WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL
OF THE MONTEREY BAY AREA
 Established in 1951


WACMB Board Members

Peter Albano - Board President

Peter is a retired Financial Consultant, most recently with Castle Rock Wealth Management, LLC, and founder of Albano Investment Management, a Registered Investment Advisor in Monterey, CA. Over his 50-year career in financial services, Peter served both individual and corporate investment management clients. Peter graduated from Hobart College with a BA in Psychology, and studied business cycle analysis at the American Institute for Economic Research. He served 9 years on the board of the Carmel Bach Festival, and in his spare time plays a mean bluegrass guitar. Peter and his wife, Anne, live in Corral de Tierra, CA.


Boyd Haight - Treasurer

Boyd A. Haight is a retired international development professional who advocates for better public understanding of world affairs. He was based overseas as an international civil servant for 38 years with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), having lived and worked in the Central African Republic, Kenya, Zambia, and Zimbabwe on fish culture development, and at FAO headquarters in Rome, Italy on FAO management and governance. Boyd holds a BSc in Biological Sciences from Stanford University and a MSc in International Agricultural Development from the University of California, Davis. He and his wife Susan currently reside in Hacienda Carmel during winter-spring and in Corea, Maine during summer-fall. He enjoys co-leading the WACMB discussion group and is an avid hiker, biker and kayaker.


Kevin Rice - Vice President

Kevin Michael Rice is a retired Army Colonel. He was commissioned in the Infantry and served for 30 years all over the world to include eight years overseas in Germany, Hong Kong, South Korea, and Beijing, China. He is the former Commandant of the Defense Language Institute (DLI) and Installation Commander of the Presidio of Monterey. He served for three years as the Army Attache to China where he was stationed at the U.S.Embassy in Beijing. Upon retiring from the Army, he served for nine years as the City Manager of Pismo Beach, CA. He has a BS in Engineering from West Point, an MA in National Security Affairs (East Asian History and Politics) from the Naval Postgraduate School, and an MS in National Security Strategy from the National War College in Washington D.C. He is a graduate of DLI's Basic year long Chinese Mandarin Course, and also studied Chinese at the British Ministry of Defense Chinese Language School in Hong Kong.Kevin and his wife Kitty have twin sons, and reside in San Luis Obispo, CA.


Michael Ipson

Michael Ipson is a retired international banker. He started his career at Chemical Bank, working in Hong Kong and Beijing in corporate banking, correspondent banking, and loan syndications. From 2005 to 2010, he worked for International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private sector arm of the World Bank assigned to Beijing, supporting efforts to develop the private sector in China, Mongolia, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Pakistan, the Middle East, and Africa. Thereafter he served on the boards of financial institutions in which IFC had invested in China, Vietnam, and Hong Kong. Before beginning his career in banking, he was a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard University in History and East Asian languages focusing on China and Vietnam. He earned his BA in History at UC Berkeley and his MA in East Asian Studies at Stanford as well as an MBA at DePaul University.


Linda Dilger

With a 34-year career in education from the elementary to the college level, a pair of master’s degrees (one in Technology in Education, and one in Educational Administration), and extensive volunteer experience, Linda brings a plethora of skills to our organization.

Eduardo Ochoa

Eduardo M. Ochoa has a BA in physics from Reed College, an MA in nuclear science and engineering from Columbia University, and a PhD in economics from the New School for Social Research. Prior to retiring, he was president of California State University, Monterey Bay from 2012 to 2022. Previously, he served as Assistant Secretary for Postsecondary Education in the Obama administration. In that office, he served as the Secretary of Education’s chief adviser on higher education issues, oversaw Federal student aid policy, and administered more than sixty programs supporting students of the nation’s colleges and universities. Prior to his Federal service, he spent thirty-nine years in the California State University system: as a faculty member at Fresno State and Cal State Los Angeles, Dean of Business at Cal Poly Pomona, and Provost and Vice President at Sonoma State University. He currently serves on the governance boards of the Council for Higher Education Accreditation, the National Council for State Authorization Reciprocity Agreements, and Reed College.


