HomeMy WebLinkAboutDocumentation_Regular Council_Tab 26_07/11/2019Agenda Item #26.
Regular Council
STAFF MEMO
Meeting: Regular Council - 11 Jul 2019
Staff Contact: Keith Davis, Village Attorney Department: Legal
RESOLUTION 21-19, A RESOLUTION OF THE VILLAGE COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF
TEQUESTA, FLORIDA, PROVIDING FOR A VILLAGE OF TEQUESTA ENVIRONMENTAL
COMMITTEE; PROVIDING FOR COMMITTEE COMPOSITION, AUTHORITY &
RESPONSIBILITIES; PROVIDING FOR COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS; PROVIDING FOR SUNSET
OF SAID COMMITTEE; PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE; AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES.
RESOLUTION 21-19, A RESOLUTION OF THE VILLAGE COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF
TEQUESTA, FLORIDA, PROVIDING FOR A VILLAGE OF TEQUESTA ENVIRONMENTAL
COMMITTEE; PROVIDING FOR COMMITTEE COMPOSITION, AUTHORITY &
RESPONSIBILITIES; PROVIDING FOR COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS; PROVIDING FOR SUNSET
OF SAID COMMITTEE; PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE; AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES.
Recommend Village Council approval by motion, second, discussion and vote.
Res 21-19 Environmental Committee
Included herewith are several resumes provided by Mr
resume Bob Shaw
Resume Tom Bradford
Resumes Provided by Mr. Shaw
Page 479 of 537
Agenda Item #26.
RESOLUTION NO. 21-19
A RESOLUTION OF THE VILLAGE COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF
TEQUESTA, FLORIDA, PROVIDING FOR A VILLAGE OF TEQUESTA
ENVIRONMENTAL COMMITTEE; PROVIDING FOR COMMITTEE
COMPOSITION, AUTHORITY & RESPONSIBILITIES; PROVIDING FOR
COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS; PROVIDING FOR SUNSET OF SAID
COMMITTEE; PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE; AND FOR OTHER
PURPOSES.
WHEREAS, the Village of Tequesta is a waterfront community which both benefits
from, and impacts, coastal and inland waterways; and
WHEREAS, the Village of Tequesta is home to a variety of natural and park areas,
including a fully developed golf course a natural preserve area and all manner of parklands in
between; and
WHEREAS, the wellbeing of all these natural and public resources, as well as the
general wellbeing of all residential and commercial landscaped areas and vegetation areas is of
great importance to the Village Council; and
WHEREAS, negative impacts on the Villages environment and its natural and public
resources can come from sources from within and from outside of the Village and with proper
education and regulation may be controlled or mitigated; and
WHEREAS, in an effort to preserve and protect all of the Village's environmental
resources and amenities, the Village Council of the Village of Tequesta, Florida, now desires to
provide for a "Village of Tequesta Environmental Committee"; and
WHEREAS, the Village Council desires to provide for the committee's composition, its
authority & responsibilities, and for its compliance with applicable laws; and
WHEREAS, the Village Council desires to provide for the sunset of the committee.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE VILLAGE COUNCIL OF
THE VILLAGE OF TEQUESTA, PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA, AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1: The above stated recitals are true and accurate and are hereby made part of
this Resolutions.
Section 2: The Village Council of the Village of Tequesta, Florida, hereby provides
for the "Village of Tequesta. Environmental Committee". The Village of Tequesta
Environmental Committee shall be composed of up to seven (7) members. The initial members
I
Page 480 of 537
Agenda Item #26.
of the Village of Tequesta Environmental Committee, appointed by the Village Council in
conjunction with the establishment of the committee, are as follows:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Committee members shall serve at the pleasure of the Village Council until they are removed by
the Village Council, or until they voluntarily resign their seat, or until the committee is dissolved
pursuant to Section 5 of this resolution. Vacancies may be filled via appointment by the Village
Council from time to time.
Section 3: The Village of Tequesta Environmental Committee shall hold public
meetings for the purpose of developing recommendations for best practices, fostering community
partnerships, and within the bounds of the Village's Comprehensive Development Plan,
developing recommendations for goals, objectives and policies relative to sustaining and
improving the environment of the Village of Tequesta. The Village of Tequesta Environmental
Committee shall report to the Village Council from time to time and shall present its
recommendations to the Village Council for further direction, final review and ultimate approval.
