The slate of candidates who have agreed to run for two posts on the Evergreen 
Oversight Board are listed below along with their own personal statements for 
your consideration. Voter information and instructions will be emailed to the 
OPEN-ILS General discussion list tomorrow . Voting will take place from 
Thursday , March 13th through noon EST on Wednesday , March 19th . Please watch 
your email for further information. 


_________ 


Grace Dunbar - Vice President; Equinox Software, Inc. ; I am a librarian. I 
received my MLIS at San Jose State in 2006 while I was working at the Stanford 
University Libraries. I worked as the lead project manager on the Google Books 
Digitization project while at Stanford and, as a result, I know way too much 
about barcode standards. I went on to work as the Library Director for the 
Marine Corps libraries, Camp LeJeune, but I was drawn back home to Atlanta in 
2009. I was so intrigued by Evergreen I went to the conference in Athens in 
2009 even though I had nothing to do with the project. I was hired a few months 
later by Equinox and I have been serving as Equinox's Vice President and de 
facto Project Manager for Software Development since then. I have served on 
three Evergreen Conference site selection committees, two Evergreen Conference 
program selection committees, arranged and hosted (with PINES) the 2011 
Evergreen conference in Decatur, GA, and am currently serving on the web team. 
My strengths lie in helping librarians and developers communicate well with one 
another and coordinating community efforts. 

_________ 

Tanya Prokrym - NC Cardinal Program Manager – I am the Program Manager for NC 
Cardinal. NC Cardinal is a consortium of public libraries in North Carolina 
dedicated to sharing resources and expanding opportunities. NC Cardinal began 
in 2010 and now includes 26 counties and 2 municipalities, basically 26% of the 
State’s counties. We continue to grow at the rate of about 5 library systems 
per year. Our Evergreen database includes approximately 4.3 million items. I am 
primarily a data systems IT person turned librarian who has worked in both the 
academic and public library arenas. My strengths lend themselves to addressing 
the intricacies of cataloging, data integration, and browser-based systems. My 
greatest strengths are my business-like cordiality and being able to pinpoint 
the real issues among a myriad of symptoms. What would I bring to the Oversight 
Committee? A person who is an active listener and a thoughtful, strategic 
thinker. I have a “can do” mentality. 


_________ 


Darrell Rogers - President, Emerald Data Networks, Inc. - Thanks for the 
consideration. I'm very excited about the possibility of being able to 
participate in this manner. 

I'm an honors graduate of Georgia Tech with a degree in Management of 
Information Systems. I've worked for several fortune 500 firms, including 
Coca-Cola (twice), Bank of America, Deloitte and UBS. I decided I wanted to 
work for a smaller firm and eventually ran and then spun off the consulting 
division of Emerald Data Solutions into the company that is now Emerald Data 
Networks, Inc. over ten years ago. 

In addition to being Chairman of my own board, I sit on a few others, including 
Touch the Future; an organization dedicated to serving disadvantaged, disabled 
and veteran citizens. I am a graduate of Leadership Sandy Springs and work on 
their Strategic Direction Committee. I have earned many technology industry 
certifications as I was primarily a technical resource early in my career. 

Now I lead Emerald Data Networks, Inc. with vision and commitment to be the 
best technology consulting company possible. Under my leadership, Emerald has 
won many awards for business acumen, marketplace ethics, community service and 
customer service. We are currently highlighted in the Georgia Business Leaders 
section of Forbes magazine, that can be seen here. 
http://forbescustom.com/marketplace/emeralddatanetworksinc-2/ 

My Evergreen experience started over four years ago working for the Georgia 
Public Library Systems in their PINES environment. We have since become the 
primary source of support for them as well as the Indiana State Library, North 
Texas Library Consortium, Health Sciences Libraries Consortium and several 
other library systems. We've assisted organizations with just about every 
possible part of an Evergreen implementation. 

Recently my company identified and wrote a patch for a major security flaw in 
the system. We are also the architects of the GenaSYS product for large scale 
Evergreen implementations. In addition, we work on many technologies that 
"touch" Evergreen systems that typically are not addressed by the community or 
other Evergreen support entities. We strive to assist each organization in 
choosing the right technologies and using them the best way possible for their 
own goals and objectives. 

My company and I have attended every conference since 2010 and will be in 
Boston next week. We've also been a major sponsor of the past two conferences 
and look forward to the opportunity to continue that participation. 

_________ 


Chris Sharp, PINES System Administrator; Georgia Public Library Service - I 
feel so privileged to be a part of the Evergreen ILS software community. I'm 
coming up on my sixth year working at the Georgia Public Library Service in the 
PINES Program, for which Evergreen was originally created. I've been involved 
with hands-on system administration, training, and technical support, and I've 
learned more than I ever imagined I could about Evergreen, Linux servers, and 
the inner workings of a Free and Open Source Software project. I'm excited 
about the direction the Evergreen project has taken as this software matures 
and progresses, and I'm optimistic that we will continue to be a thriving 
community that offers a stable and sound product that we can all depend on for 
the work of our public, academic and special libraries' needs. I've made many 
personal connections and friends in my work in the community: my daily 
participation in IRC Channel and email list discussions, my work with the 2009, 
2013, and 2014 Evergreen International Conference planning committees, and my 
co-chairmanship of the 2011 committee. I am constantly seeking new ways to 
improve the Evergreen experience for our PINES end users, and to contribute 
anything I find back to the Community so others can benefit from what I've 
done. One of my personal principles in this position is to generously share my 
knowledge and experience, while remaining open to new ways of doing things. I 
hope to bring my knowledge, experience, and unique perspective to the Evergreen 
Oversight Board so we can work together to maintain and grow our thriving 
community. 


_________ 


Ben Shum - Evergreen Systems Manager; Bibliomation, Inc. - I have always 
considered the role of the Evergreen Oversight Board to be acting as 
representatives of the broader Evergreen community. But what defines our 
community of users? What interests us? How do we contribute to the whole 
process? These are questions that I will work to fully answer myself and I 
think worthwhile challenges that our Oversight Board should help answer. If 
elected, it would be my honor to be part of this group working on defining the 
roles and helping to organize our next steps moving forward. As one of the few 
non-Board members who has gone to observe every in-person Oversight meeting 
held yearly at the conference, I feel especially close to issues and the 
history of discussions by the Oversight Board. This exemplifies my strong 
interest and commitment in joining the Oversight Board and helping to define 
its mission and execution of future plans. 

I am presently the Evergreen Systems Manager for Bibliomation, a library 
consortium in Connecticut. I have volunteered my service as part of numerous 
Evergreen working groups and committees, including two Conference Programs 
Committees, the Web Team, System Administrators group, Documentation Interest 
Group, and Reports Interest Group. Since joining the development team, my 
interests and participation have evolved from newbie sys admin to bug wrangler 
to core committer, a role I took on in the fall of 2012. As a core committer, I 
have helped more than a dozen contributors bring their code into Evergreen. 



Respectfully submitted, 

The Evergreen Oversight Board Nominating Committee 


Elizabeth McKinney 
Andrea Buntz Neiman 
Galen Charlton 









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