Doug Rogers

 An “Army brat,” Doug was born on Cape Cod and grew up in New York state, Texas, Georgia, Alaska, and Japan. Doug graduated from West Point, where he was awarded a BS in engineering in 1969. Around this time, he married Ginny; they had two sons and were married for fifty years, until Ginny passed away in 2019. Doug became an artillery officer and served in the Army for ten years, including a stint in Vietnam during the war. His last three years in the Army were spent at Fort Ord. After earning a master’s in human resources management from Pepperdine, Doug went to work for Kurt Salmon Associates (KSA), a management consulting firm based in Atlanta. This job took him all over the US and Puerto Rico. In 1985, he was sent to Asia, where he remained until he retired, living in Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, and Hong Kong, while working for KSA, Polo Ralph Lauren, and as an independent consultant in just about every country in Southeast Asia and the subcontinent. His work involved creating and implementing production efficiency projects and personnel training, and assisting with strategic planning.

Lisa Martin

Lisa is a native of Watsonville, CA and holds a degree in Political Science from UC Berkeley. Now retired, she spent nearly 30 years teaching secondary social studies, with half of her tenure abroad in the UAE, Malaysia, Jordan, and Qatar. Throughout her career at international schools, she founded numerous Model UN and youth leadership initiatives. As Executive Director of THIMUN Qatar—the largest MUN and youth leadership program in the Middle East—she managed student-led conferences, expanded programming for middle school students and Arabic speakers, and supported the development of Hope for Education and Leadership in Afghanistan (HELA). After returning to California, Lisa advanced her non-profit, MUN Impact, reaching over 60,000 secondary and university students in 120 countries with leadership opportunities and projects related to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals during the Covid pandemic. She currently assists the International School of Monterey with its MUN program and continues to support MUN Impact Nigeria, an extension of her organization. Lisa resides in Seaside with her husband, Bill Kerr.

Alan Scott

David Thon

After growing up in Illinois, David moved to Indiana for college, earning a BA with a double major in Philosophy and English Literature from Valparaiso University, followed by a BS in Electrical Engineering from Valparaiso Technical Institute. He worked his way through college by designing, building, and operating the stage lighting and sound systems for a 500-seat dinner theater near Chicago. After graduating, he was a technical editor for Motorola, then worked for several years as a hightech recruiter (aka headhunter) before settling into a career in marketing in the tech industry, doing both Product Marketing and Marketing Communications at Cadence Design Systems. Along the way, he earned an MBA from CSU Hayward (now CSU East Bay). David and Susann made their home in the Bay Area, where they operated The Registration Desk, a conference registration and service company, for several decades. They served some very large events, include the California Governor’s Conference for Women with over 10,000 attendees. As the chief technologist, CIO, and janitor, David built the office systems, wrote the database applications, created the website, and was the one and-only person on the helpdesk. After retiring in 2016, David and Susann moved to Pacific Grove full-time.

Mike Wilson

After Mike was discharged from the Army and finished up his cardiology training at Ohio State, he and Maryellen settled in Modesto, where they raised their daughter and identical twin sons, and where Mike worked as a clinical cardiologist for almost 24 years. Then, given how young both of his parents had been when they passed away, Mike retired at 55 and the family moved to Truckee, from which they pursued their two passions of skiing and traveling. When they weren’t able to be on the slopes, they hiked, golfed, and played tennis. They began to spend five months of each year in Carmel. After 20 years in Truckee, Mike and Maryellen were still alive and quite well, and so they decided to move to Carmel full time.

Eric Tao

Dr. Eric Tao is Emeritus Professor of Computer Science at California State University, Monterey Bay where he joined the faculty in 1998. He served as Founding Director of the School of Computing and Design and Director of the Institute for Innovation and Economic Development. His expertise includes innovation, entrepreneurship, economic development, artificial intelligence, and health technology.
Dr. Tao has mentored numerous Silicon Valley startups and currently chairs the Silicon Valley Research Institute and the Monterey Bay Chinese Chamber of Commerce. He earned his Ph.D. in Computer Engineering from the University of California, Irvine, and a bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering from Sun Yat-sen University in Taiwan. From 2018 to 2022, he was President of the University of East-West Medicine.
His research includes political participation and Sino-American relations. He lives in Carmel, California, and enjoys cycling, tennis, and classical music.