Section 4: The Village of Tequesta Environmental Committee shall appoint from
among its membership a Chair and a Vice -Chair, and shall establish its own rules of procedure;
however any such rules shall comply with and be subject to the Florida Government in the
Sunshine laws and the Florida Public Records Act. Additionally, all committee members shall
be bound by the Florida Code of Ethics and the Palm Beach County Code of Ethics for appointed
officials.
Section 5: The Village of Tequesta Environmental Committee shall continue until
such time as the Village Council shall by resolution deem the committee to no longer be required
and dissolve same.
Section 6: This Resolution shall take effect immediately upon adoption.
2
Page 481 of 537
Agenda Item #26.
Included herewith are several resumes provided by Mr.
Shaw who has been working with Mr. Bradford on the
committee.
These individuals are interested in serving on the
committee.
Page 482 of 537
Agenda Item #26.
I am currently a realtor with Shaw Florida Homes at Paradise Real Estate International in
Jupiter, Fl. I have been buying, selling, investing in, renovating, and appraising real
estate for over 25 years. During this period, I have owned a real estate appraisal
company as well as a real estate investment firm. For the last 2 years, I achieved
membership in the International Ambassadors Club for Sales at Paradise Real Estate
International.
While recognizing property owners' rights, I have long fought to balance these rights
with advocacy for the protection of the environment. I currently as a Director on the
Board of the Jupiter Inlet Foundation. The Jupiter Inlet Foundation is a Florida non-
profit corporation dedicated to the conservation of the natural resources along the
waterways of the Jupiter Inlet and the preservation of the historical and archaeological
assets that lay throughout this area.
I graduated Cum Laude from the University of Massachusetts with a degree in Physical
Geography. I have worked as an Environmental Scientist, owned my own Environmental
Consulting, Firm and have served as the Technical Assistance Coordinator at the Center for
Environmental Management at Tufts University.
Robert Shaw
24 Shady Lane,
Tequesta, FL 33469
(561) 440-4024
Page 483 of 537
Agenda Item #26.
June 30, 2019
Honorable Mayor and Village Council
Village of Tequesta
345 Tequesta Drive
Tequesta, Florida 33469
Re: Letter of Interest, Credentials, and Experience Relative to Serving on the Tequesta
Environmental Advisory Committee (EAC)
Dear Mayor and Village Council:
Pursuant to the process for selecting members to a new Village Board or Committee, I am
providing you with this letter as my expression of interest in serving on the initial Tequesta EAC
so that you will give consideration to appointing me to this important new Village Committee.
Relative to our local environment, indeed, in every portion of this planet Earth, the facts are very
clear and widely known. Polluting our air, our land, our plants, food and water, both surface and
underground is bad, very bad. It is bad because it is detrimental to human life, animals, plants, all
living things. The Village Council intuitively knows this. We know that you do because, in 2017,
you adopted an updated Comprehensive Plan, which enumerates numerous goals, objectives, and
policies intent on mitigating environmental degradation with strong environmentally oriented
statements such as:
)�, The Village will encourage sustainability and protect natural resources
)i�- Protect potable water well fields
Reduce automobile dependency, greenhouse gas emissions, and increase energy efficiency
Limit greenhouse gas by reductions in vehicle miles driven
Meet or exceed National Ambient Air Standards
Implement strategies which increase community resiliency from the impacts of climate
change, including sea level rise.
In order to provide structure and a framework for the work of the EAC, I previously drafted the
following paragraph as a draft mission statement for consideration by the Committee and the
Village Council, if desired:
"The Village of Tequesta Environmental Advisory Committee mission is to improve the
environmental quality of Tequesta by recommending activities that will place Tequesta in an
environmental leadership position, provide environmental partnering with area businesses, public
organizations, community leaders, and neighbors to work together to create a cleaner and safer
place to live, work, andplayforfuture generations. Our primary task is to make recommendations
to the Village Council on implementation strategies on matters of environmental consequence,
with particular attention to environmental goals, objectives, and policies as contained within the
Village's Comprehensive Plan. In addition, the Committee foresees being called upon as a
resource, a catalyst, and an advocate for environmental sustainability. We anticipate serving as a
bridge between ideas and their practical implementation by advising the Village Council, fostering
local partnerships, and engaging our local communities and neighborhoods to develop goals,
policies, and practices together that improve the well-being of our Village and ensure a vibrant
and resilientfuture for all. "
Page 484 of 537
Agenda Item #26.
