People news: Adirondack Diversity Initiative appoints first director

Nicole Hylton-Patterson

SARANAC LAKE, N.Y. — The Adirondack Diversity Initiative (ADI), which aims to make the Adirondack region “a more welcoming and inclusive place for residents and visitors,” has hired its first director.

The Adirondack North Country Association (ANCA) announced this week that Nicole Hylton-Patterson of the Bronx will take on the leadership position for the four-year-old initiative.

Established in 2015, the ADI is a volunteer-run collaboration of organizations and individuals who develop and promote strategies to help the Adirondack Park become more welcoming and inclusive to all New Yorkers, including visitors, seasonal residents and permanent residents.

In May 2019, New York State announced that $250,000 of its 2020 budget would go to the ADI as part of the $300 million Environmental Protection Fund. The new grant funding has allowed ANCA to hire a director and expand the initiative’s outreach and programming, according to an ANCA news release.

Hylton-Patterson, acting director of a Westchester County college’s social justice center, will begin serving as ADI’s diversity director on Dec. 2. She will be based at ANCA’s office in downtown Saranac Lake.

“We could not be more excited about this new hire. Nicky possesses the experience and passion for diversity and inclusion work that is critical to achieving the ADI’s goals. We all look forward to working with her as she brings fresh ideas and approaches to the Initiative’s work.,” ANCA Executive Director Kate Fish said in the release.

Hylton-Patterson was born in Jamaica and spent her formative years in northern Norway as part of a gifted child program. Hylton-Patterson has 20 years of experience leading activities and programs geared toward advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion. In addition to her current role as acting director of the Mary T. Clark Center for Religion and Social Justice at Manhattanville College, she served as program coordinator for the college’s Center for Inclusion. She has also instructed and coordinated programs in Arizona, Syracuse, and Elmira, that focus on race and gender studies, justice, diversity and advocacy, per the release.

Hylton-Patterson holds a master’s degree in Pan African studies from Syracuse University, a master’s degree in industrial and organizational psychology from the Chicago School of Professional Psychology University, and a bachelor’s degree in African & African American studies and philosophy from Mount Holyoke College. She is currently pursuing a Ph.D in Afro-LGBTQI+ justice with Arizona State University.

Fish said the addition of Hylton-Patterson to the ADI team will help the initiative achieve its objectives through a research and process-driven effort, bringing social and economic benefits to the region’s residents, businesses, and visitors. The diversity director will work closely with ADI partners to advance these goals, which are driven by two guiding principles: “that the Adirondack region should be welcoming and inclusive to everyone and that the region should be relevant to and supported by an increasingly diverse state and national population.”

Contact the Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com

Photo credit: Adirondack North Country Association

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