Shyam Kamath

Shyam Kamath, Ph.D. is an internationally recognized scholar, entrepreneur and educator who has gained recognition as a global innovator and expert in the areas of economic development, experiential learning and business program innovation. His distinguished career has also focused on building companies, programs and institutions that create economic and social opportunity, and human excellence for others. He is the Founding Dean Emeritus of the College of Business at CSU, Monterey Bay and has held academic and administrative positions at leading universities in the U.S., Canada, Asia and Europe. As an entrepreneur, Shyam co-founded three business start-ups, pioneered a number of successful academic start-ups, and worked as a corporate executive for leading international firms in the energy equipment and consumer goods areas industries. He has served as a consultant to the governments of Austria, Brazil, Canada and India and for over 100 companies and nonprofits in numerous countries. Shyam has published over eighty articles in leading peer-reviewed scholarly and trade journals and is the author or co-author of three books. Currently, Shyam serves as an advisor or on the boards of four nonprofits, a university board, and one for-profit company.

Katherine Walker

Chris Keehn

Judy Sloan

Judy Sloan is Chairman of our seven-member Program Committee. Prior to joining the board, she worked in Washington, D.C. where she was Director of the Washington office of the Asia Society, a nonprofit, public education organization founded by John D. Rockefeller 3rd. Prior to that, Judy was on the staff of the International Rescue Committee, an international humanitarian organization, and the Asia Foundation in San Francisco, a development assistance organization. Judy is a watercolorist and has shown her work in Carmel. A native San Franciscan, she earned her B.A. in International Relations from the University of California, Davis and her M.A. in East Asian Studies from Stanford University.

Nancy Johnson 


Fred Meurer

Fred Meuer is the owner of Meurer Municipal Consulting, LLC, a Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business with a primary focus on assisting military communities and the Installations they host in developing relationships to enhance their common need for critical infrastructure resilience and mission assurance. He was the catalyst for creating the concept of Intergovernmental Support Agreements with the Military bases in Monterey and partnership agreements between the Cities on the Monterey Peninsula, Monterey County, and the State of California for shared public safety and municipal services. During his military career, Fred had assignments in Germany, Korea and a combat tour in Viet Nam. As City Manager he completed a pro bono assignment for USAID in Dubrovnik, Croatia, which led to the City of Monterey becoming their sister-city. Mr. Meurer received a BS in Engineering and Science from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and a MS in Civil Engineering and an MS in Water Resource Planning from Stanford University. He attained the rank of Colonel in the U.S. Army. After his Army career, Mr. Meurer served as Monterey Public Works Director for five years and City Manager for the next 22+ years. He is Chairman of the Monterey Bay Defense Alliance, a member of the California Governor’s Military Council, and a member of the California Space Task Force.

Edward J O'Malley

With a career in the global food industry spanning four decades, Mr. O’Malley has worked with packaged foods and fresh produce for prominent brands like Dole, Sunkist, and Fresh Express. His international experience includes living and working in the Philippines for Dole, serving USAID in Russia and Afghanistan, and participating in a joint venture exporting wine from the Republic of Georgia to Russia. He has also held roles in food import and export across more than 20 countries. In addition to executive positions in supply chain, operations, and marketing, he has led as President of Datepac, Royal Rose, and Rocket Farms. Most recently, he served as CFO and Treasurer at The Center for Spiritual Awakening in Pacific Grove, a 401(c)(3) non-profit organization. Ed was also a member of the World Affairs Council of Northern California, where he acted as Program Chairman and later as Chairman of the International Forum—a volunteer committee of young professionals organizing events for the Council in the Bay Area.

Mr. O’Malley earned his B.S. in Agricultural Economics, focusing on International Trade and Development, from the University of Illinois, and an M.B.A. in Agribusiness from Santa Clara University. In 2018, he published American Renewal: A New Season of Optimism, Cooperation, and Community, a book analyzing the cycles of social, political, and foreign policy mood shifts in America since 1945.

©2026 World Affairs Council of the Monterey Bay Area All rights reserved
The World Affairs Council of the Monterey Bay Area, Inc. (WACMB) is a
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization with an IRS EIN of 77-0301206.
 

Contact:

Phone: (831) 643 -1855

Email: info@wacmb.org

 

Address:

WACMB

P.O. Box 83

Monterey, CA 93942

 

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