Our Fantastic Leaders!
TreesDurham is composed of passionate people interested in making a positive impact in our community using trees! TreesDurham is lucky to have a very active working board, comprised of amazing folks. Read all about them below!
Staff
Ginell Rogers
Executive Director

Ginell Rogers is a Co-Author, Entrepreneur, Business Consultant and Nonprofit Executive Director. She has served in C-Suite roles like CEO/CFO/COO for 20 years within organizational executive management within the financial and human service relations for the profit and nonprofit sectors. Ginell has the propensity to serve disadvantaged families that focused on achieving self-sufficiency, fight poverty, address environmental health challenges, and assist in improving the social well-being of communities across North Carolina, Georgia, and California.
Board of Directors
Marcy Lowe
Chair
Marcy Lowe is the founder and CEO of Datu Research, an environmental consultancy that informs federal and international public policy to slow global climate change. Datu’s clients and partners include the Environmental Defense Fund, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Rockefeller Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Rotary International.
With this global backdrop, Lowe’s TreesDurham work focuses on coping with the climate changes that are already underway, including hotter summers, more flooding, and increased stress. Many of Durham’s most climate-vulnerable neighborhoods lack adequate tree cover. Lowe believes that planting trees empowers a community to reduce heat, protect against flooding, improve mental health, and reduce crime. She also finds it fun and rewarding to work really hard on a beautiful Saturday planting trees with TreesDurham friends old and new! |
Clay Bordley
Vice Chair
Clay Bordley is a pediatrician at Duke Health, where he has served in a variety of leadership
roles including Medical Director of the Pediatric Emergency Department, and creator of Duke's Pediatric Hospitalist program. A lifelong outdoor enthusiast, Clay loves restorative agriculture and trees. Together with his family, he is developing a sustainable agroforestry operation in east Durham County along Panther Creek. Clay’s vision is to combine his career in child and public health with his passion for (read: obsession with!) growing trees. An expanding body of research connects systemic racism—especially redlining of non-white neighborhoods—with heat maps that align with communities with poor health outcomes. Clay is excited to collaborate with communities to grow and plant native trees to create a greener, healthier, more equitable Durham. |
Berrian Puma
Treasurer
Berrian has worked in Research and Development for the consumer-packaged goods industry for more than 23 years. For the first 20 he worked for Procter and Gamble, on the oral care business with assignments in Caracas, London, Mexico City and Cincinnati. More recently he moved to Durham to lead the Research and Development team for Burt’s Bees, a leading natural personal care brand.
Berrian was born and raised in Venezuela and has a degree in Chemical Engineering from the “Universidad Simon Bolivar." He has been actively involved in Hispanic youth since his arrival to the US in 2003. |
Willa Robinson Allen
Willa Robinson Allen has worked in the field of public health for over 20 years.
Currently, she is the Program Manager for the chronic disease and injury prevention programs, known as Health Promotion and Wellness in the Health Education Division at Durham County Department of Public Health. In Durham she also works on policy/environmental change, community empowerment and concentrated efforts working with Durham’s faith community—where she provides resources, skills building trainings, small conferences and networking opportunities. Having lived in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, she has appreciated the beauty of each state and has been inspired to take action to protect the environment. This became even more a part of her focus while living in Colorado. In addition to her community contributions as an educator, volunteer and community engagement, Willa served 20 years in the armed forces and retired as a E7/SFC (Sergeant First Class ) in the United States Army Reserves. |
Kelly Benhase
Kelly Benhase has taught English, composition, and reading for over 30 years. She has taught in
independent schools, public high schools, and universities, and is currently a writing tutor for Durham Tech’s Center for Academic Excellence. Teaching offers many gifts, besides the challenges, and one gift Kelly has received is an education in how different families see their place in the world, and more specifically, in the natural world. Kelly encourages students’ interaction with the outdoors. At three schools, including Josephine Dobbs Clement Early College High School here in Durham, Kelly founded and led an Outdoor Club. She came to realize that trees in particular can offer significant social and cultural space. Kelly admires Trees Durham’s focus on what matters—the material and psychological benefits of trees, and the fact that all citizens deserve those benefits. |
Renata Poulton Kamakura
Renata Poulton Kamakura is a PhD candidate at Duke University studying urban trees. Their work looks at the importance of tree maintenance (e.g. pruning, mulching) for long term tree health and how tree health varies across urban landscapes.
Renata grew up in a variety of different cities and so had the opportunity to see a range of ways in which greenspaces are incorporated into urban contexts. They also have had the opportunity to work within and learn alongside a variety of people in both environmental and non-environmental justice organizations. As such, they have learnt to center the importance of creating greenspaces and planting trees while following the knowledge, needs, and interests of local community members and being flexible to how those change across neighborhoods and through time. |
Katie Rose Levin
Katie Rose Levin is a Board Certified Master Arborist with a Master of Forestry and a Master of Environmental Management from Duke University. Her work is at the intersection of where people and nature meet, and is particularly focused on creating a just, sustainable and beautiful future.
Katie Rose has worked in a variety of sectors, including serving as the Natural Resource Manager at Duke University, Director of Consulting at Leaf and Limb, and most recently as the Urban Forestry Manager at the Town of Cary. She currently runs her own business, Biodiversity Works. In the past, she was lucky to be one of the small group of people who helped found TreesDurham, serving as out Executive Director, and is happy to return to help as a Board Member! |
Our valuable Partners
We’re energetic. We’re passionate. We help trees make Durham a better place for all.
Come join us!
Come join us!