Steve Coleman, President (2022)
A native of Owensboro, Ky., and resident of Frankfort for 45 years, Steve Coleman has been in awe of Kentucky’s diverse and beautiful landscapes from a young age. With a Bachelor’s Degree in Forestry from the University of Kentucky, he’s had a robust career serving in the Kentucky Division of Conservation. He began his work in 1976 as a Soil Scientist, mapping soils in the cooperative soil survey party in Boyle and Mercer Counties. He assumed leadership of the Division’s Soil Survey Program in 1979, became Assistant Director in 1982, and took over as the Director of the Division of Conservation in 1994, a position he held until his retirement in Dec. 2012 .
Steve currently serves as a Conservation District Supervisor on the Franklin County Conservation District and as chair of the Kentucky Farm Bureau Water Management Working Group. He has served on numerous conservation-focused boards, and is currently a board member for the Kentucky Association of Conservation Districts, a nonprofit representing Kentucky’s 121 Soil Conservation Districts. Additionally, he’s been the Kentucky Coordinator for the Leopold Conservation Award since 2013 and serves on the board for Kentucky Agriculture and Environment in the Classroom, a nonprofit providing agricultural, environmental and practical living literacy programs across the Bluegrass.
Steve is married with two sons, two daughters-in-law and four grandchildren. He’s actively involved with St. Paul United Methodist Church, serving as church treasurer since 1989, and his hobbies include model railroad trains, traveling, coin collecting and the outdoors.
Lee Troutwine, Vice President (2019)
Born and raised in Franklin County, Lee Troutwine and his wife of 56 years, Betty, live on a 120-acre farm on Elkhorn Creek in the Peaks Mill valley.
Lee graduated from Elkhorn High School and then attended the University of Kentucky, where he played in the famous Marching 100 Band. He left college for the United States Navy, spent two years in Morocco, went aboard the USS Forrest B. Royal, and was involved in the Bay of Pigs and Cuban Blockade. After his time in the service, Lee joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington, DC, and met Betty. The couple returned to Kentucky, and Lee completed his degree in Political Science from Kentucky State University.
Much of Lee’s career was spent in state government, including as the appointed Commissioner of the Department for Local Government under Governor Wilkinson and Kentucky’s representative to the Federally Funded Lower Mississippi Delta Development Commission.
Outside of work, Lee has been involved in many boards and commissions, including three terms as the Chair of Franklin County School System; past president of the Frankfort Rotary Club, Downtown Frankfort Inc. and the Dry Stone Conservancy; Kentucky’s representative to the Appalachian Regional Commission; Kentucky State University’s legislative liaison for two years; and a member of VFW Post 4075.
Ask Lee your dry stone construction questions: He’s a Journeyman Mason (level 2) with the Dry Stone Conservancy and, in 2009, won the National Drystone Laying Competition Amateur Class.
Lee is on the Executive Committee and the Performance Excellence Committee.
Nancy Rose Osborne, Treasurer, Performance Excellence Committee Chair (2020)
Nancy Osborne’s respect for the land took root on her grandparents’ farms in Hardin County and deepened on a northern Norway farm as a 17-year-old exchange student. Her Kentucky heritage, nurtured by Nordic cultural and environmental ethics, informed her public service career spanning three decades. Starting with the Kentucky Department of Natural Resources Secretary’s Office in the mid-1970s, she worked with state environmental policy and land management. Upon earning her law degree, she clerked for the Kentucky Court of Appeals and the Kentucky Supreme Court. At the Legislative Research Commission for 25 years, Nancy was a fiscal analyst with the budget committee and the capital projects and bond oversight committee.
Nancy has been a Woods & Waters Land Trust supporter since the organization’s inception, and she has been on the Land Extravaganza planning committee for several years. (You may know her as the salad lady, as she has become pretty good at making salads using local ingredients for our dozens of event guests.)
Nancy has been restoring her 1800s home on the Kentucky River near Lock 4 since 1980. She resides in Northern Franklin County in a home and studio she helped design on 12 acres near the Kentucky River.
Nancy is the Board Treasurer and Chair of the WWLT Performance Excellence Committee.
