MF

Molly Freiberg

Community Engagement Manager at Rensselaer Plateau Alliance

Molly Freiberg serves as the Community Engagement Manager at Rensselaer Plateau Alliance Inc, where efforts focus on connecting under-served and marginalized communities to conserved wild lands for recreational and educational purposes since April 2019. Prior experience includes roles as a Palliative Care Social Worker at Aspire Health, Inc., where Molly provided advanced care planning and counseling for terminal illness patients, and as Palliative Care Coordinator and Hospice Social Worker at The Visiting Nurse Association of Greater Philadelphia, emphasizing advanced care planning and quality of life at end of life. Additionally, Molly was a Clinical Supervisor at Eliot Community Human Services, overseeing treatment for clients with mental illness. Education includes a Master of Social Work from Salem State University and certification in Gestalt Therapy from the Gestalt Therapy Institute of Philadelphia.

Location

East Nassau, United States

Links

Previous companies


Org chart

No direct reports

Teams

This person is not in any teams


Offices

This person is not in any offices


Rensselaer Plateau Alliance

The Rensselaer Plateau Alliance (RPA) is an environmental nonprofit organization that works with the community to promote land conservation on the Rensselaer Plateau in eastern New York. The Rensselaer Plateau is one of the largest and most ecologically intact native habitats in New York State. The preservation of this landscape for future generations is the vision of the Rensselaer Plateau Alliance. The Plateau covers about 118,000 acres in the towns of Berlin, Brunswick, Grafton, Hoosick, Nassau, Petersburgh, Pittstown, Poestenkill, Sand Lake, Stephentown and the Village of East Nassau. An escarpment steeply rising from the surrounding lower elevations marks the Plateau’s boundary. The Plateau’s relatively high elevations (1,000 – 1,800 feet) and cool climate, acidic soils, and its poor drainage contribute to plants, forests, and wetlands more similar to the Adirondacks than to the surrounding local area.


Employees

1-10

Links