichita, she is deeply committed to equipping local communities with the knowledge and tools they need to thrive in the face of climate change.

Outside of her professional endeavors, Aby enjoys reading, baking and cooking. Her favorite thing to do is biking with her husband, and their one-year-old daughter, cherishing the beauty of the outdoors and family time.

Consultants

Jessica Lucas

Legislative Consultant

mail: jessica at j-sq dot com

phone: (620) 931-7161

Jessica Lucas is a business communications graduate of the School of Journalism at Kansas University and melds her public relations acumen with government affairs. In advocating for policy changes, Jessica understands it involves more than just knowing how things work under the dome. Today’s government affairs work demands the use of earned media, grassroots engagement, and digital advocacy, and these are tools she effectively employs to meet our clients’ objectives.

Recognizing the importance of a trained workforce, she successfully executed a campaign in her rural hometown to build a community college geared toward technical education degrees in aviation manufacturing, information technology, and agricultural studies. She’s represented Fortune 500 companies in crisis communications work, served as spokesperson on statewide policy initiatives, and established herself as a trusted, hardworking lobbyist.

Outside of work, she commits her time as a member of the Topeka Capital-Journal Editorial Advisory Board and serves as President of the Friends of Cedar Crest Association, the 501(c)3 organization that supports the Kansas governor’s mansion.

Sarah Dehart Faltico smiling in front of foliage.

Sarah Dehart Faltico

Consultant

email: faltico at climateandenergy dot org

Sarah Dehart Faltico is a Program Director for Climate + Energy Project focused on building community power. She worked at CEP for nearly two years until she stepped away in mid-2019 to have her second child. During her prior tenure, she managed CEP’s Integrated Voter Engagement work and organized the Environmental Leadership Summit, providing leadership training to environmental leaders across the state. Although Sarah planned to return the following year, the pandemic re-routed her trajectory until June of 2021.

Sarah has quilted a myriad of professional experiences prior to joining Climate + Energy Project. She began her career in the corporate world as an Account Executive in advertising, working in industries that made visible the connection between our food, our environment, and our health. From there she pivoted to focus on local food systems, both as an organic vegetable grower and in the nonprofit world. Just before her time at CEP, Sarah worked at Cultivate Kansas City both as an organic vegetable farmer and as Program Manager of the Double Up Food Bucks Program, where she forged multi-sector partnerships to strengthen access to local foods in underserved communities. Working with growers, farmers markets, community organizations, and governmental agencies she helped expand and operationalize the program across Kansas and Missouri. During her time there, Sarah really began to see the intersection between food, environmental stewardship, community health, and racial and environmental justice.

Sarah’s experience in both the corporate and non-profit sectors developed her capacities in project management, communications, grant writing, leadership development, volunteer coordination, community engagement and advocacy. She has two undergraduate degrees in Business Administration and Latin American Studies and a minor in International Business. She participated in CEP’s 2018 Environmental Leadership Summit, and is an alum of the Kansas Leadership Center and ReAmp/Human Systems Dynamics Institute Systems Thinking Academy (2018). When she’s not working with future generations in mind, she enjoys working in her garden and enjoying the outdoors with her family.

Board

Bill Roush

Bill Roush

Retired from Black & Veatch

email: billroush at gmail dot com

Bill Roush is retired from the Black & Veatch Renewables group. While at B&V he participated in several regional renewable energy assessments.  He also was the utility scale solar plant warranty manager. In addition, he was project manager for the engineering team assisting utility scale solar project developers with interconnection applications.

Currently, he serves on the Mainstreet Credit Union board and supervisory board.

Photo of Steve Corbett smiling

Steven Corbett

Senior Chronic Disease Epidemiologist, KDHE

email: steven dot corbett at ks dot gov

Steve Corbett, M.A., Ph.D., is a Senior Chronic Disease Epidemiologist at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE).

