On February 15, 2024

VINS appoints next executive director Alden Smith

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                             Submitted
Alden Smith

QUECHEE—The Vermont Institute of Natural Science (VINS) Board of Trustees named Alden Smith the next executive director of the Quechee-based environmental education nonprofit, Feb. 6.

Smith will serve as chief strategist, fundraiser, educational leader, and operational manager of the organization.

“After a comprehensive search, we chose Alden Smith from a slate of strong candidates. We are delighted to welcome Alden as VINS’ new executive director and are confident that he will maintain the organization’s excellent reputation in the Upper Valley and beyond while also expanding our reach and impact,” said Jack Lee, chair of the VINS Board of Trustees.

Smith will report to the Board of Trustees and will lead a staff that includes 24 full-time and eight part-time, seasonal employees and volunteers.

From 2002 to 2022, Smith served as the director of the Mountain School of Milton Academy, a semester school for high school juniors located on a farm in Vershire, Vermont. During his tenure there, Smith successfully stewarded and implemented several strategic plans, built an endowment, increased alumni engagement, and expanded the campus to 420 acres, turning it into a model of energy efficiency and outdoor education.

A graduate of Davidson College in North Carolina and Middlebury College’s Bread Loaf School of English in Vermont, Smith taught high school English for five years at Choate Rosemary Hall in Connecticut before moving in 1999 to Vermont. While managing the Mountain School for two decades, he continued to teach English and take students on animal tracking and foraging expeditions.

Smith succeeds current Executive Director Charles (Charlie) F. Rattigan, who assumed the role in 2014 and led VINS through a period of extraordinary growth, including the recent addition of the Forest Canopy Walk to the VINS Nature Center.

Alden Smith commented, “Charlie Rattigan, Mary Graham, and their team have done an amazing job preserving what is special about VINS and moving the organization forward. Raptors are still central, but VINS has become much more: a refuge for intergenerational visitors, a thriving center of place-based education, and an inspiration for all who want cleaner rivers, more diverse forests, and healthier wildlife. The world needs the mission of VINS more than ever, and my hope is to build it into an even more impactful force for good.”

Smith will begin his work with VINS April 1.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Donald “Don” Williams, 85

July 24, 2024
Donald “Don” Williams, 85, of Mendon passed away on July 10, 2024. Born on November 28, 1938, in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, Don was well known for his straightforward, honest demeanor, always telling it like it is, yet with a big hearted and kind spirit underneath. Don proudly served in the U.S. Army 1959 to 1962 and…

Dave Bienstock, 78

July 24, 2024
Dave Bienstock of Killington VT passed away from interstitial lung disease, peacefully on June 25, 2024, with his wife, Diane Benton, by his side. Bienstock, originally a music teacher from Brooklyn, New York, worked for many years at Willowbrook State School in Staten Island, New York. He was passionate about skiing and would travel to Killington to ski…

Vt turkey brood survey: report sightings July-August

July 24, 2024
The Vermont Fish & Wildlife Dept. (VTF&F) is asking for help with monitoring wild turkeys.  Since 2007, the department has run an annual online survey in August for reporting turkey broods. Beginning in 2021, the survey was expanded to include July. The use of citizen scientists in this way facilitates the department’s ability to collect important turkey…

‘Farmacy’ program notches 10 years

July 24, 2024
The Vermont Farmers Food Center (VFFC), Rutland Regional Medical Center (RRMC), and Community Health Clinics of the Rutland Region (Community Health) are celebrating the Farmacy Project’s 10th year this month. Farmacy, which began at VFFC as Health Care Shares, is a produce prescription program that provides fresh locally grown produce to people facing chronic diet-related…