Rocky Mountain Conservancy

A man wearing glasses and a blue shirt.

Walter Borneman

Board Member, President
Estes Park, Colorado

Walt is best-known in Colorado’s mountains as the co-author of A Climbing Guide to Colorado’s Fourteeners, first published in 1978. He served as the first chairman of the Colorado Fourteeners Initiative and as president of the Colorado Mountain Club Foundation. Walt has undergraduate and graduate degrees in history from Western State College of Colorado and received his law degree from the University of Denver. He is the president of the Walter V. and Idun Y. Berry Foundation, which funds post-doctoral fellowships in children’s health at Stanford. He is also the author of many books and articles about mountains, railroads, and the American West, as well as American military and political history. Walt joined the board in 2019.

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Christina Kraft

Board Member, Vice President
Estes Park, Colorado

Growing up in Colorado, Christina spent much of her childhood and young adult life adventuring in Colorado’s mountains and public lands. She and her husband live and work in Estes Park, now sharing their love of adventure and nature with their young family. Christina graduated with honors from the University of Colorado Boulder with a degree in Business Finance. Shortly after graduating, Christina moved to Alaska to begin her career in banking and explore the Last Frontier. After nearly a decade, she returned to Colorado and has called Estes Park home since 2013. Christina is the President of Bank of Colorado in Estes Park, serves as the Vice Chair of the Estes Park Economic Development Corporation, Treasurer of Estes Valley Investment in Childhood Success, and is a volunteer for Junior Achievement at the Estes Park Elementary School. Christina joined the Board in 2019.

A person with short hair, glasses, and a maroon hoodie is smiling outdoors. Pine trees and rocky terrain are in the background.

Diane Goddard

Board Member, Treasurer
Estes Park, Colorado

Diane Goddard brings extensive experience in strategic planning and financial management to the board following more than 36 years at the University of Kansas in leadership positions including comptroller, vice provost for Administration and Finance, and chief financial officer where she worked on key fiscal strategies, financial policy, analysis, and reporting, overseeing critical areas such as tuition, institutional budget planning, finance, capital projects, internal audit and global operations and security.  Some highlights from her past work include successful initiatives to generate revenue and cost savings of $51 million and overseeing a $350 million project to construct new infrastructure including science facilities, dormitories, a student union, and a central power plant.

Originally from the state of New York, Diane graduated from Southern Connecticut State University with a bachelor’s degree in economics and earned a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Kansas.

Diane and her family (husband Stephen, and children, Ejae, Emily and Caitlin) vacationed in Estes Park and Rocky Mountain National Park every summer for 35 years. Each summer was filled with daily hiking, sightseeing and shopping in Estes Park, with many evenings spent relaxing in front of a fire, often in the company of lifelong friends.

Diane retired from the University of Kansas in 2020 but serves as an advisor for campus leaders as a consultant and budget review and optimization practice lead with the National Association of College and University Business Officers. 

Diane and Stephen reside full-time in Estes Park and continue to enjoy all the wonderful natural resources in the area with family and friends. In particular, Diane and Stephen enjoy watching their four grandchildren discover all the magic of Rocky Mountain National Park and develop their deep love of nature and understanding of the need to protect and conserve this amazing natural resource.  Goddard is honored and excited to be part of, and contribute to, the important work of the Rocky Mountain Conservancy.

A man with glasses and a beard in a classroom.

Rich Fedorchak

Board Member, Secretary
Estes Park, Colorado

Originally from New England, Rich worked with the Young Adult Conservation Corps in Alaska and realized his future was in the West. Working with the National Park Service for more than 34 years, Rich has been able to live and work in truly amazing places. Starting his career as a researcher at Glacier NP, Rich has called Mount Rainier, Grand Teton, Zion and most recently Rocky Mountain National Park, home. He has worked in various capacities with the NPS, including Interpretation, Law Enforcement, Structural/Wildland Fire, and Employee Development. As part of the National Park Service’s Sister Parks program, Rich has spent time working with the governments of Poland, Slovakia and the Republic of Georgia providing technical assistance to their National Parks and Preserves programs.  Before retiring from the NPS in 2020, Rich served as the NPS National Partnerships Coordinator developing a service-wide training program to help bridge the cultures of the Federal Government and nonprofit organizations. Rich and his wife Sheri are very happy to call Estes Park home!