As you can see, the task of the Committee, subject to the guidelines provided by the Village
Council, is broad-based requiring focus, commitment, and diligence in order to effectuate the
assignment given by the Village Council. Knowing this, at her request, I provided Mayor Brennan
with a draft outline for the creation of a Tequesta Sustainability Plan, which included the following
Focus Areas each with its own goal and objectives designed to enable the accomplishment of the
Focus Area goal. The Focus Areas are listed below. Without this sort of context, which is similar
to the format of the development of a municipal Comprehensive Plan, well-intentioned citizens on
a newly formed committee can wander aimlessly never reaching the promised land of success
similar to Moses and the Israelites in the desert.
Draft Sustainability Plan Focus Areas
Focus Area 1. Energy Conservation
Focus Area 2. Climate Protection
Focus Area 3. Air Quality
Focus Area 4. Material Resources
Focus Area 5. Public Health and Nutrition
Focus Area 6. Urban Design, Land Use, Green Building, and Transportation
Focus Area 7. Parks, Open Space, and Habitat Conservation
Focus Area 8. Water Resources and Flood Protection
Focus Area 9. Public Involvement and Personal Responsibility
Every environmental issue identified for action in the Tequesta Comprehensive Plan, and more,
can be addressed in a systematic fashion by pursuing the format and outline inherent in any good
Sustainability Plan.
This is the essence of what I bring to the table for the Village Council and the Committee — high
level organizational skills and a precision goal -based focus honed by 36 years of municipal
management experience in a public setting wherein most people find it difficult to function, let
alone succeed, and I do it with humility, honesty, and kindness to the people I serve and related
stakeholders.
Yet, this is not all I bring to the table for I have been interested in environmental issues from an
early age, Second Grade as a matter of fact, when I inquired of my father as to the source of the
smoke in the sky from the steel mills in Birmingham, the "Pittsburgh of the South." As a
sophomore in college, I immediately traded my Pontiac for a VW convertible during the 1973
Arab Oil Embargo. I was embarrassed driving a gas guzzling muscle car that was feeding the bank
rolls of Arab sheiks. I enrolled in Environmental Ecology classes in New College, learned how to
make inexpensive solar water heaters, went to local elementary schools to teach children the
problems stemming from over population and, as a Senior, I chose to write a report for a seminar
class on the savings the City of Tuscaloosa could achieve by retrofitting every street light they
owned and operated from mercury vapor lamps to energy efficient sodium vapor lamps. The
savings was a six -figure number. To my surprise, the City made the change by augmenting their
funds with federal grants and a contribution from the electric utility. I received an "A" in that class.
My entire working career was in the first generation of environmental permitting for infrastructure
projects, which became more rigorous with the passage of time. In Tequesta, I worked hand-in-
hand with Gee & Jensen to permit the Tequesta Drive and Seabrook Road drainage systems you
see today. In parallel, staff secured Community Block Grants to pay for a portion of the upgrade to
Page 485 of 537
Agenda Item #26.
the drainage system. This system is a de facto retrofitted bio-swale system wherein the lip of the
drainage inlets is higher than grade to ensure retention, percolation, and mitigate transference of
toxic runoff into the Loxahatchee River or the Dover Ditch. There are numerous projects that I was
involved with throughout my career that provided environmental protection as a component.
Perhaps the most important relative to the EAC is the assignment I was given to secure grants for
Palm Beach so that the Town could take its first steps toward a more "Green" operation. The Town
Council wanted the Town to receive some good press about "going green." I was tasked with
seeing that this became a reality. We pursued funding from the Energy Efficiency and
Conservation Block Grant Program. The Town received hundreds of thousands of dollars based
upon our grant proposal. I hired a consulting firm to write the proposal to help ensure success. It
worked, and the grant included funds to pay the cost of the grant writer. If memory serves me
correctly, we purchased numerous hybrid vehicles, garbage compactors with diesel efficient
engines, Town parking lots were switched to LED night lights, parking meters to solar power,
Town -owned street lights were converted from sodium vapor to LED, all Town buildings were
converted to interior LED lighting, and motion sensors that turn off lights when there is no
movement. Even little things like Exit signs that ran 24 hours per day were switched to LED. We
even bought variable drive pumps for storm and sewer operations which are more efficient. At one
point, the Finance Director came to me and said she thought what I was doing was working
because the Town's electric bill was dropping. Of course it did! And, all of it cost the Town
practically nothing. We would front the money, submit a grant application form showing what we
bought and, then, be reimbursed, less our small share. The Town's biggest cost was my time
devoted to it all. The Town Council got the good press they wanted, too.