The focus of much of his work has been on the social determinants of health and health disparities, particularly among vulnerable populations. With a focus on chronic diseases, Dr. Corbett has contributed to articles on cancer burden, historical disease trends, medicinal plants, health disparities, and the health impacts of climate change. Working with the Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas in 2014, he developed a grant-funded climate change adaptation plan for Kansas Tribes through the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

In 2018, he participated in the Climate + Energy Project’s Kansas Environmental Leadership Summit, facilitated by Kansas Leadership Center and Kansas Association for Conservation and Environmental Education. Dr. Corbett received his Ph.D. in biomedical anthropology from the University of Kansas.

Mary Fund smiling

Mary Fund

Retired Executive Director of the Kansas Rural Center

email: ksrc at rainbowtel dot net

Mary Fund, retired from the Kansas Rural Center, a non-profit research, education and advocacy organization for a sustainable agriculture and food system in March 2020, where she worked on natural resource issues for most of KRC’s 42 years. She served as Executive Director from January 2015-March 2020 and directed KRC’s early water policy work, writing extensively on Kansas water issues, and managed KRC’s Clean Water Farms Project from 1995-2012, working with a network of over 300 farmers and ranchers on whole farm planning and farming practices that protect water quality.

She has served on numerous task forces and advisory teams for organizations or state entities. She was editor of KRC’s newsletter, Rural Papers and its Legislative Weekly E-Update Policy Watch. She served on the Kansas Center for Sustainable Ag and Alternative Crops Advisory Team, and represented KRC for many years in the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, serving as co-chair for several years. She served on the board of directors of the national Organic Farming Research Foundation from 2010-2017, serving as chair of the board her final year. Currently she serves on the Delaware WRAPS advisory team.

She and her husband, Ed Reznicek, own and operate a 400-acre certified organic crop and livestock farm. Mary was an outspoken supporter of a local wind farm development in her county.

Portrait of Laura Lombard

Laura Lombard

President/CEO, Kansas Global Trade Services, Inc.

email: laura dot lombard21 at gmail dot com

Laura Lombard is a businesswoman, politician, and environmental activist. She is the new President/CEO of the Kansas Global Trade Services, Inc. and the CEO at Sunflower Strategies, LLC. Prior to these professional roles, Laura ran for the U.S. Congressional seat in the 4th District of Kansas in 2020. 

After moving home to Wichita in 2017, she was hired as the CEO of ImEpik, a market-driven and research-based online training company. Laura joined ImEpik to expand the company’s presence in the food safety industry and other industrial sectors. The company tripled its revenue two years in a row under her leadership and became a recognized leader in food safety training. Laura also worked as a consultant for the Climate and Energy Project as the Development Director of the Clean Energy Business Council. In this capacity, she worked on membership services, event planning, fundraising, and public affairs campaigns.  

Before moving home to Wichita, Laura lived in Washington, DC, for seven years. After graduating from Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), she worked as a consultant and media relations coordinator at The Cohen Group (TCG), a DC-based consulting firm founded by former Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen. 

After leaving TCG, Laura was the founding President and Executive Director of the Middle East & North Africa Consultants in Washington, DC. She formed MENA Consultants in 2013 along with twelve other consultants interested in promoting increased trade relations and commerce between the United States and Middle Eastern countries. She also provided strategic consulting for non-profit organizations, small-to-medium-sized companies, public-private partnerships, and Fortune 500 firms. 

In addition to her Master’s Degree in International Relations & Economics from Johns Hopkins SAIS, Laura has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science from the University of Kansas. She enjoys traveling, painting, Latin dancing, and basketball. She is also the proud mom of a red-headed little boy.

