Vermont Agricultural Mediation Program (VTAMP)

Vermont Mediators

 

Neal Rodar
Neal Rodar has over 16 years of experience in professional mediation. He was Director of the Woodbury Dispute Resolution Center for ten years. Neal’s Board and Committee memberships include the Professional Responsibility Board of the Vermont Supreme Court, the Vermont Board of Bar Examiners, the Environmental Mediation Center, the Oversight Committee of the Vermont Family Court Mediation Program, and the Vermont Environmental Court Mediation Program. Neal has worked extensively developing mediation programs with State Governments and serves as Mediator-in-Residence at the Woodbury Institute at Champlain College in their Masters in Mediation and Applied Conflict Studies program.

 

 

Susan Terry
Susan is a nationally recognized mediator, facilitator, and consultant working in complex issues in the public and private sector. She teaches in the Masters in Mediation Program at the Woodbury Institute at Champlain College and is adjunct faculty at Vermont Law School. She is also a contract mediator with a number of state agencies and is recognized for her thoughtful and creative approach to problem solving. Susan lives on a diversified tree farm and has worked with numerous dairy farm families in planning farm succession.

 

 

Emily Gould
Emily has close to 30 years experience as an attorney, mediator and facilitator. She is a former criminal prosecutor and general counsel to the Agency of Agriculture. Emily is in solo practice at Empatia Resolutions in Montpelier Vermont as a mediator and facilitator serving farmers and agricultural organizations as well as non-profits, individuals and families.  Emily also provides training and coaching to other mediators, attorneys and people in conflict situations. Learn more about Emily at her website: www.empatiaresolutions.com

 

 

Alfred Mills
Alfred has worked as a mediator for over thirteen years. He is a member of the Vermont Bar and an active member of the Vermont Bar Association’s Alternative Dispute Resolution Committee. Alfred is an Adjunct Professor in the Masters in Mediation (teaching Legal Issues in Mediation and Negotiation) and Masters of Science in Law (teaching Constitutional Law, Torts, and Alternative Dispute Resolution) programs at the Woodbury Institute of Champlain College and an active member of the Vermont Bar Association’s Alternative Dispute Resolution Committee. In his past life, he spent four years as a Wilderness Ranger in Wenatchee National Forest in Washington state. Today he lives and works in and around Montpelier, Vermont. Learn more about Alfred at his website: www.riverstoneresolutions.com

 

 

Julian Portilla
Julian is currently the director of the Master’s in Mediation and Applied Conflict Studies of the Woodbury Institute of Champlain College. His experience ranges from interpersonal situations to multistakeholder dialogue processes primarily to help people and communities resolve differences over managing their natural resources, specifically land use, distribution and ownership, fisheries management and coastal development. He has assisted communities in developing ad hoc systems for resource management as well as community-led policy recommendations to be adopted by government actors. Julian has worked to resolve disputes in over a dozen countries. He has consulted for the UN, national governments, universities and colleges and other institutions. In addition to English, he is fluent in Spanish and French.

 

 

Matt Strassberg
Matt Strassberg is the executive director of the Environmental Mediation Center and the Agricultural Mediation Programs. He is an attorney and mediator with over twenty five years of experience in environmental law and mediation. He is the founding director of Green Mountain Environmental Resolutions, a dispute resolution firm focused on developing collaborative solutions to environmental and land use disputes. He is also a senior consultant with the Consensus Building Institute in Cambridge, MA. He has served on the Steering Committee of the Coalition of Agricultural Mediation Programs, currently serves on it’s legislative committee, co-chairs the Vermont Environmental Court’s Advisory Committee on Mediation, and is listed on the roster of the US Institute for Environmental Conflict Resolution.

 

 

Julie Hoyt
Julie Hoyt is the Associate Director of the Environmental Mediation Center. Julie has worked with EMC since 2007 and currently assists in the administration of both the New Hampshire and the Vermont Agricultural Mediation Programs. Julie is an attorney admitted to practice in both Vermont and Massachusetts. Julie’s mediation experience includes a variety of producer-creditor disputes, adverse decision letters arising from FSA loans, NRCS programs, Rural Development loans and many others. Julie has experience working in the agricultural community working on issues affecting diary and goat farms and fruit and vegetable growers. Julie is approved to provide foreclosure and family court mediations for the State of Vermont and has a background in collaborative law.

 

 

Jennifer Larsen
With a background in science, education and mediation, Jennifer brings a breadth and depth of knowledge in technical science, forestry, and agriculture to her mediation and facilitation practice. Her work includes facilitation, conflict consulting, trainings and mediation for non-profits, towns, the agricultural community, the U.S. Forest Service, and in Chittenden County Small Claims Court.

 

Jennifer served as a field and lab scientist for 24 years before becoming a mediator and facilitator. For more than a decade, Jennifer supervised soil and plant tissue analysis in the UVM Agricultural & Environmental Testing Lab, interpreting lab results for, and building collaborative relationships with farmers, feed dealers, extension agents and researchers.

 

Active in the community garden behind her house, Jennifer has also been a longtime supporter and member of a CSA. Learn more at: www.jenniferlarsenassociates.com.