Results: 2019 Board of Directors & Branch Elections

Learn the results of our 2019 Board of Directors and Branch elections. Thank you to everyone who participated by voting.
Vik Sahney Vik Sahney
Board Vice President and Governance Committee Chair
October 29, 2019
Results: 2019 Board of Directors & Branch Elections

We're pleased to present you with the outcome of our most recent Board & Branch elections and we are grateful to everyone who participated in this election process. This year, we saw an +80% increase in member voting with 1,501 votes.  

Verified by the Board Secretary, Manisha Powar, the following Board of Directors At-Large  candidates were elected for a 3-year term:

  • Mark Kroese
  • Steve McClure
  • Roger Mellem
  • John Ohlson
  • Siana Wong

The Mountaineers Tacoma, Kitsap, and Everett Branch ballots included a decision for Branch Directors who hold a voting seat alongside Directors At-Large. The following Directors were elected by branch membership for a 2-year term:

  • Mark Kerr - Tacoma
  • Jerry Logan - Kitsap
  • Matt Vadnal - Everett

The leadership positions for Mountaineers Foothills and Everett Branch included on the ballot will be announced by each respective branch. Stay tuned for a formal communication from Foothills and Everett leadership.   

As a 501(c)(3) volunteer-led organization, The Mountaineers continues to depend on the generosity, initiative, and leadership of our volunteers. We are humbled by the service provided by board and branch directors whose positions are confirmed by members each year. Thank you for all you do as members to elevate our mission, and your participation in the election process for these organization-wide leaders! 

MEET OUR NEW BOARD MEMBERS!

The new members possess the professional skills and personal commitment needed to further our mission: To enrich the community by helping people explore, conserve, learn about, and enjoy the lands and waters of the Pacific Northwest and beyond.

Kroese_for blog.jpgMARK KROESE 

MEMBER SINCE 1998

Mark Kroese has been exploring the high and wild for 40 years. He thrives in the confluence of outdoor adventure, visual storytelling, and environmental goodness. Mark has travelled extensively — from Chamonix to Madagascar — and considers himself lucky to have seen some of this planet’s most exotic and pristine places. His idea of a good time is a well-planned adventure gone awry.
    
Mark began his career in the ad agency business, and then spent twenty years at Microsoft. Post Microsoft, he has worked at several tech start-ups, consulted with growth companies in the outdoor and active lifestyle space, and spearheaded a large “REDD+” land conversation project in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).  
         
Mark has climbed a lot of mountains, and his book, Fifty Favorite Climbs in North America, was published by Mountaineers Books. He recently completed a term as President of the American Alpine Club, an organization that supports climbers and the conservation of mountains landscapes. Mark has also served as Vice President of the Access Fund, and is an Advanced Leadership Fellow at Harvard University, and has served on The Mountaineers Books Governance Board.
    
Mark believes we are at a unique point in history, one where we have unprecedented technology and tools to develop innovative solutions to the world’s biggest problems. Mark resides in Bothell, WA, but he spends as much time as he can in the mountains.

SteveMcClure.jpgSTEVE MCCLURE

MEMBER SINCE 2010

After growing up with the 2nd edition of Mountaineering: The Freedom of the Hills, Steve was honored to be given the opportunity to extensively rewrite three chapters for the 9th edition of Freedom released in 2017. He also contributed to the Mountaineers' new Crevasse Rescue Pocket Guide: A Field Reference. Steve has been an instructor for Scrambling, Climbing, Wilderness Navigation, and GPS courses. He was the Co-Chair of the Intense Basic Alpine Climbing course, and is active with the Navigation, Alpine Scrambles, and Climbing Committees. With the Seattle Navigation committee, Steve is deeply engaged in modernizing our Wilderness Navigation course, following the blueprint in Freedom 9. In 2019, Steve completed the fourth and final leg of the cross-country "Sierra High Route," first publicized in The Mountaineers title of the same name.

Steve is a CPA and has served as CFO or Controller for several companies including Esterline Technologies (aerospace), Valve Corporation (video games), and Cascade Designs (outdoor equipment manufacturer). He served on the finance committee from 2010-16 and was Board Treasurer from 2012-2016.

Personal Statement: “Growing up in Seattle I gained an early love of our wild spaces from Scouts and from being in a family of hikers and skiers. The first ‘peak’ I aspired to summit was the top of the Snoqualmie’s Thunderbird ski lift which looked formidable from the rope tows below. In addition to hiking trails all over the western US, I’ve always been intrigued by the spaces between the trails where few venture. Being part of The Mountaineers has given me the skills and confidence to visit those spaces while also igniting a passion for sharing and teaching outdoor skills to others.”

