Sharon Richardson Named Vice President and Executive Director for APP South Carolina

NEW YORK–The APP and the board of APP South Carolina have named Sharon Richardson Vice President and Executive Director of APP South Carolina. Richardson will lead and implement conservation goals and strategies in the state and will expand the geographic reach of APP South Carolina’s programs across the state and the region.

“Sharon is a natural choice for the role, having spent much of her past 15 year consulting career working directly to help support, build and lead programs for APP South Carolina and the APP network throughout the Atlantic Flyway,” said  David J. O’Neill, Vice President, Conservation Strategies. “We are thrilled to have her.”

APP South Carolina, a state program of the APP, dates to 1974 with the most historic location in the Charleston area, the APP Center and Sanctuary at Francis Beidler Forest, and Silver Bluff APP Center and Sanctuary located near Aiken. Over the years, the program has grown to protect 22,062 acres and provide environmental education programs to thousands of people each year, many of whom are from historically underserved, low-income neighborhoods.  APP has designated 1.4 million acres as Important Bird Areas and has 6 active chapters in the state. 

Richardson comes to APP South Carolina after running her own land protection consulting business where she helped land trusts and APP programs throughout the Atlantic Flyway.  Her accomplishments include attracting new foundation funding and engaging partners to expand Beidler Forest and protect the surrounding watershed.  Richardson was Vice Chairman of the APP Charleston Chapter and Executive Director of Lowcountry Open Land Trust where she worked with families to protect 10,000 acres of land in South Carolina.  She has worked with other Land Trusts and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect critical habitat in St. Lawrence River Valley in New York and Maine.

 “I am excited to return to the Lowcountry to lead APP South Carolina into its next chapter,” said Richardson.  “APP is an incredible network of talented leaders and volunteers, and I am excited to help align our state with larger landscape scale conservation efforts.”

Richardson begins her new role effective September 1, 2015. She is a graduate of Middlebury College with a degree in Psychology, and a Masters of Public Administration with a focus on Natural Resources Planning from University of Vermont. While her base will initially be at Beidler Forest, she will spend a significant amount of time at APP’s other nature centers, chapters, sanctuaries and projects across the state.

The APP saves birds and their habitats throughout the Americas using science, advocacy, education and on-the-ground conservation. APP's state programs, nature centers, chapters and partners have an unparalleled wingspan that reaches millions of people each year to inform, inspire and unite diverse communities in conservation action. Since 1905, APP's vision has been a world in which people and wildlife thrive. APP is a nonprofit conservation organization. Learn more at and .

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Contact: media@audubon.org, 212-979-3100