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Aguirre is new Adirondack Council director

ELIZABETHTOWN — The Adirondack Council’s Board of Directors announced Wednesday that it had hired the council’s current Deputy Executive Director Raul “Rocci” Aguirre to be the new executive director of the organization, effective immediately.

Aguirre, 51, of Keene, is the organization’s seventh executive director since it was founded in 1975. He succeeds William C. Janeway, who stepped down in February after 10 years.

“The council’s board of directors undertook a vigorous evaluation process as part of our initial work with our consultants and internal search committee,” said Sarah Collum Hatfield, the board’s chair. “As our process unfolded, it became clear through internal discussions and with stakeholders across the region and in Albany, that the right candidate was already serving as our acting executive director. There is a generational shift in leadership occurring across the Adirondacks, as a board we unanimously agreed that Rocci is the most qualified and capable person to lead the organization into this new era.”

“I am pleased to be given this opportunity,” Aguirre said. “The council has an amazing staff of dedicated conservation professionals and an extremely supportive and engaged board of directors. For the past 10 years, I have been able to work on the largest and most complex conservation issues facing the Adirondacks as the director of conservation and deputy executive director of the council. I look forward to building on that experience to re-engage partners, build better relationships, start new dialogues, and strengthen our presence across the entire Adirondack region.”

Aguirre began his conservation career on the shore of Raquette Lake at the SUNY Cortland Adirondack Campus. He brings 28 years of large landscape conservation work from across the country and a deep understanding and knowledge of the Adirondacks. His previous roles include a wilderness/interpretive ranger and firefighter with the U.S. Forest Service and National Park Service, field staff with Trout Unlimited, and director of land protection with the Finger Lakes Land Trust.

Aguirre serves on multiple boards including the Catskill Center for Conservation and Development, the New York Chapter of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, and is an OPRHP regional commissioner for the Saratoga/Capital Region. For over a decade he has also served as a national voice on diversity issues facing BIPOC professionals in the conservation and land trust sectors and appreciates the significance of a Latino running a major Adirondack green group.

Aguirre joined the Council’s staff in 2013 as conservation director. He left the council in January of 2021 to take on the role of executive director of advocacy, policy and science at Scenic Hudson, a conservation group based in Poughkeepsie. After eight months at the Hudson Valley organization, a combination of family and personal circumstances led Aguirre and his family back to the Adirondacks. He has been deputy executive director at the council since October of 2021.

Aguirre earned a Bachelor of Science in outdoor recreation and a Bachelor of Arts in American history from SUNY Cortland. He received a Master of Science degree in 2012 in resource management and conservation from Antioch University New England.

Prior executive directors of the Adirondack Council include Gary A. Randorf, George Davis, Charles Clusen, Timothy Burke, Brian Houseal and William “Willie” Janeway.

Established in 1975, the Adirondack Council is a privately funded not-for-profit organization whose mission is to ensure the ecological integrity and wild character of the Adirondack Park.

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