My point is I can do the same for the Village of Tequesta. I have hands-on experience completing
and filing the required detailed monthly grant reports. I can also write grant applications, not only
for energy conservation, but for anything approved by the Village Council to enhance our
environment and save the Village money in operational costs.
In conclusion, I can go on writing to you about many other examples of environmental
undertakings in my life and bore you but, suffice it to say, if you want this Committee to be
effective and potentially tap widely available "green" grant funding allow me to bring my skills to
the Committee so that it may transform ideas into reality. I would be a valuable asset to this
Committee due to my training and experiences in problem solving for securing environmental
permits, acquisition of grant funds, and management of the grant process. I have a preference for
environmental projects pertaining to energy conservation, alternative energy, and mitigation of
sources of air and water pollution, but I have experience in one form or another within every
environmental area of concern touched upon in the Tequesta Comprehensive Plan. As you may
recall, I have a BS degree in Political Science and a Master's Degree in Public Administration
(MPA) from the University of Alabama.
I am ready, willing, and able to serve on this new Village Committee and help make it be
successful and meet all of your expectations.
Sincerely,
Th&M,Ct,k (�. -8 radf&r&
Thomas G. Bradford
Page 486 of 537
USA S KRIMSKY
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
FLORIDA SEA GRANT COLLEGE PROGRAM
2199 SOUTH ROCK RD
FT. PIERCE, FIL 34945
LKRIMSKY@UFL.EDU - (301) 351-5747
Areas of focus
Protecting and enhancing coastal and estuarine water quality
Understanding and mitigating harmful algal blooms
Identifying and reducing land-based sources of pollution
Education
University of Delaware, College of Marine and Earth Studies
0 Ph.D. - Marine Biosciences, 2008
University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP)
• B.S.-Environmental Science and Policy, 2002
• Life Sciences Scholars Program, 2000
Roskilde University, Denmark's International Study Abroad Program in Marine Biology, Spring
2001
Professional Experience
2016 -Present Water Resources Regional Specialized Agent, South District
University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
Florida Sea Grant
2008-2016 Sea Grant Extension Agent III
University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
Miami -Dade County
Peer Reviewed Publications (selected list)
Krimsky, L. and Patterson, J. 2018. Ocean Acidification: An Introduction. UF/IFAS Extension
Electronic Database Information Source publication #FA206. https:Hedis.ifas.ufl.edu/fa206.
Krimsky, L., Phlips, E. and K. Havens. 2018. A Response to Frequently Asked Questions about the
2018 Algae Blooms in Lake Okeechobee, the Caloosahatchee, and St. Lucie Estuaries. UF/IFAS
Extension Electronic Database Information Source publication #SG159.
USA S KRIMSKY
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
FLORIDA SEA GRANT COLLEGE PROGRAM
2199 SOUTH ROCK RD
FT. PIERCE, FL34945
LKRIMSKY@ UFL.EDU - (301) 351-5747
Warner, L.A., Kumar Chaudhary, A., and L. Krimsky. (in review). Establishing a Typology of
Residential Water Conservation Practices Informed by Irrigation Water Source. Urban Forestry
& Urban Greening.
Professional Presentations (selected list)
Krimsky, L.S. and C. Sidman. 2018. "UF/IFAS Florida Sea Grant Coastal Research & Extension:
Applied Science and Outreach for Climate Resiliency and Sea Level Rise Adaptation". Florida
Atlantic University Transforming a Wetter Florida into a Better Florida: Collaborating for Sea
Level Rise Resilience. Fort Lauderdale, FL. October 8, 2018.
Krimsky, L.S., Abeels, H., Seals, L., and M. Lusk. "Source and Concentration of Nutrients from
Waterfront Properties along the Indian River Lagoon". Association of Natural Resources
Extension Professionals Bi -annual Conference. Biloxi, MS. April 30 — May 4, 2018.
