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Featured

Communications Manager

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https://onda.org/careers/
Experienced (Non-Manager)
Full Time
Oregon Natural Desert Association
50 SW Bond Street,Bend,Oregon,97702
Oregon Natural Desert Association (ONDA) is a nonprofit conservation organization with a mission to protect, defend and restore Oregon's high desert. With offices in Bend and Portland, Oregon, we represent more than 25,000 members and supporters around the state and across the country advocating for conservation and restoration of more than 12 million acres of high desert public lands in central and eastern Oregon. This includes iconic regions like the Owyhee Canyonlands, Steens Mountain, the John Day River and the Greater Hart-Sheldon. Our work requires close collaboration and partnership with local communities, Tribal Nations, elected officials and a wide array of nonprofit partners. Read more at www.ONDA.org.

POSITION DESCRIPTION
The Communications Manager works to achieve ONDA's conservation goals and sustain the engagement of our community of supporters by overseeing all public communications. This position focuses on collaboration, creativity, and storytelling and will work across teams to create insightful and inspiring narratives of ONDA's conservation work.

The Communications Manager will steer ONDA's brand expression, plan our annual communications calendar, provide strategic direction, and coordinate all activities including ONDA's publications and web, social, email, and media presence. This role requires a deep passion for conservation and a commitment to developing and managing a wide range of activities to support conservation outcomes. A person who is energized by creatively thinking about impactful methods of sharing ONDA's work and catering content to our various audiences will excel in this role.

Reporting to the Development Director, the Communications Manager is part of a small, collaborative development and communications team. This position will require independent decision making and frequent prioritization. Primary duties include:

Organizational Communications (80%)
- Work closely with ONDA's Executive Director and Director of Development to ensure cohesive messaging across the organization
- Oversee ONDA's organizational communication strategy to expand ONDA's community and deepen the engagement of existing supporters
- Manage the tone, content, and cadence of information across all ONDA communication channels
- Serve as primary editor to ensure all organizational communications are accurate and aligned
- Produce e-newsletters, blogs, articles, social posts, videos and web content or other materials
- Manage the production of printed publications inclusive of the Wild Desert Calendar, Desert Ramblings newsletter, Annual Report, and other brochures or outreach items
- Write copy and work with staff and volunteers to create compelling written narratives; design materials in InDesign/Canva; produce short in-house videos
- Own and manage website content updates on a day-to-day basis; conduct periodic full website audit
- Manage email analytics and deliverability best practices; analyze performance and recommend improvements
- Manage branding guidelines, written and visual style guides, and photo and video libraries
- Cultivate media relationships and identify opportunities to raise the public profile of Oregon's high desert and ONDA's conservation efforts
- Oversee web, email, print and other vendors, contractors, photographers and volunteer content contributors

Program Communications (15%)
- Collaborate with conservation, development and stewardship program staff to support campaign, project and event-specific communications plan development
- Mentor staff on communications best practices and utilization of methods that adhere to ONDA's strategic communications plan and further programmatic priorities
- Provide oversight, education, templates, toolkits and tips that encourage brand and message cohesion across all program areas

Administration and Other (5%)
- Attend team and staff meetings
- Prepare program assessments, summaries or other reports
- Support funder, partner or other program communication needs
- Perform other duties as assigned

SKILLS AND QUALIFICATIONS
The ideal candidate is able to tell a story that inspires people to get involved in ONDA's conservation efforts. The Communications Manager is always thinking about how to creatively articulate the importance and value of Oregon desert conservation to inspire public engagement. Initial applicant screening will select for those candidates that meet the following minimum qualifications:
- A demonstrated passion for ONDA's conservation mission
- Four+ years of communications and content creation experience, with a thorough knowledge of engagement strategies, marketing, design, social media, or other relevant experience
- Proficiency in Microsoft Office, Adobe Creative Suite, WordPress, email marketing platforms, and social media applications and schedulers, with other technical knowledge such as video production a plus
- Strategic planning, project management, and/or brand development/management experience
- Knowledge of AP Style and copy editing principles
- Participatory and collaborative work style
- Strong attention to detail and ability to meet deadlines and complete tasks efficiently
- Commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice principles

Following initial screening, subsequent steps in the selection process will prioritize candidates based on the degree to which they meet or exceed these minimum qualifications and possess the skills, aptitudes, experience and qualifications required to excel in the position. Candidates with Spanish language skills are strongly encouraged to apply.

