Elizabeth Dickinson is the Chief Development Officer. She has had the opportunity and honor to advance social justice for over 40 years, working with not-for-profit organizations, foundations, and government agencies. Most recently, Liz served as the Executive Director of the CUNY School of Law Foundation and directed institutional advancement for the nation’s #1 public interest law school. She has strengthened neighborhood-based multi-service settlement houses in New York City and advanced public health programs at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. At Women’s Environmental and Development Organization, she worked with the Rachel Carson Institute in the development of the WASTE (Women Assessing the State of the Environment). At WITNESS, she secured support to launch a human rights program in North America that resulted in the 2010 passage of the Elder Justice Act and in the 2011 TRUST films to advance the mission of Our Children’s Trust. At LatinoJustice, she launched LAWbound® to expand the pathway to law school for Latinos.
She has served on the Boards of the Lower East Side Printshop, HIV Law Project, and Sapna NYC. Liz received her BA from Kenyon College and her MBA in not-for-profit management from Binghamton University.
She enjoys cooking with her adult sons, painting and printmaking, exploring Prospect Park with her lab Luna, and has a lifelong love of Block Island, which the Nature Conservancy has called one of the 12 “Last Great Places.”
Aubrey is an Oregonian who attended the University of Oregon and earned a B.S. in Environmental studies. After completing an internship with the City of Eugene Parks and Opens Spaces program where she mentored youth in collecting ecological data, Aubrey began her administrative career managing a local sustainable business. She hopes to bring her unique skills and expertise to the mission of Our Children’s Trust. In her down time she can be found tending to her garden, browsing local antique malls and spending time in Oregon’s plentiful natural spaces.