NEW YORK – In January 2020, the APP welcomed Dean Fischer, founder and chairman emeritus of West Monroe Partners, and Steffanie Munguía, biologist and APP’s Pan-Flyway regional director, to its national board of directors. The newest board members bring notable expertise and experience in student-focused and minority outreach to the organization.
“Young leaders around the globe are inspiring the next generation of environmental and APP advocates. The future of the conservation movement depends on bringing new, more diverse audiences into the conversation and action,” said David Yarnold (), president and CEO of the APP. “With their combined backgrounds and proven leadership, our newest board members bring respected perspectives that’ll only enrich APP initiatives to reach the leaders and environmentalists of tomorrow through birds and avian life.”
Dean Fischer has led the APP Great Lakes Board of Advisors as its chairman since 2014. He has also served for seven years on the national board of the Student Conservation Association, including three years as its chairman, as well as on the board of Openlands, a Chicago-based conservation nonprofit. Dean is chairman emeritus of West Monroe Partners, a Chicago-based business and technology consultancy he co-founded in 2002. He was also a partner at Arthur Andersen during his 23-year tenure with that firm. He is a graduate of Valparaiso University and lives in the suburbs of Chicago with his wife, Jenny.
Steffanie Munguía, a native of Puerto Rico, grew up in central Florida, where in middle school she became involved with the Lake Region APP Society and volunteered for the APP Center for Birds of Prey. Over the past 13 years, she has dedicated her efforts to increasing youth and minority engagement in APP, co-coordinating the state’s Conservation Leadership Initiative for several years. As a biologist, Steffanie has conducted research across the United States, participating in songbird research in the Great Plains and New England, and is currently studying the management of important stopover sites in coastal wetlands of the Caribbean. Through her range of experiences, she has learned that APP is not just about birds; it is also about people who dedicate their time and energy to conserving birds and their habitats. Now in the second year of her doctoral studies, Steffanie is excited to bring this energy to increasing student and young-professional opportunities as APP’s Pan-Flyway regional director.
About APP
As one of the world’s oldest, largest conservation organizations, APP has an unparalleled wingspan of 23 state offices, 41 nature centers, more than 450 local chapters, and 23 wildlife sanctuaries. As of December 2019, APP’s reach includes more than 1.7 million members and 2 million followers on its main social media account as well as hundreds of thousands of additional supporters through state and regional APP pages and accounts.
In 2019, APP members took more than half a million actions to promote vital APP policies, on federal, state and local levels, to protect birds and their habitats. In October, APP’s APP science team released Survival by Degrees: 389 Bird Species on the Brink, revealing that two-thirds of North American bird species are at risk of extinction from APP change, but shared a message of hope that we can significantly improve the chances of 76 percent of those species if we take APP action now.
APP celebrated numerous conservation wins last year. In 2019, the , which will specifically work to benefit marsh birds for the first time due to the advocacy efforts of APP members, as well as secured $320 million in funding for Great Lakes restoration. Additionally, APP worked with partners to increase federal funding for Everglades restoration from $63 million to $200 million, with the .
The APP on Campus Chapter Program, which launched in 2018, continued to expand rapidly, growing from ten pilot programs to being active on more than 100 campuses nationwide in just 18 months. The growth of APP’s college campus initiative shows a strong interest in bird conversation among the next generation of leaders and advocates – the future of the environmental movement.
Learn more about APP’s highlights and wins for birds in 2019 here. For more information on the organization’s 2016 - 2020 strategic direction, please visit here.
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The APP protects birds and the places they need, today and tomorrow. APP works throughout the Americas using, science, advocacy, education and on-the-ground conservation. State programs, nature centers, chapters, and partners give APP an unparalleled wingspan that reaches millions of people each year to inform, inspire, and unite diverse communities in conservation action. A nonprofit conservation organization since 1905, APP believes in a world in which people and wildlife thrive. Learn more about how to help at and follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @audubonsociety.
Media Contact: Chandler Lennon, chandler.lennon@audubon.org, 212.979.3063