COMPENSATION AND BENEFITS
ONDA offers an engaging and interactive work environment with 14 fellow staff. The starting annual salary range is $61,000 to $69,000 per year, with the actual salary within the range determined based on experience. ONDA provides a hybrid office-home work environment (i.e., 3 days/week in the Bend office, 2 days/week work from home) and full benefits package including 95% paid premiums for medical, dental and vision insurance, a 403b retirement program with 5% employer match, 12 paid holidays/year, 15 paid vacation days/year to start with increases over time, 12 paid sick days/year, and an 8-week sabbatical every 6 years. Company vehicles are provided for travel.

TO APPLY
ONDA uses an anonymous applicant screening process to ensure objective applicant evaluation. To facilitate this review, please submit your application via email including two separate attachments as follows in .doc or .pdf:
1) Attachment #1: A single page that includes your name, address, email and phone number. Do not include this identifying information anywhere else in your attachments.
2) Attachment #2: A cover letter (without your name) describing your qualifications and interest in the position, resume (without your name), and the names and contact information for three references. This information should be combined into a single file.

Please submit application materials via email to CommunicationsManager@onda.org no later than 5 p.m. Pacific Time on Monday May 11, 2026.

ONDA IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
ONDA is committed to diversity, equity and inclusion and seeks to create an inclusive environment for all volunteers, partners, collaborators and employees. Our commitment to diversity includes the recognition that our mission is best advanced by the leadership and contributions of people of diverse backgrounds, beliefs and cultures. We strongly encourage applicants from all cultures, races, colors, religions, sexes, national or regional origins, ages, disability status, sexual orientation, gender identity, military, protected veteran status or other status protected by law. Please review our commitment to fostering diversity, equity, inclusion and justice in environmental conservation at www.ONDA.org/justice.
Posted Online 2 weeks ago

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West Slope Youth Voice Regional Organizer

West Slope Youth Voice Regional...

Western Colorado Alliance for Community Action seeks a full-time West Slope Youth Voice Regional Organizer to support and grow youth civic engagement across our region. The WSYV Regional Organizer's primary role is to engage students and coordinate campaigns across multiple geographic areas, organizing students from across the Western Slope to participate in youth identified priority campaigns. This position will report to the Executive Director.

Please visit www.westerncoloradoalliance.org for a full job description and announcement

Western Colorado Alliance for Community Action seeks a full-time West Slope Youth Voice Regional Organizer to support and grow youth civic engagement across our region. The WSYV Regional Organizer's primary role is to engage students and coordinate campaigns across multiple geographic areas, organizing students from across the Western Slope to participate in youth identified priority campaigns. This position will report to the Executive Director.

Please visit www.westerncoloradoalliance.org for a full job description and announcement

Posted Online 1 week ago
Featured

Executive Director

Executive Director

Great Basin Water Network seeks an Executive Director who is energetic, charismatic and highly motivated, with management experience and strategic vision, and diverse communication skills.

About the Position: Executive Director
The Executive Director provides visionary and strategic leadership for GBWN, reporting to the Board of Directors, and specifically the President of the Board. This is a full-time position, responsible for overseeing the day-to-day administration, legal campaigns, programs, and consultants; as well as managing the organization's financial health.

The Executive Director has overall responsibility for the planning, development, implementation, assessment and improvement of the mission-related programs, revenue generation and financial management, strategic and annual planning, partnerships, community relations, legislative and government relations, public relations, and other key areas. The E.D. serves as the primary spokesperson for the organization with funders, stakeholders, and the media.

