VTDigger Board of Trustees

The Vermont Journalism Trust is governed by a rotating board of community leaders.


A black and white photo of a woman with glasses.

Gaye Symington, President

Gaye Symington is a former political leader, nonprofit executive and president of the High Meadows Fund, a philanthropic fund associated with the Vermont Community Foundation, which she led from 2009 until her retirement in 2022. The fund promoted vibrant communities and economic enterprise and a healthy natural environment.

Gaye served in the Vermont House from 1997 to 2009, including one term as minority leader and two as Speaker of the House — becoming the second woman to lead the chamber. She won the Democratic nomination for governor in 2008.

She is a graduate of Williams College and has a masters in business administration from Cornell University. Gaye lives in Jericho with her husband, Chuck Lacy, and two cats, Earl and Sheila.


Rob Woolmington, Vice President

Rob Woolmington is a lawyer based in Manchester. He focuses his practice on environmental, energy and conservation matters. Rob was formerly a reporter, photographer and editor for the Bennington Banner. He served as the first chair of the Vermont Housing and Conservation Board, and has chaired the Vermont Community Foundation and the Castanea Foundation. Rob designed and developed a website for the village of North Bennington, where he has served for 26 years as the founding president of a community foundation.


Kathryn Stearns, Vice President

Kathryn Stearns, a resident of Hanover, New Hampshire, spent 35 years in journalism as a reporter, editor, editorial writer, and occasional commentator for Vermont Public Radio. In 2012, she stepped down as editorial page editor of the Valley News, an award-winning daily covering Dartmouth College, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and more than 40 towns in the Upper Connecticut River Valley. She received a New England Press Association award for editorial writing in 2008. While living in London, England, in the 1990s, she contributed regularly to The Economist’s Britain section and its Global Agenda website. From 1980 to 1993, she was a member of The Washington Post’s editorial page staff. She edited the letters column, commentary pages and wrote editorials on a wide range of topics, including education, public policy and the arts. She and her husband, Robert Bruce, have three grown children.


Eric Hanson, Treasurer

Eric Hanson founded Hanson & Doremus Investment Management in 1995 and focuses on portfolio strategy, portfolio management, and client interaction.

Eric has managed money in Burlington, Vermont since 1971, first with Howard Bank, then Fraser Management Associates. Eric has also lectured at The University of Vermont and Saint Michael’s College and wrote a column on Personal Finance in The Burlington Free Press for ten years. Eric holds a BA from St. Lawrence University, where he is Trustee Emeritus. He is also a CFA® Charterholder and a CFP® Certificant.

Eric lives in Greensboro with his wife Xin Yang. He has served in the past as Board Chair of the Vermont Symphony Orchestra, The Champlain Valley Area Agency on Aging (Age Well), The Vermont Nature Conservancy and the Wake Robin Continuing Care Retirement Community. He presently serves on the Selectboard in Greensboro.


Carolyn Crowley Meub, Secretary

Carolyn made a successful career that included projects in the fields of organizational management, special events planning, political campaigns and fund-raising. She was director of the Vermont office of U.S. Sen. Robert Stafford, executive director of the Vermont Bicentennial of Statehood and ran her own public relations and event planning business. She has held many leadership roles for Rotary International programs, and is a member of the Rutland South Rotary Club.

Carolyn served for 17 years as executive director of Pure Water for the World, Inc., a not-for-profit organization started in 1999 by the Brattleboro Rotary Club, retiring in 2019. Under her leadership, Pure Water for the World, Inc. grew from a Rotary Club project into an effective non-governmental organization working in Haiti and Central America. Carolyn was recognized by the White House in April of 2012 as one of ten Rotary Champions of Change for her work with Pure Water for the World.

Carolyn is married to attorney Bill Meub. Their life is filled with a wonderful family. Ripton, their Portuguese Water Dog, keeps these “empty nesters” company.


Christina Asquith

Christina is the co-founder, chief operating officer and board member of Hack Club, a global movement of young coders who impact change through technology.

She’s also founder of The Fuller Project, a global nonprofit journalism organization that investigates issues impacting women. For seven years, she created and grew Fuller Project, leading its investigative journalism as editor-in-chief, raising the first $5-$7 million in donations, and building out all media partnerships, including with The NYTimes Magazine, Foreign Policy Magazine, PRI’s The World and TIME Magazine, for whom Fuller Project had the cover story in 2019.