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Brian Ross

Board Member, Immediate Past President
Denver, Colorado

Brian’s love of Rocky Mountain National Park began in high school when he worked as a wrangler for the Cheley Camps. His regard for public lands was furthered when he worked on the staff of United States Senator Gary Hart and was involved in drafting the 1980 reauthorization of the Wilderness Act which added over one million acres of wilderness land in Colorado. Brian retired after 27 years with the international real estate investment firm Jones Lang LaSalle, where he was president of the firm’s U.S. Investment Management Division. In 2008, he was named executive director of the Colorado Conservation Trust (CCT), a nonprofit which supported private land conservation. In 2014, he worked to merge CCT with Colorado Open Lands making it one of the nation’s largest and most respected private land conservation organizations. Brian joined the Conservancy board in 2015.

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Greg Danielson

Board Member
Silverthorne, Colorado

Greg Danielson joined the Rocky Mountain Conservancy board in 2024. After 20 years as partner at the Denver law firm Davis Graham & Stubbs, Greg now works on a more limited basis as Senior of Counsel. He graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Colorado and earned his law degree from the University of Denver Sturm College of Law. He has volunteered with environmental organizations including the Rocky Mountain Land Library and the Friends of the Dillon Ranger District, and served on the board of The Foundation for Natural Resources and Energy Law. Greg came by his love of Rocky Mountain National Park in part through regular visits from Nebraska to his grandparents who lived in Loveland. He and his wife, Peggy, raised their three children to share their love of the outdoors which includes hiking, skiing, and fly-fishing. They look forward to welcoming their first grandchild in the coming year.

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Timothy Davis

Board Member
Denver, Colorado

Tim has been a board member with the Rocky Mountain Conservancy since 2014. Tim has more than 35 years of consulting experience serving middle market public and private sector clients in a multitude of industries and functions. Tim’s experience has been gained over the years, having worked in numerous industries, including: telecommunications, manufacturing, public sector, consumer business, health care, real estate and construction, managing projects relating to financial systems technology assessments and implementations, process/operations/organizational reengineering, financial forecasting, budgeting and developing business plans. This broad background has enabled him to apply his skills in a number of bankruptcy/turnaround projects over the years. Tim has been involved in a variety of civic and professional activities within the Denver marketplace, including industrial manufacturing. Tim also founded a local construction and remodeling company and has been associated with the Colorado National Guard for 6 years.

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Liza Grant

Board Member
Denver, Colorado

Liza Grant rejoined the Rocky Mountain Conservancy board in 2024, continuing the Grant family’s long tradition of supporting Rocky Mountain National Park and other conservation, cultural, and educational organizations. Liza graduated from Colorado College with a degree in math and education and holds a master’s degree in education from Regis University. As a college athlete, Liza was named an All-America player in soccer. She spent more than a decade working in collegiate athletics and Olympic development programs, coaching at the University of Washington, the University of New Mexico, and establishing and coaching the Division 1 women’s soccer program at the University of Wyoming. Liza later returned to the classroom teaching math and established a business providing private tutoring. Liza enjoys hiking, nature photography, gardening, golf, and tennis, and spending time at her property adjoining Rocky—land her family has stewarded since the late 1800’s

A smiling woman in a black shirt.

Laurie Mathews

Board Member
Denver, Colorado

Laurie is passionate about putting her skills to work to protect the environment and change peoples’ lives for the better.

After completing her undergraduate degree cum laude at the University of Colorado, she earned a master’s degree in environmental engineering from Stanford. She spent her early career drafting environmental policy and working with government leaders at the state and national levels.