As a leader of GBWN, the Executive Director is expected to communicate effectively; act with courage and moxie; strategize; collaborate; and show independent initiative. The E.D. will work cooperatively and productively with a wide variety of stakeholders including legislators; state, tribal, federal and local officials; the Board of Directors; donors and sponsors; community partners, business leaders; the media; community members and all Network participants.

Primary Responsibilities: Be a leading voice for water in the west

Lead water protection campaigns and advocacy strategies by disseminating communications, collaborating with long-standing partners, and navigating high-level water politics in local, state and federal arenas.

Foster an inclusive, positive and collaborative work culture with consultants, board and stakeholders.
Oversee finances, grants, and supporter engagement with our bookkeeper and administrative assistant.

Engage the Board of Directors in policy and decision-making for organizational stewardship and direction.

Lead fundraising efforts to sustain and grow the organization, including gift cultivation, donor stewardship, grant applications, requests to foundations, corporations and other sources. Provide updates and reports to funders as needed.

Present reports, updates and results to the Board on a periodic basis which will include regular board meetings and specific committee meetings of the Board.

Oversee and create newsletters, website updates, and social media content.

Engage with traditional and non-traditional media outlets to inform the public about our campaigns and initiatives.

Conduct water tours and public events for rural and urban constituencies.

Primary Program Activities:

Continue leading role in opposing the Cedar City Pipeline through the administrative, legislative and legal processes.

Advocate for water laws that balance community and conservation frameworks in the Nevada legislature.

Maintain GBWN's position and expertise as a go-to voice and source of information on Colorado River issues, with a focus on conservation.

Assist our Tribal partners through strategic consultation in regulatory, legislative and legal matters.

Required Skills and Experience:
Bachelor's degree.
Minimum three years of professional-level experience in advocacy, government affairs, academia, or business. Fundraising or grant writing experience preferred.
Background in natural resources.
Public sector, private sector or NGO experience will be considered.
Current driver's license and access to reliable transportation to remote rural areas.

Position Details:
Work from home.
Must be located in Reno, NV or Las Vegas, NV.
The position entails extensive travel, as much as one week per month. Travel expenses reimbursed.

Salary/compensation:
$105,000 - $115,000 DOE.
Up to 5% 403(b) retirement contribution.
Up to $7,500 contribution to pre-tax Health Reimbursement Account.

GBWN is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

To Apply
Interested candidates should send their resume, cover letter and a writing sample to GBWN Board at board@greatbasinwater.org with subject line GBWN Executive Director.
Position will be open until filled.

About the Organization:
The Great Basin Water Network (GBWN) (www.greatbasinwater.org) is a small but successful and respected nonprofit organization whose mission is to protect locally sustainable water uses, natural resources and the public interest through communication, coordination, research, science, education, litigation, and advocacy in the extended Great Basin.

We promote sustainable water management in the West by partnering with directly affected communities grappling with dangerous development, aridification, drought and warming. With collaboration and independent thinking at the forefront, we bring a diverse voice to human and ecological communities in the regulatory, judicial and legislative arenas. Our watchdog functions, educational outreach and governmental engagement ensure a well-informed public that participates in decision-making.

We are a network of urban and rural, ranchers and farmers, counties and communities, Native American tribes, hunters, anglers, hikers, conservationists, and businesses committed to the careful assessment of water projects and their environmental, social and economic consequences.

GBWN was founded in 2005 in response to the push by Southern Nevada Water Authority to pump and pipe groundwater for sprawl in Las Vegas. Thanks to our partnerships, we defeated the project in 2020.

Great Basin Water Network seeks an Executive Director who is energetic, charismatic and highly motivated, with management experience and strategic vision, and diverse communication skills.

About the Position: Executive Director
The Executive Director provides visionary and strategic leadership for GBWN, reporting to the Board of Directors, and specifically the President of the Board. This is a full-time position, responsible for overseeing the day-to-day administration, legal campaigns, programs, and consultants; as well as managing the organization's financial health.

The Executive Director has overall responsibility for the planning, development, implementation, assessment and improvement of the mission-related programs, revenue generation and financial management, strategic and annual planning, partnerships, community relations, legislative and government relations, public relations, and other key areas. The E.D. serves as the primary spokesperson for the organization with funders, stakeholders, and the media.

