News

Section Title

Add women, CHANGE everything.

Supporters

Board of Directors

Lisa Borders (GA)
Atlanta City Council President

Barbara Bridges (CO)
Founder, I-ON Films

Beth Brooke (NY)
Global Vice Chair of Strategy, Communications and Regulatory Affairs, Ernst & Young

Geena Davis (CA)
Academy-Award Winning Actress

Stephanie Davis (GA)
Policy Advisor of Women’s Issues,
Mayor of Atlanta’s Office

Abigail E. Disney (NY)
Founder, Daphne Fund

Helen Gemmill (CO)
Philanthropist

Julie Gilbert (MN)
Senior Vice President, Best Buy

Donna P. Hall (CA)
President & CEO, Women Donors Network

Daisy Khan (NY) 
Executive Director, ASMA Society

Anna Lefer Kuhn (DC) 
Executive Director, Arca Foundation

Gara LaMarche (NY)
President and CEO, The Atlantic Philanthropies

Lucie Lapovsky (NY)
Former President, Mercy College

Lisa Borders serves as President of the Atlanta City Council, having been elected in a citywide special election on August 10, 2004.  She was re-elected by an overwhelming margin in 2005’s normal citywide election cycle. Her duties include presiding over Council meetings, appointing committee chairs and participants for Council and maintaining relationships with the Executive branch of government. Her community initiatives include increasing the availability of affordable housing, uncovering transportation solutions to address our region’s traffic challenges and promoting neighborhood safety and preservation.

Barbara Bridges is a businesswoman, educator, and philanthropist.  A former elementary school teacher, Barbara was the co-founder of Advance Geophysical Corporation, a highly successful company that pioneered the development of innovative software for oil and gas exploration.  She then played a leading role in forming Quest International Management Co. Inc, a worldwide investment firm focusing on socially responsible companies.  Barbara currently is starting a new, Denver-based motion picture company, I-ON Films, with its first film scheduled to begin production summer of 2005. 

Beth Brooke is Global Vice Chair of Strategy, Communications and Regulatory Affairs of Ernst & Young, a leading global professional services organization providing audit, tax, transaction and risk advisory services.  Beth is also a member of the firm’s Global Management Committee and its Americas Executive Board. Beth’s policy expertise has enabled her to make strong contributions to the government sector, as well.  During the Clinton Administration, she worked in the U.S. Department of the Treasury, where she was responsible for all tax policy matters related to insurance and managed care.  She played important roles in the healthcare reform and Superfund reform efforts. She has been recognized by Accounting Today as one of the “Top 100 Most Influential People in Accounting.,” 

Academy Award-winner Geena Davis continues to be one of Hollywood’s most sought-after actors.  Having received the 2006 Golden Globe Awards for Best Performance by Actress in a Television Series – Drama, Davis broke ground in her portrayal of the first female President of the United States in ABC’s hit show “Commander in Chief.”  In 1989, Davis received an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as the offbeat dog trainer Muriel Pritchett in Lawrence Kasdan’s “The Accidental Tourist.”  She was again nominated for an Academy Award and Golden Globe for her performance as Thelma in Ridley Scott’s “Thelma and Louise,” in which she co-starred with Susan Sarandon. Davis received Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress for her portrayals of a political speech writer in “Speechless,” a film which she also co-produced, and as a baseball phenomenon in “A League of Their Own.” Davis made her feature film debut starring opposite Dustin Hoffman in “Tootsie.”  She then went on to star in such films as “The Fly,” “Beetlejuice,” “Earth Girls are Easy,” “Angie,” “The Long Kiss Goodnight,” and “Stuart Little.” Davis, a member of the genius society Mensa, is also a trustee of the Women’s Sports Foundation, and supports Title IX and girls’ participation in sports through her own website, GeenaTakesAim.com. Although she took up the sport in 1997, Davis was one of only 32 women to qualify to compete in the 2000 Olympic Trials for archery.  She attained the rank of thirteenth in the nation the next year. A long-time advocate for women and girls, Davis founded the See Jane program. See Jane is dedicated to advocating balance in gender representation and to increasing the percentages of female characters and reduce stereotyping in media made for children ages 0-11.

Stephanie Davis serves as the Mayor of Atlanta’s Policy Advisor on Women’s Issues and is charged with helping to end child prostitution, empowering women through financial literacy, and institutionalizing the living wage. As the first director of the Atlanta Women’s Foundation where she served for 11 years, Davis was responsible for raising several million dollars, establishing an endowment and positioning the Foundation to be the fastest growing women’s fund in the country. Women’s issues and social justice have always been an integral part of Stephanie’s life and work. She was the first coordinator of Vote Choice and the founder of the Women’s Policy Group, which develops a “woman’s agenda” to more effectively lobby the legislature.  She directed two branches of the YWCA of Atlanta, was the training coordinator for legal services programs throughout the Southeast, and was the associate director of the Fund for Southern Communities.

Abigail E. Disney is Founder and President, Daphne Foundation and former Chair, New York
Women's Foundation.  Ms. Disney is a philanthropist and speaker active in supporting women’s initiatives who serves on the boards of a variety of organizations that work to improve the lives of low-income women and families. She is Vice Chair of the board of Shamrock Holdings, Inc., an investment firm based in California.

Donna P. Hall, MPH, MBA, President & CEO, Women Donors Network (WDN) has devoted nearly 20 years to such national organizations as The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation and The Rockefeller Foundation. Donna's dedication to economic justice, reproductive rights, education, woman's rights in the workplace, international development, and progressive philanthropy has allowed her career to crisscross the public and private sectors. Donna joined WDN in 2002 for the opportunity to "further strengthen and empower the progressive movement for change through my work with individual members, as well as through representation of the collective body that is WDN."

