×
×
homepage logo
STORE

Calusa Waterkeeper welcomes Botty as its new executive director

By Staff | Oct 21, 2021

The board of directors of Calusa Waterkeeper recently announced the appointment of Trisha Botty to the position of executive director. Botty brings a wealth of advocacy, government and nonprofit experience to the organization, which is dedicated to the protection of clean water in the Caloosahatchee River & Estuary, Lake Okeechobee, Charlotte Harbor, Estero Bay, and other portions of Lee, Hendry, Glades and Charlotte counties’ watersheds.

Calusa Waterkeeper is a nonprofit organization focused on improving the quality of water in our region through public policy, advocacy, community education, monitoring, and court action when necessary. Its force of volunteer citizen Rangers monitors local waters and advocate for water quality issues in Southwest Florida.

Botty most recently served as head of Social Impact and Connectivity (Grantmaking Lead) at Collaboratory (Southwest Florida Community Foundation) in Fort Myers. Her extensive professional background includes positions in government, philanthropy, organized labor and nonprofits in the D.C. metro area, Upstate New York, and Southwest Florida. She is passionate about building meaningful and authentic relationships to lift people, organizations, and communities so they can thrive. Through her experience in philanthropy, she has developed and implemented strategies to foster community collaboration, strength organization, and to deliver social impact through sustainable funding.

Botty graduated from the State University of New York at Oswego with a Political Science degree, and she is currently working on her master’s degree at the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications with a concentration in Public Interest Communication. She was a 2020 recipient of Gulfshore Business magazine’s 40 under 40 distinction.

Botty is replacing former executive director K.C. Schulberg who is taking on another role within the Waterkeeper Alliance. Under the leadership of Schulberg and Calusa Waterkeeper John Cassani, the organization was able to accomplish many goals including developing a community action plan to help restore water quality in Billy’s Creek. During 2020, they pressured federal courts to require the Corps of Engineers to consider harmful algal blooms as they affect endangered species and their habitat as part of the Lake Okeechobee Regulation Schedule. In 2019, they joined other petitioners in asking Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection to adopt EPA’s recommended guidelines for blue-green algae toxins as new water quality standards and swim advisories in Florida. They provided expert testimony that helped win an administrative court hearing regarding an application to remove the Chiquita Lock in Cape Coral, and led the Calusa Waterkeeper family of volunteers, local innovators and leaders in establishing a community environmental task force, designing novel ways to monitor algal toxins, and advocating for proper public health notification at waters impaired for fecal bacteria.

To become a Calusa Waterkeeper member or to make a tax-deductible donation to Calusa Waterkeeper’s efforts visit https://calusawaterkeeper.org/contribute.