As a leader of GBWN, the Executive Director is expected to communicate effectively; act with courage and moxie; strategize; collaborate; and show independent initiative. The E.D. will work cooperatively and productively with a wide variety of stakeholders including legislators; state, tribal, federal and local officials; the Board of Directors; donors and sponsors; community partners, business leaders; the media; community members and all Network participants.

Primary Responsibilities: Be a leading voice for water in the west

Lead water protection campaigns and advocacy strategies by disseminating communications, collaborating with long-standing partners, and navigating high-level water politics in local, state and federal arenas.

Foster an inclusive, positive and collaborative work culture with consultants, board and stakeholders.
Oversee finances, grants, and supporter engagement with our bookkeeper and administrative assistant.

Engage the Board of Directors in policy and decision-making for organizational stewardship and direction.

Lead fundraising efforts to sustain and grow the organization, including gift cultivation, donor stewardship, grant applications, requests to foundations, corporations and other sources. Provide updates and reports to funders as needed.

Present reports, updates and results to the Board on a periodic basis which will include regular board meetings and specific committee meetings of the Board.

Oversee and create newsletters, website updates, and social media content.

Engage with traditional and non-traditional media outlets to inform the public about our campaigns and initiatives.

Conduct water tours and public events for rural and urban constituencies.

Primary Program Activities:

Continue leading role in opposing the Cedar City Pipeline through the administrative, legislative and legal processes.

Advocate for water laws that balance community and conservation frameworks in the Nevada legislature.

Maintain GBWN's position and expertise as a go-to voice and source of information on Colorado River issues, with a focus on conservation.

Assist our Tribal partners through strategic consultation in regulatory, legislative and legal matters.

Required Skills and Experience:
Bachelor's degree.
Minimum three years of professional-level experience in advocacy, government affairs, academia, or business. Fundraising or grant writing experience preferred.
Background in natural resources.
Public sector, private sector or NGO experience will be considered.
Current driver's license and access to reliable transportation to remote rural areas.

Position Details:
Work from home.
Must be located in Reno, NV or Las Vegas, NV.
The position entails extensive travel, as much as one week per month. Travel expenses reimbursed.

Salary/compensation:
$105,000 - $115,000 DOE.
Up to 5% 403(b) retirement contribution.
Up to $7,500 contribution to pre-tax Health Reimbursement Account.

GBWN is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

To Apply
Interested candidates should send their resume, cover letter and a writing sample to GBWN Board at board@greatbasinwater.org with subject line GBWN Executive Director.
Position will be open until filled.

About the Organization:
The Great Basin Water Network (GBWN) (www.greatbasinwater.org) is a small but successful and respected nonprofit organization whose mission is to protect locally sustainable water uses, natural resources and the public interest through communication, coordination, research, science, education, litigation, and advocacy in the extended Great Basin.

We promote sustainable water management in the West by partnering with directly affected communities grappling with dangerous development, aridification, drought and warming. With collaboration and independent thinking at the forefront, we bring a diverse voice to human and ecological communities in the regulatory, judicial and legislative arenas. Our watchdog functions, educational outreach and governmental engagement ensure a well-informed public that participates in decision-making.

We are a network of urban and rural, ranchers and farmers, counties and communities, Native American tribes, hunters, anglers, hikers, conservationists, and businesses committed to the careful assessment of water projects and their environmental, social and economic consequences.

GBWN was founded in 2005 in response to the push by Southern Nevada Water Authority to pump and pipe groundwater for sprawl in Las Vegas. Thanks to our partnerships, we defeated the project in 2020.

