Staff
Caroline Amport, MPP, Executive Director
Prior to joining NH Project Learning Tree, Caroline Amport was the Principal Consultant for Canoe Harbor Consulting, which provided program and public relations services for small businesses and the nonprofit sector. Prior to founding Canoe Harbor Consulting, Amport served as the Director of Programs for the New Hampshire Political Library, which operated President Franklin Pierce’s historic Concord home. Other previous positions include Service Director for City Year New Hampshire in Stratham, New Hampshire; Project Consultant for the Annie E. Casey Foundation in Baltimore, Maryland; Residential Counselor at Edgewood Center for Children and Families; and Public Relations Account Executive at Schwartz Communications in San Francisco, California.
Amport holds a masters of arts in public policy and a certificate in nonprofit management from the Johns Hopkins University, and a bachelor of arts from Washington and Lee University. She is a 2007 graduate of Leadership Seacoast. Amport lives in Exeter where she serves as Vice Chairwoman of the Exeter Development Commission.
, M.S., Education Director
Prior to joining NH Project Learning Tree in January of 2007, Erin Hollingsworth served as a Naturalist Educator at both New Hampshire Audobon’s Prescott Farm in Laconia and the New England Wild Flower Society in Framingham, MA. Over the course of her career, Hollingsworth has worked in a variety of educational settings including Massachusetts Audubon’s HABITAT, Deerfield Community School, Afterschool, Inc., and Newton Parks and Recreation in Auburndale, MA. In 2005, she was recognized as the New England Environmental Educator of the Year by the New England Environmental Education Association.
Hollingsworth holds a Masters of Science degree in Environmental Education from Antioch Graduate School and a Bachelors of Science degree in Environmental Conservation from the University of New Hampshire, Durham. She is certified as a facilitator for Project Learning Tree, Project WILD, and Project WET. She lives in Gilmanton where she serves on the Conservation Commission.

