MISSION
Our mission is to end plastic pollution everywhere.
ABOUT
Launched in January 2019, Beyond Plastics is a nationwide project based at Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont, that pairs the wisdom and experience of environmental policy experts with the energy and creativity of grassroots advocates to build a vibrant and effective movement to end plastic pollution. We use our deep policy and advocacy expertise to build a well-informed, effective movement seeking to achieve the institutional, economic, and societal changes needed to save our planet, and ourselves, from the negative health, climate, and environmental impacts of the production, usage, and disposal of plastics.
GOALS
It will take changes at every level of our economy and civil life to stem the tide of plastic pollution. Individuals need to be moved to act in their personal lives and take action as part of a growing movement; corporations need to feel the pressure to initiate changes in their purchasing and packaging habits; governments need to impose bans and adopt laws that require extended producer responsibility; and new manufacturing of plastic has to be prevented from spreading. Beyond Plastics seeks to educate the media, policymakers, and the public on the plastic pollution crisis; encourage businesses to eliminate single-use plastics; train students to become leaders in the anti-plastics movement; and help block new plastic manufacturing and plastic burning facilities.
COMMITMENT TO ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
Plastic pollution is a growing global environmental crisis that disproportionately burdens people of color around the world in a variety of ways. We stand in solidarity with these communities around the world and seek to find respectful and productive ways to lend our assistance in the struggle to end plastic pollution and environmental racism. Read more.
JOB OPENINGS
There are not currently any openings. Please check back later.
STAFF
Judith Enck is the President of Beyond Plastics, a visiting faculty member and senior advisor at Bennington College, and served as a Regional EPA Administrator under President Obama.
Eve is an expert in online advocacy, fundraising, and communications with more than 20 years experience advancing progressive causes.
Alexis Goldsmith is an energetic grassroots organizer, environmental advocate and independent media producer and journalist.
Lane is a nonprofit fundraising professional with more than 20 years of experience in government, education, the arts, and wildlife conservation.
Megan is a medical historian by training, and enjoys digging at the historical roots of issues to explain how problems developed and look for policy solution.
Andrew is a driven legal and administrative professional with a desire to build a more sustainable future.
Christina is a grassroots organizer, artist, and former educator who believes local action is where it’s at, especially in tackling the intersectional issue of plastics.
Melissa is a dedicated communications professional and accomplished writer who believes in the power of words to effect change.
Dawn Henry has practiced environmental law for more than 18 years. She served as Commissioner for the US Virgin Islands Department of Planning and Natural Resources and was the author and champion of the USVI’s plastic bag ban.
Jenny has spent more than 30 years developing programs and conducting research, analysis, and legislative advocacy around recycling and green building.
Jess is a grassroots activist and leader who was launched into grassroots advocacy following the East Palestine, Ohio train derailment and chemical spill.
Cathy is a development professional based in New York City with 20+ years of donor stewardship, partnership building, and fundraising experience.
Kathryn is a graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary and served for a decade as Pastor of a progressive congregation, but the moral and spiritual urgency of our current ecological crises prompted her to leave the pulpit and dedicate herself to effective environmental solution
Johnathan is the Policy Director at Beyond Plastics and has over a decade of public policy and strategic communications experience in the nonprofit, government, and academic sectors.
Michael is the Managing Director at Beyond Plastics and his career includes leading policy and/or press shops at the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, Climate Nexus, U.S. Congress, Friends Committee on National Legislation, Institute for Economics and Peace, Biodiversity Northwest, Puget Soundkeeper Alliance and more.
ADVISORY BOARD
Jo banner co-founded The Descendants Project, where she channels her affection and knowledge into challenging systems, primarily legal systems that have exploited the descendants, such as herself, of those enslaved to plantations. She is now working to gain recognition of the burial grounds of the enslaved as sacred sites and aims to protect such sites and their communities from degradation, especially degradation caused by heavy industry.
Ana Isabel Baptista, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Professional Practice in the Environmental Policy and Sustainability Management graduate program and Co-Director of the Tishman Environment and Design Center at The New School.
Yinka N. Bode-George leads the strategy and management of Volt Energy Utility’s environmental justice and community impact practice. Prior to joining Volt’s team, she led the Environmental Health Program for the National Caucus of Environmental Legislators.
Robin Caiola is a New York-based development consultant and professional photographer. Ms. Caiola currently serves as the Chair of the Board of the Center for Science in the Public Interest the nation’s food and health watchdog which lobbies governments and corporations for a healthier food environment.
Ramón Cruz has over 20 years of experience intersecting the fields of sustainability, environmental policy, urban planning, energy and climate change. He has worked in the public sector in his native Puerto Rico as the Deputy Director of the Environmental Quality Board, the state environmental regulatory agency and as Commissioner of the Puerto Rico Energy Commission.
Mark Lichtenstein is the executive operating officer at the State University of New York, College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF), and a faculty associate in Syracuse University’s Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration.
Bill McKibben is founder and senior adviser emeritus of 350.org. His 1989 book The End of Nature is regarded as the first book for a general audience about climate change, and has appeared in 24 languages.
Kirstie Pecci is the Executive Director of Just Zero. Previously, she was the Zero Waste Project and a Senior Attorney at Conservation Law Foundation. Kirstie is a former MASSPIRG Staff Attorney actively engaged in waste reduction and opposing the expansion of landfill and incinerator capacity.
Leslie Mintz Tamminen is the director of Seventh Generation Advisors, a nonprofit environmental organization in Santa Monica. In 2006, she founded the Clean Seas Coalition, where she spearheaded efforts to create and pass California’s SB270 law to ban single-use plastic bags.
Brian Thompson served as a journalist for five decades, more than half of that time as the New Jersey reporter for NBC NY, before retiring in May 2023. He then devoted himself full time to his true passion, caring for our Mother Earth.
Laurie Valeriano is Executive Director for Toxic-Free Future where she has worked since 1995. For more than 20 years, she has worked to pass strong environmental health policies at the state level.
Dr. Imari Walker is a research scientist at Research Triangle International (RTI). In 2021, Imari completed her PhD at Duke University investigating the release, transformation and effects of polymer associated chemicals within aquatic environments.
Monica Wilson is the Associate Director of GAIA U.S. and Global Programs Coordinator. Monica has worked with GAIA since 2002 and served as GAIA’s International Co-Coordinator for five years.
Patti Wood is founder and executive director of Grassroots Environmental Education, an award-winning not-for-profit environmental health organization whose mission is to inform the public about the health risks of common environmental exposures and to empower individuals to act as catalysts for change in their own communities.
Dan began her career in college as a student leader with CALPIRG, where she helped to bring high-speed rail to California. In her current role she directs the national political strategy for the Student PIRGs.
CONTACT BEYOND PLASTICS
CAPA AT BENNINGTON COLLEGE
Bennington College has distinguished itself as a vanguard institution within American higher education. It was the first to include the visual and performing arts in a liberal arts education and the first to integrate work in the classroom with work in the field. Bennington students work intensively with faculty to forge individual educational paths around their driving questions and interests. Its continued emphasis on self-directed learning, made real through hands-on experience in the field, has established Bennington as a bellwether among the nation's liberal arts colleges.
The Center for the Advancement of Public Action (CAPA) is a national leader in preparing undergraduates to become agents of social change. CAPA's mission is to educate students in public action; to be a catalyst, convener, and creative space for social change; and to design solutions to the urgent social, political, and environmental problems of our time.