Posted Online 3 days ago
Featured

Legal Analyst or Director

Legal Analyst or Director

Legal and Policy Analyst OR Director
About SEACC
The Southeast Alaska Conservation Council (SEACC) is a small grassroots nonprofit based out of Juneau, Alaska, surrounded by the Tongass National Forest. Since 1970, SEACC has been a regional conservation watchdog, defending the remaining intact old-growth forests and waters of Southeast Alaska.
We partner with local communities, Tribes, businesses, and visitors to advocate for the conservation and sustainable use of our region's natural resources, and preserve our uniquely Southeast Alaskan ways of life. We mix policy and technical expertise with grassroots organizing and communication skills to engage the public, advance new policy, and maintain and uphold existing protections, so that we ensure the interconnected whole of Southeast Alaska exists for future generations.
SEACC is committed to justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion. Our commitment to these priorities is being developed and elaborated by both staff and board on an ongoing, sustained basis, and our work towards living these values is interwoven across all our programs and departments, as well as into our day-to-day work practices. Any future team member should share these values and priorities.
Who we're looking for
Are you someone who cares deeply about the lands and waters of Southeast Alaska? Are you action-oriented and interested in doing something meaningful to create impact for the long term benefit of our communities? Do you want to apply your legal skills toward protecting this one-of-a-kind place? Are you excited to support a team of campaign staff to strategize on and develop campaign goals? Do you find it satisfying to deep dive into research and help evaluate actionable paths in environmental watchdog work? Are you a strategic thinker; a planner and a doer who loves details and efficiency? Are you excited to empower the people and hold agencies accountable? Then you might just have what it takes to be our new Legal and Policy Analyst or Director!
Position summary
SEACC is seeking a motivated legal professional to join our team as a Legal and Policy Analyst or Director. The title and scope of this position will be tailored to the experience and qualifications of the selected candidate. The salary range for this role is wide to accommodate either an early career (Analyst) or more seasoned professional (Director). At the analyst level this role will be a critical contributor to our team, while the more senior director level would be a team leader position with the possibility of supervisory responsibilities. The analyst position will be a partner to our existing policy analyst and will share the workload of analysis and technical comments. As a director the position will additionally play a more prominent role in directing strategy and helping determine the organization's priorities.
Position summary: Legal and Policy Analyst
This position reports to SEACC's Executive Director and works closely with the Policy Analyst and campaign staff.
The Analyst will work independently and as part of a team, including with staff, community members, and partner organizations such as Alaska Native Tribes, commercial fishermen, business owners, local government officials, hunters and fishers, and other conservation groups.
The ideal candidate will thrive in a rapid-fire environment with hard-working colleagues. We are looking for someone who is innovative, creative, and passionate about Southeast Alaska, who can serve as our analyst and commenter on a wide array of technical and legal documents and permit applications, and lead our participation in processes with significant regulatory and legal components. This work will entail significant collaboration with outside attorneys, technical experts and others.
What You'll Do
In coordination and collaboration with the SEACC team, you'll work to further SEACC's mission and vision in these key areas:
Represent SEACC in agency proceedings, public hearings, and coalition settings;
Help translate complex legal and regulatory issues into accessible materials for SEACC staff, partners, and the public;
Conduct legal research and analysis as well as produce written technical comments on proposed state and federal actions;
Develop technical comments, legal memoranda, FOIA requests, and talking points;
Review legal mechanisms of proposed state and federal timber sales, mining permits, and other conservation-related actions in Southeast Alaska and flag emerging legal issues;
Track and manage timelines for state and federal action requirements;
Ensure SEACC builds a strong record to preserve legal standing in case of future litigation;
Review and recommend possible cases for litigation;
Assist with litigation in coordination with outside counsel and partner organizations.
Who You Are
The strongest candidates will have many, but not all, of the following qualifications:
All candidates should bring:
Juris Doctorate or LLM in Environmental Law and admitted to the Alaska Bar;
Familiarity with the federal regulatory process, including NEPA environmental review, notice-and-comment rulemaking, and agency appeals;
An understanding of Alaska government and politics;
Genuine commitment to SEACC's conservation mission and the communities of Southeast Alaska;
Comfort working in a small, fast-paced, and nimble nonprofit environment;
A collaborative spirit and ability to work with a team in both a project leadership and individual contributor capacity;
Excellent legal research, analysis, writing, and speaking skills;
Knowledge of legal procedures (federal and state).