Portrait of Greg Murphy

Greg Murphy

CFA, CPA – Managing Director, Head of Impact of TortoiseEcofin

email: gmurphy at ecofininvest dot com

Greg Murphy serves as Managing Director, Head of Impact for TortoiseEcofin, LLC a Leawood, KS-based asset manager with over $8B of investments focused on energy and social infrastructure including investments in renewables, waste-to-energy, water, sanitation, education, and healthcare. As Head of Impact Mr. Murphy oversees the firm’s responsible investing and ESG initiatives; reports on the positive impact these investments make to society beyond their financial returns; and works closely with other investment industry professionals to help define industry standards around reporting responsible investing, ESG, and impact.

A third-generation Kansan, Mr. Murphy grew up in Prairie Village. After high school, he attended Trinity University in San Antonio, TX where he graduated with honors and a double major in Economics and Business Administration. While at Trinity his college work study was in the athletic department working as an athletic trainer for the Division III sports teams. While he has not taped an ankle in years, he can still apply ice bags to his own knees after a run. 

Mr. Murphy returned to Kansas in 2000 to take a job at a predecessor to TortoiseEcofin and has worked for TortoiseEcofin or affiliates ever since. He earned a Master of Business Administration degree from the University of Kansas in 2002. He enjoys woodworking, live music and running. He lives with his family in Leawood. 

Portrait of John Shively smiling

John Shively

NGO Liaison for the Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth to the United Nations

email: jshively at scls dot org

John Shively is a Kansas native and was born and raised in Coffeyville, KS. He holds a B.A. in Political Science from Washburn University and an M.A. in International Affairs from Marquette University.

After completing his graduate program in 2018, John moved back to Kansas to work for the Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth in their Office of Justice, Peace, and Integrity of Creation. In that role, he works to educate and advocate on a wide variety of social justice issues such a climate justice, poverty, homelessness, and immigration. He is also the NGO Liaison for the Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth to the United Nations and serves on the steering committee for the Justice Conference of Women Religious (JCWR).

In his free time, John enjoys gardening, volunteering, and going on walks with his newly adopted dog, Sadie.

Portrait of John Shively smiling

Matt Kleinmann

Program Manager, Health Equity Task Force at Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, KS

email: matt dot kleinmann at gmail dot com

Matt Kleinmann is a Ph.D. candidate and community health designer. Matt uses design to collaborate with communities and improve health outcomes in the built environment. In 2014, Matt co-founded Dotte Agency at the University of Kansas, an international award-winning public interest design collaboration.

Matt recently joined the Public Health Department at the Unified Government of Wyandotte County as the Program Manager for the Wyandotte County Health Equity Task Force, where he uses mapping, storytelling, and community organizing to increase access to COVID-19 resources for underserved communities. Matt and his wife Sangeeta live with their two dogs in Kansas City, Kansas.

Portrait of John Shively smiling

Jill Westra

Senior Manager of Sustainability, Boston Beer Company

email: jillington at gmail dot com

Jill Westra is an environmental scientist with a 20-year career in environmental consulting and corporate sustainability management. Originally from mid-Missouri and having spent the majority of her career working internationally, Jill relocated to Northeast Johnson County, Kansas, in 2015. She holds a Masters of Science degree in Environment and Society from the University of Pretoria (South Africa) and a Masters of Science in Occupational and Environmental Health and Safety Management from the University of Portsmouth (UK). Ms. Westra is currently the Senior Manager of Sustainability for the Boston Beer Company, a role she accepted after a decade of experience working in the consulting engineering, mining and construction sectors. She is an Associate Member of the international environmental practitioners’ professional association (IEMA) and a member of the Manufacturers Alliance where she sits on the Sustainability Council. Jill is also a member of the Brewers’ Association, an American trade group of brewers, and an elected board member of WaterOne, Johnson County’s water utility.  

In her spare time she enjoys camping, hiking, walking her two dogs and just about any other opportunity to get immersed in nature. She also takes pride in volunteering with Missouri River Relief and Folk Alliance International, local animal rescue shelters, and playing music in several local bands. Jill is a single mother to a 13-year old daughter attending middle school in the Shawnee Mission School District.

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