Before becoming an entrepreneur, and before she discovered her love for start-ups, she was a journalist for 15 years, starting at NYT, and then as a staffer at The Philadelphia Inquirer and PRI’s The World. At the start of the US invasion of Iraq, she snuck into Baghdad and covered the impact of war on women and girls. She’s written and edited pieces for years for: The New Yorker, The Atlantic and Washington Post. Her two nonfiction books are on women in the Iraq war, and as her year as a 6th grade teacher in North Philadelphia. She was born in NYC, but has lived in Baghdad, Istanbul, London and Santiago, Chile. She’s been interviewed on NPR, BBC, ABC News, Al Jazeera and PRI’s The World.

In her free time, she runs on dirt-roads in Vermont, and invests in real estate and tech stocks. She loves to code with her daughters.


Greg Craig

Greg Craig is a lawyer who has served as White House Counsel under President Barack Obama and assistant to the president and special counsel in the White House of President Bill Clinton. He also served as a senior advisor to Senator Edward Kennedy and to Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

Greg’s father was a former chancellor of state college systems in both Vermont and California. Greg considers his home state to be Vermont and his home base to be in Addison County where three generations of Vermonters preceded him, living in Middlebury and Ripton. He co-managed the Vermont campaign for Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern in 1972, as well as the 1976 Vermont republican gubernatorial campaign for his father, William Craig, who lost in the primary to Richard Snelling.

Both of Greg’s parents went to Middlebury College, two of his three brothers and two of his five children went to the University of Vermont, and his youngest brother, Sandy, a doctor living in Montpelier, has practiced medicine in Vermont for almost forty years. Greg is a graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School. Prior to his government service he worked for the Washington law firm Williams & Connolly, and after leaving the White House he worked in the Washington office of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. He and his wife divide time between their homes in Washington and in Ripton, VT.


Sue Halpern

Sue Halpern is a staff writer at The New Yorker and a scholar-in-residence at Middlebury College, where she directs the program in narrative journalism.

She is the author of seven books, including the best-selling “A Dog Walks Into a Nursing Home” and “Four Wings and a Prayer,” which was made into an Emmy-nominated film. She was a columnist for Mother Jones, Ms., and Smithsonian Magazine, and has written on science, technology, and politics for the Times Magazine, Rolling Stone, and The New Republic, as well as for The New York Review of Books, where she is a regular contributor. Halpern founded and edited NYRBLit, the electronic-publishing imprint of New York Review of Books. She has been the recipient of Guggenheim and Echoing Green Fellowships, and earned a doctorate in political theory from Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes Scholar.

She lives in Ripton with her husband, the author and journalist Bill McKibben.


Jane Mayer

Jane Mayer has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1995. The magazine’s chief Washington correspondent, she covers politics, culture, and national security. Previously, she worked at the Wall Street Journal, where she covered the bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, the Gulf War, and the fall of the Berlin Wall. In 1984, she became the paper’s first female White House correspondent.

Jane is the author of the 2016 book “Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right,” and the 2008 book “The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals.” She is the co-author, with Jill Abramson, of “Strange Justice: The Selling of Clarence Thomas” and, with Doyle McManus, of “Landslide: The Unmaking of the President, 1984-1988.” All four of her books have been New York Times best-sellers.

Jane began her career in Vermont as a reporter with the Weathersfield Weekly, the Black River Tribune and the Rutland Herald. She has won numerous awards for her writing.

Jane is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and in 2019 was awarded an honorary doctoral degree from Middlebury College.


Paul Millman

Paul Millman retired in 2020 as CEO and President of Chroma Technology, an employee-owned manufacturing company in Bellows Falls, VT. He attended Antioch College and is a graduate of the New School, and the Antioch New England Graduate School. He is an emeritus member of the Advisory Board of the College of Education and Social Service at UVM. He was formerly Chair of the Vermont Employee Ownership Center, a director of the Vermont Business Roundtable, and a board member of the Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility. In 2016 VBSR awarded him with the Terry Ehrich Award for Socially Responsible Business, and in 2022 he received Antioch College’s Arthur E. Morgan Award for Service to the Community.


David Morrissey

David Morrissey is the director of finance and administration at Hula. He enjoys working on financial and operational systems that resource mission-critical work after spending most of his career to date in the nonprofit sector.

Prior to joining Hula, David spent 15+ years at the Vermont Community Foundation as a member of the Finance and Operations team in evolving roles but always in support of the programmatic efforts and community investments being made throughout Vermont.