Other qualifications that would be beneficial
Demonstrated knowledge of public lands and Indigenous rights (including Free, Prior, and Informed Consent practices);
Experience working with Tribal governments or on Indigenous rights issues;
Experience with litigation in Alaska state or federal court;
Big picture thinking: seeing beyond individual tasks to understand how they fit into the overall campaign strategy/SEACC strategy;


Position summary: Legal and Policy Director
The Legal and Policy Director will play more of a leadership role than the analyst role. They will hold all of the responsibilities of the analyst role with some additional responsibilities. The Legal and Policy Director will help coordinate and manage our policy and campaign staff and craft campaign and policy strategies. Candidates with the right background and experience may also take on supervisory responsibilities.
What You'll Do
In addition to the job duties described above for the Analyst role, the Director level position will also:
Guide SEACC campaign strategy grounded in statute, regulation, and policy, with the aim of influencing outcomes on the Tongass and Inside Passage;
Oversee and track research, document preparation, and comment submissions to build a strong public record on resource development projects;
Coordinate and lead litigation efforts in collaboration with outside counsel and partner organizations.
In addition to the qualifications listed for the Analyst role, all Director candidates should bring:
At least 5 years of experience in environmental law, administrative law, natural resource law, or related public interest practice;
Experience litigating in federal and/or Alaska state court and/or before administrative agencies;
Experience creating long-term plans to advance an organization's mission through political, state, or federal channels.


We know there is not one ideal candidate who has all of these traits — if you have a mix of interests, skills, and experience related to the above, and a passion for this work — please don't let a gap in your strengths for this role stop you from applying or reaching out.
What Else You Should Know
SEACC recognizes, supports, and values all forms of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
Compensation: This role is a full-time, exempt position, and the salary range for this role is between $78,000 and $105,000 with exact salary dependent upon experience. The top half of this range is intended for Director level candidates, the bottom half is intended for Analyst candidates.
We also offer excellent benefits, including:
3 weeks of paid leave your first year and 4 weeks of paid leave after one year, plus
11 federal and state holidays, plus
fully paid healthcare, plus
12 days of medical leave annually, plus
2 days of community service or participation leave, plus
a 401K plan with a 5% match that begins after just one year of employment, and
In addition, the Executive Director closes the office between Christmas Day and New Year's Day each year as a thank you to the staff.
Where you will work: SEACC's office is located in Juneau, Alaska. Our preference is a candidate based in Juneau who would be able to fully integrate with the team here. But, there is flexibility and we're open to considering remote candidates based in other Alaska communities. Candidates must be located in Alaska or willing to relocate.
Work Travel: This role will include some required work travel. Anticipate at least 1-3 work trips a year at minimum with the opportunity for more. Candidates based outside of Juneau would be required to travel to Juneau at least twice a year in addition to other work related travel.
Desired Start Date: As soon as possible but flexible to the needs of the selected candidate.
How to Apply
SEACC seeks to engage in an unbiased review process and anonymizes applications for the first round of review.
Please submit your cover letter, resume, and a writing sample of no more than 25 pages to admin@seacc.org. Please put 'Job Application - Legal and Policy Analyst' or 'Legal and Policy Director' and your last name in the email subject line.
Your cover letter should indicate which level of the role you feel would be the best fit for you. It should also discuss your commitment to SEACC's mission and, for those outside of Alaska, your willingness to relocate to Alaska.
Your writing sample should include legal analysis, reflect the applicant's recent work and not be more than 25 pages in length. Excerpts from a longer piece of writing are acceptable.
Applications received by the end of day on May 20, 2026 will be considered in the first round of review. SEACC will continue to actively accept and review applications on a rolling basis thereafter until the role is filled. If the role is still posted on our website we are still accepting applications.
Three professional references, including one from a former or current direct supervisor, will be requested from those candidates selected for interviews.

