Yesca has been a volunteer in her small, rural community for the last thirteen years. Volunteering and working within her little town is following along with her belief that when we give to our communities it strengthens them enough to sustain us in return.
Currently Yesca is working with the Embudo Valley Environmental Monitoring Group, a community organization that works to provide a baseline of background environmental information that will help understand any changes in the event of a catastrophic event. This is done with the understanding that there are many small, rural communities that exist directly in the windshed of Los Alamos National Laboratory. EVEMG conducts monitoring of the watershed and the windshed, particularly focusing on constituents that come from the nuclear weapons industry. EVEMG has developed many important partnerships throughout the years including New Mexico Environment Department and Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety. These partnerships between community members and regulating agencies is an important step in the process of getting things done.
In 2007 Yesca completed a three-year long project in the form of The Upper Rio Grande Watershed Plan, a 140-page guide to the area’s ecology and ecological history with a special focus on the water systems and their safeguarding. The Embudo Valley Watershed Management Plan is available online, and is an excellent resource for those working on this and similar issues. (download PDF)
Yesca is a native New Mexican who after a fashion career in Europe, returned to the States and eventually to her beloved Embudo, where she raises two children. Does she miss the big-city world? “Not at all”, she says. She began her volunteer work while attending classes and is currently in her last year of study towards a BS in Environmental Science from Northern New Mexico College.



