Steven Knapp is President and CEO at Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh. John and his wife Cyndy live in Claremont California and are the proud parents of four adult children. Reading Ways believes that all students should leave secondary school able to use reading and writing to participate effectively in society in a variety of roles, be it as a private individual, citizen, or employee. John has a passion for education and is a partner and President of Reading Ways, a company designed to ensure high-quality literacy instruction in all content areas for a school system. John is also a retired technology industry sales executive where he led sales and marketing teams for a number of technology companies managing fortune 100 companies. John has held a number of counseling and leadership positions in a variety of nonprofit organizations, including Unitarian Universalist Congregations and various counseling centers. He is a graduate of the Starr-King School for Ministry, a member school of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley California and also studied philosophy and religion as an undergraduate student at Colgate University. John Fahey serves as the Chairperson of The Cobb Institute and as an Adjunct Philosophy Instructor at The University of La Verne. Other boards on which Bedford served many years are: Fonkoze, a micro-credit program in Haiti serving primarily women with education, credit, banking and insurance services with 1000 employees and 45 offices throughout the country the Good Shepherd Retirement Center in Little Rock, an ecumenical facility providing all levels of care for 400 retirees from all economic levels and the Morris Foundation, a private foundation supporting hundreds of non-profits, mostly in Arkansas, focused on education, the arts, and social services. While working at Heifer, in the 1980’s Bedford founded the Arkansas Rice Depot, a statewide food bank, that supported 300 food pantries and initiated the food backpack program for hungry school kids that has now spread throughout the US and to several foreign countries. Heifer’s annual income grew from $300,000 in 1966 to $115 million today and foundation assets from zero to $105 million. He subsequently established the Heifer International Foundation to build an endowment to support Heifer’s work. Trained in agriculture, business and philosophy, he worked two years as a youth organizer in East Africa before becoming chief fundraiser for Heifer International in 1966. Jerry Bedford is a skilled fundraiser and communicator, who has devoted his life to lifting people out of hunger and poverty and empowering them toward self-reliance.