Legal and Policy Analyst OR Director
About SEACC
The Southeast Alaska Conservation Council (SEACC) is a small grassroots nonprofit based out of Juneau, Alaska, surrounded by the Tongass National Forest. Since 1970, SEACC has been a regional conservation watchdog, defending the remaining intact old-growth forests and waters of Southeast Alaska.
We partner with local communities, Tribes, businesses, and visitors to advocate for the conservation and sustainable use of our region's natural resources, and preserve our uniquely Southeast Alaskan ways of life. We mix policy and technical expertise with grassroots organizing and communication skills to engage the public, advance new policy, and maintain and uphold existing protections, so that we ensure the interconnected whole of Southeast Alaska exists for future generations.
SEACC is committed to justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion. Our commitment to these priorities is being developed and elaborated by both staff and board on an ongoing, sustained basis, and our work towards living these values is interwoven across all our programs and departments, as well as into our day-to-day work practices. Any future team member should share these values and priorities.
Who we're looking for
Are you someone who cares deeply about the lands and waters of Southeast Alaska? Are you action-oriented and interested in doing something meaningful to create impact for the long term benefit of our communities? Do you want to apply your legal skills toward protecting this one-of-a-kind place? Are you excited to support a team of campaign staff to strategize on and develop campaign goals? Do you find it satisfying to deep dive into research and help evaluate actionable paths in environmental watchdog work? Are you a strategic thinker; a planner and a doer who loves details and efficiency? Are you excited to empower the people and hold agencies accountable? Then you might just have what it takes to be our new Legal and Policy Analyst or Director!
Position summary
SEACC is seeking a motivated legal professional to join our team as a Legal and Policy Analyst or Director. The title and scope of this position will be tailored to the experience and qualifications of the selected candidate. The salary range for this role is wide to accommodate either an early career (Analyst) or more seasoned professional (Director). At the analyst level this role will be a critical contributor to our team, while the more senior director level would be a team leader position with the possibility of supervisory responsibilities. The analyst position will be a partner to our existing policy analyst and will share the workload of analysis and technical comments. As a director the position will additionally play a more prominent role in directing strategy and helping determine the organization's priorities.
Position summary: Legal and Policy Analyst
This position reports to SEACC's Executive Director and works closely with the Policy Analyst and campaign staff.
The Analyst will work independently and as part of a team, including with staff, community members, and partner organizations such as Alaska Native Tribes, commercial fishermen, business owners, local government officials, hunters and fishers, and other conservation groups.
The ideal candidate will thrive in a rapid-fire environment with hard-working colleagues. We are looking for someone who is innovative, creative, and passionate about Southeast Alaska, who can serve as our analyst and commenter on a wide array of technical and legal documents and permit applications, and lead our participation in processes with significant regulatory and legal components. This work will entail significant collaboration with outside attorneys, technical experts and others.
What You'll Do
In coordination and collaboration with the SEACC team, you'll work to further SEACC's mission and vision in these key areas:
Represent SEACC in agency proceedings, public hearings, and coalition settings;
Help translate complex legal and regulatory issues into accessible materials for SEACC staff, partners, and the public;
Conduct legal research and analysis as well as produce written technical comments on proposed state and federal actions;
Develop technical comments, legal memoranda, FOIA requests, and talking points;
Review legal mechanisms of proposed state and federal timber sales, mining permits, and other conservation-related actions in Southeast Alaska and flag emerging legal issues;
Track and manage timelines for state and federal action requirements;
Ensure SEACC builds a strong record to preserve legal standing in case of future litigation;
Review and recommend possible cases for litigation;
Assist with litigation in coordination with outside counsel and partner organizations.
Who You Are
The strongest candidates will have many, but not all, of the following qualifications:
All candidates should bring:
Juris Doctorate or LLM in Environmental Law and admitted to the Alaska Bar;
Familiarity with the federal regulatory process, including NEPA environmental review, notice-and-comment rulemaking, and agency appeals;
An understanding of Alaska government and politics;
Genuine commitment to SEACC's conservation mission and the communities of Southeast Alaska;
Comfort working in a small, fast-paced, and nimble nonprofit environment;
A collaborative spirit and ability to work with a team in both a project leadership and individual contributor capacity;
Excellent legal research, analysis, writing, and speaking skills;
Knowledge of legal procedures (federal and state).