Laurie was honored to serve as Director of Colorado State Parks from 1991 to 2001. Under her leadership, the department constructed 19 new visitor centers, established statewide environmental education programs, and added $16 million of buffer land to expand and protect existing parks. In 1992 Mathews was a key leader in the creation of Great Outdoors Colorado (GOCO) the organization which uses a portion of Colorado lottery proceeds to help preserve and enhance state parks, trails, wildlife, rivers, and open space. To date, GOCO has expended $1.3 billion on over 5,500 projects located in every county in Colorado.

In 2001 Mathews founded Global Dental Relief (GlobalDentalRelief.org) to provide critical dental care to children in underdeveloped countries. The organization leads 25 trips per year to seven nations with dental professionals and volunteers. They provide dental care to 25,000 children annually. Since its founding, the organization has provided $41 million in dental care to 195,000 children.

Laurie joined the board in the fall of 2022.

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Claudine Perrault

Board Member
Estes Park, Colorado

Claudine has been a part of Colorado libraries for 20 years and director of the Estes Valley Public Library since 2005. Before moving to Estes Park, she was a college reference librarian, suburban branch manager, and rural high school media specialist. Claudine grew up in Miami, Florida, but was a lucky scholarship kid and attended a peace-based summer camp in the mountains of New England, which changed her life and worldview. So, longing for life on a woodsy dirt road she headed ‘out West.’ Claudine spent early pre-library summers as a Colorado Outward Bound Instructor, and upon visiting Rocky Mountain National Park for the first time said, “This is the place.” After graduate school, she made her Colorado move and has been a grateful mountain village librarian ever since. Claudine enjoys volunteer activities that make civic, youth and outdoor connections.  She begins serving on the Conservancy board in 2022.

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Jim Pickering

Board Member
Estes Park, Colorado

Jim Pickering, a retired Professor of English and administrator, served as director of the Honors College at Michigan State University and as dean, provost and president at the University of Houston. The author/editor of more than thirty books on Estes Park, Rocky Mountain National Park, and the American West, in 2006, Jim was appointed Historian Laureate of the Town of Estes Park. In addition to serving as president of the Rocky Mountain Conservancy (and as a Conservancy board member since 2014), he serves as chair of the board of directors of the Estes Park Economic Development Corporation, as a member of the editorial board of the Estes Park Trail Gazette, on the board of the Estes Park Museum Foundation, and as a member of the Estes Valley Community Fund Committee of the Community Foundation of Northern Colorado. Jim also is a member of the Constantinian Military Order of St. George, a philanthropic knighthood. His relationship with Rocky Mountain National Park began when, as a boy of 11 from suburban New York, he spent two weeks in a rustic 1917 log cabin on the slopes of the Twin Sisters looking out at the East Face of Longs Peak. A graduate of Williams College, he received his graduate degrees from Northwestern University.

Person in a pink shirt and cap stands near a stream in a forested area, with trees and rocks visible in the background.

Darla Sidles

Board Member
Estes Park, Colorado

Former Superintendent of Rocky Mountain National Park Darla Sidles’ first exposure to the park came as a 9-year-old traveling with her family to their first National Park Service (NPS) experience. After more than three decades of a rewarding career with the NPS, she came full circle back to Rocky and completed her federal service in Colorado in 2023. 

Darla began her federal career as a Student Conservation Association (SCA) volunteer in the North Cascade mountains of Washington State. She worked summers as a U.S. Forest Service wilderness ranger while obtaining her business degree at the University of Texas at Arlington, and then completed graduate school at Western Washington University. 

Darla’s 37-year career spanned numerous national parks and sites across the country including Arches and Zion in Utah; Big Bend in Texas; Denali in Alaska; NPS headquarters in Washington, D.C.; Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument and Saguaro National Park in Arizona; Independence National Historic Park in Philadelphia; Golden Gate National Recreation Area in California; and, finally, the last seven years at Rocky. She is passionate about parks, their resources, and the people who enjoy them. 

Although Darla and her husband reside primarily in Arizona now, Darla returns to the Rockies regularly and keeps the park and its communities firmly in her heart. 

A woman sitting in a snow hole.