Michelle Tackett Singer, Secretary (2022)
Michelle Tackett Singer has more than 20 years of experience in federal and state grants management. From 2005 to 2019, she served as the Director of Finance and Grants Management for the Homeless and Housing Coalition of Kentucky, a statewide coalition of partners and advocates working to end homelessness, where she managed federal and state grants in the millions of dollars and oversaw the nonprofit’s financial and budgetary matters. She temporarily served, concurrent with her primary duties, as interim Executive Director during the nonprofit’s transition times. Michelle currently works for the Kentucky Housing Corporation as the Grants Management Supervisor.
Michelle hails from Scott County, where her family has lived for six generations. Her love of the land was birthed during her childhood while spending weekends on her maternal grandfather’s farm in Grant County, fishing, roaming the outdoors, picking wildflowers and hunting for arrowheads. Now, with three kids of her own, she tries to spend as much time outdoors as she can, hiking, gardening and exploring.
Michelle is passionate about the Commonwealth and its history, land and people. She’s dedicated her life to preservation, whether it be historic preservation or preservation of natural areas, and wants future generations to have the same opportunities to have a relationship with the land that she’s been able to.
Nathan Depenbrock (2019)
Getting people off the couch and into the outdoors is one of Nathan Depenbrock’s main missions. This is evident in the two businesses, Canoe Kentucky and Kentucky River Tours, that he owns with his wife, Allison.
Nathan grew up in Northern Kentucky, graduated from Covington Catholic High School, attended Western Kentucky University, and then became the head animal keeper at Kentucky Down Under in Horse Cave. He moved to Frankfort in 2002. He believes Kentucky has some of the most wonderful, beautiful and scenic countryside in the world, which is often taken for granted.
When Kentucky River Tours—known as the Bourbon Boat—began offering tours in 2018, he and Allison wanted some of the proceeds to go to a local nonprofit associated with conservation, as land cannot be recreated or made again. They knew Woods & Waters Land Trust to be the right organization, and Nathan joined the board in 2019.
You might see Nathan out canoeing, kayaking, SUPing, backpacking, hunting or trapping. Additionally, he is a Merchant Mariner (Boat Captain), holds a US Coast Guard 100-Ton Master’s License, and is a Wilderness First Responder and EMT. Nathan is also involved in the American Canoe Association as an Instructor Trainer in Whitewater Canoe and as a Swift Water Rescue Technician for both the ACA and Rescue 3.
Nathan believes his first purpose is as a follower of Jesus Christ; second is as a faithful husband to Allison and father to Boone, Dane and Isla; and third is to encourage others to share the outdoors.
Emma Strong, Board Member (2022)
Emma Strong, gets her dedication to natural spaces from her mother, Diane, who motivates their whole family to spend time outside.
Emma sees the whole picture in protecting our natural areas and believes waterways are extremely important because clean water is an essential part of life. She also views land conservation as essential for protecting wildlife as well as trees, which absorb carbon dioxide.
In addition to being on the board for Woods & Waters Land Trust, Emma has interned with Kentucky State University Aquaculture & Aquaponics and Joanna Hay Productions. In fact, Emma shot and produced many of the video segments in Woods & Waters Land Trust’s first-ever virtual Land Extravaganza fundraiser, in 2020. She’s a volunteer at LIFE House for Animals, too, because she “cannot get enough of dogs.”
Emma is pictured here with Izzy, a rescue pug from LIFE House for Animals, who is technically her brother’s dog but an all-around “love potato.”
Emma serves on the Outreach and Fundraising Committees.
Amber Inscore Essick (2022)
More information to come.
Moira Wingate (2023)
From historic buildings to essential open space, preserving the character of the community is Moira Wingate’s passion. Becoming involved with Woods and Waters Land Trust was a natural fit for her.
A lifelong Franklin County resident, Moira currently lives in downtown Frankfort, but her love of the outdoors is rooted in her grandparents’ 300 acre Barren County farm. Her interest in nature and conservation led her to a concentration in environmental studies in college. This love of the outdoors recently led Moira and her husband, Matt, to purchase a farm in Western Franklin County.
Here in the Lower Kentucky River Watershed, Moira is particularly taken by the seasons. “I say summer is my favorite, but then in the middle of summer, I feel like I’m about ready for the fall, and before fall goes on for too long, we get winter. They all arrive with the perfect timing.” she says.
In addition to protecting our outdoor spaces, Moira is interested in protecting the historical character of our built environment. She and Matt have renovated a number of buildings in Frankfort, careful to maintain the historical aspect of the place.
Moira is currently the assistant county attorney in Franklin County. You can often find her kayaking the Elkhorn Creek or visiting Salato Wildlife Education Center with her son, Salen.