Krimsky, L.S. and S. Krueger. "Water Watch: Citizen Science Water Monitoring Programs for
South Florida. Association of Natural Resource Extension Professionals (ANREP)/National
Association of Community Development Extension Professionals (NACDEP) Joint Conference.
Burlington, VT. June 26-29, 2016.
External Grants (selected list)
Martin County, Martin County Stormwater Management Grant. 2017-2019 (PI), $60,000
Gulf of Mexico Alliance. Water Watch: Establishing a Regional Citizen Science Water Quality
Monitoring Program in the Florida Panhandle. 2018-2019 (Co -PI), $51,075
Indian River Lagoon National Estuary Preserve. Source and Concentration of Surface Water
Nutrients from Residential Waterfront Homes in Brevard County, Florida. 2017-2018 (PI),
$27,401.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Habitat Focus Area Grants. The Human
Dimensions of Biscayne bay Algal Blooms: Socioeconomics, Spatial Modeling, and Community
Engagement. 2015-2017 (Co -PI), $117,667
USA S KRIMSKY
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
FLORIDA SEA GRANT COLLEGE PROGRAM
2199 SOUTH ROCK RD
FT. PIERCE, FL 3494S
LKRIMSKY@UFL.EDU - (301) 351-5747
• SAI Global. Peer -reviewer for the Audubon Nature Institute Gulf United for Lasting
Fisheries (G.U.L.F.) Certification Program for the LA Blue Crab Fishery, 2015
• National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Saltonstall-Kennedy grant reviewer,
2015
Recognitions and Awards (selected list)
Keep Martin Beautiful Environmental Stewardship Award, 2019
Florida Association of Natural Resource Extension Professionals, Innovative Program
Award —Water Watch Citizen Science Water Monitoring Program, 2019
Association of Natural Resource Extension Professionals, Outstanding Team Award —
Microplastics Awareness Program, 2017
National Association of Counties (NACo), Achievement Awards Program, 2015
Wells Fargo Extension Professional and Enhancement Award, 2014
Association of Natural Resource Extension Professionals (National), Early Career
Leadership Award- Gold, 2011
Florida Association of Natural Resource Extension Professionals, Early Career Leadership
Award- First, 2011
Professional Membership & Activities (selected list)
Co -Chair, Florida Sea Grant Water Quality Work Action Group, 2019
Indian River Lagoon Council Science, Technology, Engineering and Modeling (STEM)
Committee member, 2016 -Present
Lagoon Watch Advisory Committee member, 2018 -Present
Southeast Florida Coral Reef Initiative member, 2008-2017
Stephen Smith
13190 La Lique Ct. Palm Beach Gardens, Fl 33710
561-427-9637
steyhen.smith7oo7(a-)2mail.com
Objective
A position on the Tequesta Environmental Committee
Areas of Strength
Professional Communication e Connecting Environmental Preservation with Healthy Living
* Organization e Leadership e Well Connected to Community
Qualifications
One World Zero Waste Tequesta, Fl.
Co -Owner and Operator July 2018- Present
• Dedicated to helping our community eliminate unnecessary waste in our lives. Especially single use
plastics.
• Educate our society on how to live more sustainably and consciously while being more healthy at the
same time.
• Collaborate with people, small businesses, groups, and organization who share similar missions to ours.
• Provide a space for people to shop zero waste!
Hot Yoga Jupiter
Hot Yoga Downtown at the Gardens
Lala Hot Yoga
Jupiter, Fl.
Palm Beach Gardens, Fl.
Stuart, Fl.
V ogaInstructor August 2016 to Current
• Guide students through a series of postures and exercises and share the benefits that are being received
in different parts of the body.
• Encourage students to practice healthy living for themselves and for the Earth.
• My ultimate goal is to open my students' minds up to realize their individual power and potential in their
lives.
School District of Palm Beach County Boca Raton, Fl.
High School English Teacher November 2017 to February 2019
• Planned for and executed lessons throughout the day.
• Participated in both school district wide and state-wide training and mentoring programs for new
teachers.
A tfp" A �A A;�t�,*,f _ A �f�A I A -I
JESSICA NAMATH
P HOTOGRAPH E R //ACTIVIST
.) 34-1497 2555
Ejessicanamathftmail,corn
9 20 Shady L,n,
TeqUesta, FIL
VILLAGE COUNCIL
VILLAGE OF TEQUESTA
345 TEQUESTA DR
TEQUESTA, FLORIDA
MAY 25TH, 201.9
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
I have been a 30 -year resident on the Loch-ahatchee River in Tecluesm, Ft.. and am
no\.%, raising my two chil&en on it. I've watched the river change over my life[ime. I
can Lasite the difference. see the difference and �:eel the difference. I'm committed to
making sure that we protect and i-estore the r-iver forfUture generations.
