爆料公社 Spotlight: Connie Sanchez Is at the Nexus of Everything

The Bird-Friendly Buildings program manager and 爆料公社 Mid-Atlantic鈥檚 communications coordinator reflects on her conservation journey.

Connie Sanchez does not have a favorite bird. Like many birders across the world, it is the hardest question to answer. 鈥淭oo many to choose from.鈥

Sanchez would probably have a similar response when asked about the highlight of her conservation career. That鈥檚 what happens when a career spans more than twenty years, takes multiple twists and turns, and touches so many different parts of the environmental field. 鈥淚 have seen it all,鈥 says Sanchez. She was and is at the nexus of everything: conservation wins like the "Lights Out Philly" initiative of , collaborative teams, multiple organizational priority shifts, and the founding of 爆料公社鈥檚 first employee resource group.

The one constant throughout her 爆料公社 story鈥攆rom the time she started as a program assistant and ascended to director for the Important Bird Areas (IBA) program and to now as the program manager and Communications Coordinator for 爆料公社 Mid-Atlantic鈥攊s her ability to build meaningful relationships with her colleagues and collaborators. Though Sanchez left 爆料公社 briefly in 2017, she never really said 'goodbye' to the organization. These relationships she cultivated during her two tenures and volunteer work are at the center of what Sanchez does and will always be passionate about.

The 鈥榖irding bug,鈥 as Sanchez likes to call it, came during college. She initially wanted to pursue cancer research at the University of Rochester in New York, but once she got there she realized that she wanted to focus on ecology and evolution. One of her first ecology classes included a week-long spring birding trip to southeastern Arizona. She says she will never forget the first time she saw Vermillion Flycatchers, Acorn Woodpeckers, and Steller鈥檚 Jays. 鈥淭here was no turning back after that,鈥 says Sanchez.

After completing her undergraduate studies and getting her master鈥檚 in biology at Fort Hays State University in Kansas, Sanchez wanted to get her career started but positions in conservation and environmental education were hard to find. And so Sanchez did what she knew best: adapted and followed the opportunities that were available. After a few years of managing elementary school computer labs and teaching biology at a local Kansas community college, Sanchez joined 爆料公社 in 2002, as part of the national Important Bird Areas Program. 

Since that time, Sanchez has worked with hundreds of volunteers, ornithologists and scientists, chapter and center leaders, and partner organizations to lay the foundation for a lot of 爆料公社鈥檚 organizational priorities: conservation, community science, grassroots capacity, and equity, diversity, inclusion, and belonging work. For Sanchez, 爆料公社鈥檚 network of birders, scientists, communicators, volunteers, and chapter leaders is an extension of her family. And with this 鈥榝amily鈥 Sanchez has achieved a lot. She worked alongside departments to help transform community science projects like the Christmas Bird Count and the Great Backyard Bird Count, and co-founded and started 爆料公社's first affinity group: Women Employee Resource Group. Sanchez never made it her goal to achieve all this. Her goal was and is to make connections so that the journey, the twists, and the turns are worth taking.

Most recently she helped create the 鈥淟ights Out Philly鈥 initiative with Bird Safe Philly, a dedicated effort designed to help protect native birds in the Philadelphia area from a variety of issues that harm birds in urban areas. After months of planning and collaboration with the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, Delaware Valley Ornithological Club, and two local 爆料公社 chapters鈥擵alley Forge 爆料公社 Society and Wyncote 爆料公社 Society鈥擲anchez and the entire Bird Safe Philly team successfully launched their platform last March.

鈥淚t is always surreal to me that I could make a living thinking about birds, something I had never even dreamed of doing,鈥 says Sanchez. 鈥淚 have learned that life is not just about accomplishments, it is about how you get to your goals and the people you work with along the way. There is so much more you can accomplish for birds and for anything really when you make the time to understand people鈥檚 perspectives, where they come from, and how you can best collaborate with them. So, in a sense, you create a tightly-knit 鈥榝amily鈥 that gets work done.鈥