RogerMellem_Web.jpgROGER MELLEM

MEMBER SINCE 1985

Roger Mellem is a longtime mountaineer, and Mountaineer. In 1974 he stood with the late Willi Unsoeld and two others on top of Laila Peak (Rupal Valley) in northern Pakistan. At 6,132 meters (20,118 feet) high, and with two ice falls each as large as the Nisqually ice fall on Mt. Rainier, this beautiful Himalayan peak had never before been climbed. In 1998, Roger passed Basic Equivalency and enrolled in our Intermediate Climbing course. A member of the Peak Society, Roger has been an active member of our event fundraising committees for the past several years. In 2018, he was appointed as an At Large Member of the Board, and currently serves on our Governance Committee and the Litigation Committee.

A former Outward Bound instructor, and later a member of the Northwest Outward Bound School’s Washington advisory board, Roger appreciates the value of outdoor education and supports The Mountaineers’ mission in this regard. An avid wilderness conservationist, Roger is past President and Board Member Emeritus of Washington Wild, a conservation organization with which The Mountaineers regularly partners to advocate for protection of our threatened public lands. He is also a member of the international Leadership Council of the Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

Roger is a member of the Executive Committee of Ryan, Swanson & Cleveland, a Seattle law firm where he practices securities litigation. He earned a Master of Studies in Law Degree from Yale Law School, and a J.D. from the University of Oregon Law School. Roger’s combination of mountaineering, conservation, outdoor education, fundraising, legal, mediation, and board leadership experience should continue to benefit The Mountaineers.

JOHN OHLSONJohn Ohlson.jpeg

MEMBER SINCE: 1999

John started his service as a Board Director in 2009 and served a term as Board Secretary. He has chaired the Building Operations Committee, served as a Seattle Branch Safety officer for several years and has taken on multiple responsibilities within the Seattle Climbing Committee where he is a Climb Leader. He also keeps his Mountaineers burner going at other levels, as a  Freedom 8 & 9 author and Part 1 Chair, and with his involvement in the program center renovation and construction of the center’s climbing walls. He holds electrical engineering degrees from MIT (SB) and Stanford University (MS, PhD).

Personal Statement: I grew up in Seattle, learned to climb with the Sierra Club, was a Professor and telecommunications executive, then retired and returned 17 years ago, embraced our courses and learned much. I enjoy volunteering for The Mountaineers as a payback. I consider us an activities-based organization with vital educational and conservation roles, which I embrace and support. I offer my corporate skills in decision-making, marketing, negotiations and consensus management. I have an unyielding view of budgets (every operation’s true cost must be visible), many years of managing multi-million dollar budgets, plus a fervent belief that leadership is action, not just a job title.

sianaWong_Web.jpgSIANA WONG

MEMBER SINCE 2014

Siana Wong joined The Mountaineers in 2014. She has since completed Olympia’s Basic Climbing, Beyond Basic Rock, and Backcountry Ski courses, Tacoma’s Sailing course, and Seattle’s multi-pitch course. Siana is currently an Olympia Intermediate Climbing student and volunteers with Olympia’s Basic Climbing and Winter Travel programs. In 2017/2018, Siana served as the Olympia Branch Chair. 

Siana is from the great state of Oklahoma, and earned her B.S. in Environmental Science at the University of Oklahoma. She earned an M.S. in Environmental Science at Western Washington University. For a few years between her undergraduate and graduate degrees, Siana worked for the National Park Service at Yellowstone, Crater Lake, and Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks, and later for The Nature Conservancy in southern Oregon. Siana currently is an environmental scientist at the Washington State Department of Ecology in Olympia, a career which allows her to travel and study in all parts of Washington State. For the past several years, she has served as a board member of the Washington State Lakes Protection Association. Siana’s diverse professional interests in the environmental field have inspired her passion for the outdoors, and vice versa.

Personal Statement: I joined the Mountaineers because I was attracted to the many courses offered by the club and the sense of community for people wanting to get outdoors. Serving as the Olympia Branch chair was an outstanding opportunity to learn about and help support the programs run by so many passionate volunteers, as well as learn more about the organization as a whole. I would be excited and honored to continue down this path by serving on the Mountaineers Board of Directors. 


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Jeff Horne
Jeff Horne says:
Oct 29, 2019 03:38 PM

Vik, Are we permitted to know the actual vote count per candidate?

Vik Sahney
Vik Sahney says:
Oct 29, 2019 09:15 PM

Hi Jeff,

We have historically not shared the actual vote count out of concern for the candidates who are or are not elected and by what margin that may or may not have been elected. Putting forward ones name, whether via the floor or via the Governance Committee, is a great contribution to the club and we wouldn’t want anyone to feel underappreciated based on the vote count.

We again thank all our candidates for running and for their commitment to The Mountaineers.

Vik