In order to do so, we must as communities recognize howwe are all contributing to
its demise, wl iether we realize it or not. Public awareness arid education are cl-itic".11.
As we continue to develop and grow, we must be aware of how our individual
actions, whether building, --ii home or fertilizing a yard, effect Our environment,
corn mu n i ties, arid each other. Cori ta rni nated runoff, storm water drains, retention
ponds, pesticidesancl fertilizers, as well as countless other- issues affect oui� families
and communities On a daily basis,
I Would be honored to ser-ve Our community to do my pai-t inimproving the
envilronmenLal quality of Tecluestai.
Sincet-ely,
Jessica Namath
JESSICA NAMATH
P H 0 T 0 G R A P H E R
A C T I V I S T
jessicanamathftmail.com
,,,) 3474972555
E D U C A T 10 N
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
University of Alabama.
2005-2008
PR. COMMUNICATIONS
University of Alabama,
2005-2008
FINE ARTS (ASSOCIATES)
Palm Beach StaLe College, 2007
S K I L L S
// PROFESSIONAL
Strategic design
Public speaking
Philanthropy
Researching
Problem solving
// TECHNICAL
MicrosoftWord
Microsoft Excel
Microsoft Power Point
Photoshop
Illustrator
MEMBER
SIERRACLUB
FLORIDA ANTHROPOLOGICAL
SOCIETY
P R 0 F I L E
Outgoing, hard working, creative leader with a diverse
background. Exposed to an exceptional array of people and
experiences providing an arsensal of ideas and associates.
Highly motivated and detail -oriented, capable of multi -tasking
effectively in fast paced environments.
-NON-NATIVE SPAN ISI. I SPEAKER;"
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
PI-IOTO(;IIAPIIF'R;'�"(;RA,1'111(.,])ESI(.;.N]-".R. SeltIFL&NYC12010-Present
Experienced photojournalist skilled in multiple formats, including 35mrn and
digital. Event, Editorial, Commercial, Manual, RAW,
• Experienced in construction and architectural photography, both for
clients (project update portfolios) and industry recognition (submissions)
• Families, Weddings, Newborns. Corporate
• Logos, Letterheads, Layouts, Mailouts, Newsletters. etc,
PRODUCTfON ASSISTANT BroodwayJoeTVjFL&NYCj2011 2013
Worked integrally with celebrity to maintain and update social media platforms
Filmed, edited and uploaded weekly videos to website
Traveled to events and supplied website with media content
Worked with clients to enSUre mutually beneficial public exposure
EXTRA CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES
NA110NAL (;F N 11,ALOGICAI, SOCAETY 112017 - Present
Certified in multiple geanalogical studies in the pursuit of rnyfamily history
• American Genealogical Studies
• Guide to Documentation and Source Citation
TROOPI.,FADER. Girl Scot its of Americo I Teq uesta, FL 12018 - Present
Provide girls opportunities to find and become leaders in their communities
• Organize and host weekly meetings for a group of 7-9 year old girls
• Invested in teaching girls to become business owners and activists
INIMAN (A ]..AIR Daughters of tlie American Rn,,olution Jupiter, FL I Present
JESSICA NAMATH
P H 0 T 0 G R A P H E R / / A C T I V I S T
.) 3�74972555
M jessiczinam@th@gmail.coni
20 Shady Lane
Tequesta, FL
33469
REFERENCES
CIIARLE—S, MODIC.A
P resid ell [
Monam I FL
ct ry14711.@,-rT)�,,il.coni
I.F',ANX k LANDSM \N\
Board of Direelors
Sustainable PBC I FL
leannalandsi nai mftmail.corn
.11 A 111T� .11 A L M
E V A N NA 1) E' It
Volulktoel. ("'oordiflat,o].
Loxahatchee Historical Society I FL
evan.naderftmail.com
CHIP BLOCK
V �ice Ma' Vol.
Jupiter Inlet Colony I FL
cblock,', n@yahoo.corn
CHERY1, �CIINEIDER