Other qualifications that would be beneficial
Demonstrated knowledge of public lands and Indigenous rights (including Free, Prior, and Informed Consent practices);
Experience working with Tribal governments or on Indigenous rights issues;
Experience with litigation in Alaska state or federal court;
Big picture thinking: seeing beyond individual tasks to understand how they fit into the overall campaign strategy/SEACC strategy;


Position summary: Legal and Policy Director
The Legal and Policy Director will play more of a leadership role than the analyst role. They will hold all of the responsibilities of the analyst role with some additional responsibilities. The Legal and Policy Director will help coordinate and manage our policy and campaign staff and craft campaign and policy strategies. Candidates with the right background and experience may also take on supervisory responsibilities.
What You'll Do
In addition to the job duties described above for the Analyst role, the Director level position will also:
Guide SEACC campaign strategy grounded in statute, regulation, and policy, with the aim of influencing outcomes on the Tongass and Inside Passage;
Oversee and track research, document preparation, and comment submissions to build a strong public record on resource development projects;
Coordinate and lead litigation efforts in collaboration with outside counsel and partner organizations.
In addition to the qualifications listed for the Analyst role, all Director candidates should bring:
At least 5 years of experience in environmental law, administrative law, natural resource law, or related public interest practice;
Experience litigating in federal and/or Alaska state court and/or before administrative agencies;
Experience creating long-term plans to advance an organization's mission through political, state, or federal channels.


We know there is not one ideal candidate who has all of these traits — if you have a mix of interests, skills, and experience related to the above, and a passion for this work — please don't let a gap in your strengths for this role stop you from applying or reaching out.
What Else You Should Know
SEACC recognizes, supports, and values all forms of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
Compensation: This role is a full-time, exempt position, and the salary range for this role is between $78,000 and $105,000 with exact salary dependent upon experience. The top half of this range is intended for Director level candidates, the bottom half is intended for Analyst candidates.
We also offer excellent benefits, including:
3 weeks of paid leave your first year and 4 weeks of paid leave after one year, plus
11 federal and state holidays, plus
fully paid healthcare, plus
12 days of medical leave annually, plus
2 days of community service or participation leave, plus
a 401K plan with a 5% match that begins after just one year of employment, and
In addition, the Executive Director closes the office between Christmas Day and New Year's Day each year as a thank you to the staff.
Where you will work: SEACC's office is located in Juneau, Alaska. Our preference is a candidate based in Juneau who would be able to fully integrate with the team here. But, there is flexibility and we're open to considering remote candidates based in other Alaska communities. Candidates must be located in Alaska or willing to relocate.
Work Travel: This role will include some required work travel. Anticipate at least 1-3 work trips a year at minimum with the opportunity for more. Candidates based outside of Juneau would be required to travel to Juneau at least twice a year in addition to other work related travel.
Desired Start Date: As soon as possible but flexible to the needs of the selected candidate.
How to Apply
SEACC seeks to engage in an unbiased review process and anonymizes applications for the first round of review.
Please submit your cover letter, resume, and a writing sample of no more than 25 pages to admin@seacc.org. Please put 'Job Application - Legal and Policy Analyst' or 'Legal and Policy Director' and your last name in the email subject line.
Your cover letter should indicate which level of the role you feel would be the best fit for you. It should also discuss your commitment to SEACC's mission and, for those outside of Alaska, your willingness to relocate to Alaska.
Your writing sample should include legal analysis, reflect the applicant's recent work and not be more than 25 pages in length. Excerpts from a longer piece of writing are acceptable.
Applications received by the end of day on May 20, 2026 will be considered in the first round of review. SEACC will continue to actively accept and review applications on a rolling basis thereafter until the role is filled. If the role is still posted on our website we are still accepting applications.
Three professional references, including one from a former or current direct supervisor, will be requested from those candidates selected for interviews.

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