Kim Skyelander

Board Member
Loveland, Colorado

Kim’s love for Rocky Mountain National Park started when she took a job as a trail guide for the Moraine Meadows stables when she was 19 years old. She’s been in love with this country ever since.  Kim has a degree in wildlife biology, and two graduate degrees in environmental studies and natural resources management. She worked professionally for the U.S. Forest Service for 16 years as a wildlife biologist. Kim left the U.S.F.S. to pursue a career in teaching, and taught natural resources classes for eight years at the Salish Kootenai College on the Flathead Indian Reservation in Montana. She also taught environmental education and interpretation classes at the University of Idaho. Kim has also served as the executive director of Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center, a large residential outdoor school in Minnesota, which is similar to the Teton Science Schools in Jackson, WY. Currently, she is the Associate Director for the Center for Collaborative Conservation at Colorado State University. Kim joined the board in 2019.

A bearded man in a plaid shirt standing in front of a tree.

Zachary Wiebe

Board Member
Fort Collins, Colorado

Zac spent much of his childhood exploring Rocky Mountain National Park’s west side, developing a deep love for the area and a desire to pursue a career in natural resources. After completing a degree in Natural Resources Management and Geographic Information Systems from Colorado State University, he spent years conducting research throughout the park to help inform the management of elk and vegetation. Currently, Zac works for the Larimer County Department of Natural Resources, an agency that shares many similarities with the Rocky Mountain Conservancy, including a focus on environmental education, land conservation, responsible public land stewardship, and fostering the connection of youth and the outdoors. In the past, Zac served on the board of the nonprofit Backcountry Snowsports Alliance and helped oversee its merger with the Colorado Mountain Club. He lives with his wife, Nicole, and son, Quinn, in Ft. Collins and has been on the Conservancy board since 2015.

Legacy Board Members

Phillip Bell (1991-1999) 

David Binns (1985-1986) 

Lennie Bemiss (1981-1991) 

Hank Birnbaum (1984-1992) 

Frederick Campbell (1980-2001)

Gerald Caplan (1999-2006) 

Don Cheley (2011-2020)

Richard Coe (2007-2011) 

Charles Cofas (2014-2024)

Ruth Deffenbaugh (1980-1981) 

Robert Dern (1996-2009) 

Dorothy Dines (1995-2005) 

Katherine Dines (2013-2024)

Bud Duryea (2004-2014) 

Walter Emery (1989-2005) 

Gloria Falkenburg (1984-1986) 

Howard (Howdy) Fry (2013-2024)

Peter Grant (1999-2021) 

Martin Graves (1994-1998) 

Howard Grey (1981-1982) 

Lynne Geweke (2017-2022) 

Carolyn Hackman (1989-2007)

Julie Harrington (2009-2020) 

Patricia Harrington (1991-2001)

Taru Hays (2003-2010)

Pieter Hondius (1983-1986) 

Richard Hoffman (2007-2011) 

Joseph Jackson (1995-1999) 

Ted James, Jr. (1988-1993) 

Ted James, Sr. (1991-1996) 

Charles Jerden (2014-2020) 

Allyn Kauk (1972) 

Frank Kugeler (1999-2012) 

Bill Lively (2007-2008) 

Bill Needham (1988-1993) 

James Nissen (1991-2012) 

Bryant O’Donnell (1987-1990)

Marlys Polson (2003-2014) 

James Randall (1972) 

David Rauwerdink (2009-2010)

Ralph Reed (1989-1991) 

Phillip Reilly (1991-1997)

Janet Robertson 

William Setchfield (1980-1981)

Roger Sherman (1986-1991) 

Mary Kay Stoehr (1991-2002) 

Buddy Surles (1984-1987) 

William Sweet (1997-2014) 

Jerome Sutherland (1998-2006)

David Taylor (1999-2004) 

Bill Tindall (2007-2018)

Henry Toll, Jr (1987-2001) 

Don West (1981-1987) 

Arthur Wilcox (1972-2001) 

Marvin Woolf (2007-2010)