GPRC Life Wheel™ + 12 Components of Ecological Health

TIffanie Willis

Board Member

Ms. Tiffanie Willis is from California and Texas, and is a product of Adventist Christian education. Tiffanie Willis received her commitment to community early in life. This early commitment to servant leadership would later result in her decision to pursue a Biology degree during undergraduate school at Oakwood University and then a Masters degree in business management at the University of Texas at Arlington, with a secondary focus in urban planning land use and development-community planning.

Ms. Willis was employed with several Texas Independent School Districts, teaching Advance Placement Biology and Physical Science. Further, Miss Willis worked and gained promotion as a Planner I within the Cities of Irving, Fort Worth and Denton, Texas. Presently, Miss Willis is employed with the Department of Defense of the United States of America in Huntsville, Alabama.

In addition to serving on the board of Great Plains Restoration Council, Ms. Willis serves as Vice chair of the North Alabama Boys and Girls Club, Seminole, Huntsville, AL and is a board member of the The Girls Scouts of America, Inner-Circle. Recently, Ms. Willis was nominated to the position of Director of Adventist Community Services at the Madison Mission Seventh Day Adventist Church, Huntsville, AL.

Ms. Willis’ life focus is to help the disadvantaged in our community and the world by guidance through compassionate life education and community development. As a GPRC board member she believes that in order to reach the goal of environmental sustainability, the United States must put into place policies, programs, and systems that integrate economic, environmental and social components at all levels.

Contact Information

Great Plains Restoration Council
National Headquarters
PO Box 131291
Houston, TX 77219
832-598-GPRC(4772)
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Our Mission

Great Plains Restoration Council (GPRC) works to restore and protect our shattered prairies and plains through developing youth leaders in Ecological Health. Protecting wild nature is a matter of public health, and participating in its hands-on recovery offers therapeutic modalities for many social and physical ills.