He recently spent two years with the Vermont Land Trust’s Finance and Operations
team supporting statewide conservation and stewardship efforts. His work focused on financing the transition of land to the next generation of farmers, conserving
ecologically critical forestland, and helping donors and communities preserve the places where they live and play.

David lives in Salisbury with his wife, two daughters, and two dogs. Outside of work, David is an avid hiker having hiked the Long Trail in 2021 and is an Adirondack 46er, completing his last peak in the fall of 2023.


John Reilly

John Reilly is an independent consultant with over 40 years in the field of communications and public relations, with experience in journalism, public and media relations, corporate philanthropy, community involvement and employee engagement. John began his career as a reporter with the Burlington Free Press. He spent 12 years as a journalist with the Gannett and Newhouse newspaper groups in Burlington and in Washington D.C. and was part of the pilot team of Gannett reporters and editors that launched USA Today in 1982. From 1989 to 2014 John worked at MFS Investment Management in Boston, creating several new functions for the company, including its first media relations department, its first organized corporate philanthropy program, a broad-based program of employee volunteerism, and a Global Corporate Citizenship program encompassing the offices across the Americas, Europe, Asia and Australia. John is a former board member of the Americorps program City Year Boston and for the past 22 years has captained a team of cyclists that have contributed over $12 million to the Pan Massachusetts Challenge to benefit the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. He is a graduate of Bowdoin College and Johns Hopkins University and lives in Burlington.


Louisa Schibli

Louisa Schibli is a partner at Vermont Works Management Co, an alternative investment firm supporting Vermont’s job & economic development. She is a co-founder of Milk Money Vermont, an online equity crowd-funding platform connecting all Vermonters with opportunities to invest in Vermont businesses. In 2017, Milk Money won Vermont Businesses For Social Responsibility’s (VBSR) Innovation and Inspiration Award. Louisa successfully guided Milk Money through the acquisition by The Vermont Innovation Commons where she continues to pursue ways to grow the Community Capital movement and ways the Milk Money platform can support this effort. Passionate about the people and businesses of Vermont, in particular female founded/led businesses, Louisa led the charge to bring iFundWomen to Vermont as an alternative source of funding. She’s also a founding member of the Vermont Women’s Investor Network (WIN) and currently serves on the boards of the Flexible Capital Fund, LaunchVT and Mercy Connections. Louisa spent more than 12 years on the board of The Charlotte News, Vermont’s oldest non-profit community newspaper.


Meg Smith

Meg Smith began her career as a press secretary for a Congressional candidate in Connecticut in the early 1980s, then led her own PR firm in Westport, CT. After relocating to Vermont, she served as PR Director for Gardener’s Supply, gaining national media attention for the company. Meg’s passion for organic gardening and small-scale agriculture led her to a nearly 12-year tenure on the Intervale Center board, and she founded a Vermont-based PR firm, working extensively with nonprofits like Good News Garage and The Charlotte News.

In 2014, she became director of the Vermont Women’s Fund, part of the Vermont Community Foundation. Over ten years, she doubled the endowment to over $6M, expanded the donor base, and led two major initiatives: Change The Story, promoting gender equity, and This Way UP, tracking women-owned businesses in Vermont. Since retiring in 2024, Meg has been involved in new projects, including her role as Campaign Finance Chair for Congresswoman Becca Balint’s reelection.


Heidi Tringe

Heidi Tringe is a Partner and leads the Multistate practice at MMR, LLC, a Montpelier government relations and public affairs firm. She joined MMR in 2010 after more than 15 years in public service at the federal and state level. Heidi was a member of the Senior Staff of Vermont Governor Jim Douglas where she led the Administration’s work with the National Governors Association, the Coalition of Northeastern Governors, the White House and federal agencies, and Vermont’s Congressional delegation.

Before returning to her home state of Vermont, Heidi served as Director of Legislative Affairs at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, as Communications Director for the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science and held a number of positions in the office of the late U.S. Senator Jim Jeffords (R-Vt.).

Heidi currently serves as Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Vermont College of Fine Arts, was a member of the Vermont Commission on Women and was a lead fundraiser for the Montpelier ArtSynergy Project. She is co-founder of ElevateHer Vermont, a grassroots women’s networking and leadership organization. She volunteers at Montpelier High School in Montpelier and at the Old Meeting House church in East Montpelier. Heidi received her B.A. cum laude from Amherst College in 1996.