Gara LaMarche is President and CEO of The Atlantic Philanthropies. His articles on human rights and social justice issues have appeared in publications including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, Newsday, The Nation, The American Prospect, The Texas Observer, and The Wharton Magazine, and he is the editor of Speech and Equality: Do We Really Have to Choose? LaMarche has taught at New School University and The John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He also serves on the boards of Article 19 Institute, the international free expression organization, PEN American Center and The Nation; as a member of the Sundance Documentary Fund Selection Committee; on the U.S. Advisory Committee for Index on Censorship, the London-based human rights magazine; and on the Advisory Committees for the Human Rights Watch Women's Rights Division and U.S. Programs.

Dr. Lucie Lapovsky (Treasurer) Former President, Mercy College. Dr. Lapovsky has almost 30 years of experience in Higher Education Finance. Prior to Mercy College, she served as Vice President for Finance at Goucher College and before that, she worked as Special Assistant to the President of the University of Maryland at College Park, as Director of Finance and Facilities for the Maryland Higher Education Commission, and as a Fiscal Planner for the Maryland State Department of Budget and Fiscal Planning.  In 1999, she was named one of the 100 top women in Maryland. Dr. Lapovsky serves on a number of boards and advisory committees including the American Public University System, American Council on Education,  Advisory Committee to the Center on Policy Analysis,  and the Boards of Western New England College, the National Council for Research on Women, and the New York Women's Forum Education Fund.

Deborah Slaner Larkin is the former executive director of the Women’s Sports Foundation.  In this capacity, she developed a broad-based advocacy network to increase female participation and equity in sports, and developed National Girls and Women in Sports Day.  Larkin served on the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports from 1994 to 2002, where she chaired a national task force on girls and minorities in sports.  She is the author of a national research study titled, “Physical Activity & Sport in the Lives of Girls: physical and mental health dimensions from an interdisciplinary approach.  For the past 10 years, she has served as chair of the Westchester Fund for Women and Girls and is a member of the National Coalition of Girls and Women in Education specializing in Title IX equity issues with the National Women’s Law Center.

Colleen J. May (Chair) is the owner and CEO of Intervine, Inc. a company based in Napa, CA that buys and sells wine worldwide.  She is also a director of the Resource Foundation, a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization founded in 1987 for the purpose of cultivating productive relationships between sustainable private development organizations (PDOs) in Latin America and selective donors worldwide by leveraging capital and information resources to increase the self-reliance and living standards of the disadvantaged. 

Zina C. Pierre was a high-ranking member of President Bill Clinton’s administration.  She has worked on issues and programs affecting the lives of women, African Americans and small business owners. Born in 1964 in Annapolis, Maryland, Pierre would go on to graduate from Catholic University of America. Today she is the founding president and CEO of the Washington Linkage Group, a political lobbying and consulting firm.

Wendy D. Puriefoy has been the President of Public Education Network (PEN), the nation’s largest network of community-based school reform organizations, since PEN was founded in 1991. Her involvement in school reform goes back to the 1970’s when she served as a special monitor of the public court-ordered desegregation plan for Boston’s public schools. Prior to PEN, Puriefoy served as the executive vice president and chief operating officer of The Boston Foundation, the second oldest community foundation. 

Susan L. Taylor is editorial director of ESSENCE magazine. Taylor has been the driving force behind one of the most celebrated African American owned business success stories of the past three decades. She oversees the editorial operations of the magazine and writes the popular In the Spirit column each month. A fourth-generation entrepreneur, Taylor was the founder of her own company, Nequai Cosmetics, before becoming ESSENCE’s fashion and beauty editor and, in 1981, its editor-in-chief. She is the author of three books: In the Spirit: The Inspirational Writings of Susan L. Taylor, Lessons in Living and Confirmation: The Spiritual Wisdom That Has Shaped Our Lives, the latter co-authored with her husband, Khephra Burns. Taylor is currently co-chair of a capital campaign with Danny Glover to raise money to build housing in the rural areas of South Africa. She serves on the board of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington, D.C. In addition, she serves on the Louisiana Recovery Authority at the request of Governor Kathleen Blanco to aid in the state’s post-Katrina rebuilding.

J. Christine Wilson is co- founder of the Women’s Foundation of Genesee Valley, WFGV makes grants economic self –sufficiency for women and girls in a seven county region.  During that period, Chris was the co- founder of Partners through Food, Inc.  Partners was responsible for bringing a full service grocery store to the most disenfranchised neighborhood in Rochester, NY.  Chris serves on the Board of Marie C. & Joseph C. Wilson Foundation, the Joslin Diabetes Center, Greater Rochester Enterprise, a public-private organization to enhance economic development in Rochester NY.  Chris serves on Friends of Hillary Finance Committee, advised and worked closely with Congresswoman, Louise Slaughter.  Chris is active on the political scene in her community.  Chris understands deeply that all the grassroots activity and funding will be for naught if she does not support the kinds of candidates and policies that will move oppressed populations forward.

Marie C. Wilson is founder and president of The White House Project, co-creator of Take Our Daughters to Work Day and author of Closing the Leadership Gap: Why Women Can and Must Help Run the World (Viking 2004).  Ms. Wilson founded The White House Project in 1998 in recognition of the need to build a truly representative democracy – one in which women lead alongside men in all spheres. Ms. Wilson started The White House Project while she was still president of the Ms. Foundation for Women, a position she held from 1984-2004.