About the
Adam Palmer Sustainability Fund

Our Mission

The Adam Palmer Sustainability Fund was first envisioned in the summer of 2021 after the tragic loss of Adam Palmer, Andy Jessen, and Seth Bossung in an avalanche near Silverton, CO on February 1st. Adam was a champion for sustainability as an Eagle Town Council member and beyond. 

The Palmer Fund intends to honor Adam’s legacy by supporting local economic and community development through a lens of sustainability.

The mission of the Palmer Fund is to partner with community leaders to achieve net-zero carbon consumption in the Town of Eagle by 2030 through philanthropy, green infrastructure, revolving loans, and grant funding.

Triple bottom line
of sustainability.

The Palmer Fund will honor the triple bottom line of sustainability, operating as an organization that sees equal value in stewardship of the environment, human dignity, and financial resources. All operations are grounded in these three principles. We believe in protecting and preserving the natural environment, responsible stewardship and fiscal management of donor resources, and a just transition away from carbon that is inclusive and ensures all individuals are equally protected from environmental risk.

Stewardship of
the Environment

Human
Dignity

Financial
Resources

Explore our Impact Areas and Priority Tactics

Net Zero is a big concept. In alignment with Project Drawdown and the Eagle County Climate Action Collaborative, the Palmer Fund has selected seven Impact Areas where we focus our efforts.

About Adam

Outdoor enthusiast, musician, elected leader, family man, and friend.  Adam was known in many roles and brought integrity, energy, and humor to them all. Adam’s public roles as an Eagle Town Councilman, Holy Cross Energy Board Member, and Eagle County Director of Sustainability have guided the development of the Fund in principle and practice. 

Communication: Adam knew almost everyone and could drink a beer with absolutely anyone! Innovation: Adam was ahead of the curve when it came to sustainability. He was an early advocate for electric car charging infrastructure and a solarized electrical grid. Action: Adam was always on the go, most often on a bike! He took deliberate and incremental action toward sustainability daily.

To understand Adam more personally, please see this heartfelt tribute from one of his closest friends.

Our Team

The Palmer Fund is overseen by a five member Board of Directors and operated by one staff member, all of whom were friends or colleagues of Adam’s.

Geoff Grimmer

is an elected member of the Eagle Town Council, and its representative to the Eagle County Climate Action Collaborative (CAC) Governing Board. He is the founder of Zealous Schools and the Vail Ski & Snowboard Academy.

Kristen Hartel

is a LEED Certification Reviewer for USGBC/GBCI. She has experience in local government sustainability from the City of Boulder and recently completed her Masters in Sustainability from Harvard University, with a dual focus in Environmental Policy and Sustainable Cities and Communities.

John Gitchell

is the Climate Action Manager for Eagle County Government with more than twenty years experience working in sustainability for mountain towns.

John Widerman

Treasurer, is a Banking Officer with First Bank and former Mayor of Minturn, CO. John has many prior years of nonprofit service through the Eagle Valley Family Assistance Fund.

Luke Cartin

is the Environmental Sustainability Director for Park City, Utah and the Co-founder of Mountain Towns 2030. Luke worked in sustainability for Vail Resorts for fifteen years.

Kalie Palmer

Adam’s wife, brings valuable vision and nonprofit and sustainability to the Board as an advisor.

Laura Hartman

Director, serves as the staff support for the Palmer Fund. Laura has six years of experience in nonprofit management /community development and a background in environmental science and public policy.

Special Thanks

Why?

The Palmer Fund exists to spur action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Eagle, CO through increasing access to capital that allows existing solutions to grow in scale. Through community, innovation, and action, we hope to grow the green revolving fund to meet the needs of individuals and businesses to reach Net Zero 2030

Why Eagle? We live here. We are starting closest to home and on a small scale. By first looking at our own carbon footprint and piloting the green revolving fund, we will learn best practices and prove the concept.