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Lisa Wiederlight, M.P.P., Board President/Founder
Ms. Wiederlight is the mother of a young adult with autism. She currently serves as the chief performance officer and communications coordinator at the University of Baltimore Center for Public Safety Innovation, where she is responsible for performance management duties for the National High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) Program Office and for the Washington/Baltimore HIDTA (W/B HIDTA); and for authoring the W/B HIDTA’s threat assessment and annual report documents. As communications coordinator, she manages media relations, the W/B HIDTA’s social media efforts, and marketing for the organization.
Prior to joining the W/B HIDTA, Ms. Wiederlight led a national autism nonprofit for five years, helping to pass the federal “Kevin and Avonte’s Law Act,” which provides funding to first responders and other community organizations to prevent and address wandering in children with developmental disabilities and people with certain forms of dementia, such as Alzheimer’s disease. She also advocated for passage of a Maryland law that creates a state autism coordinator, annual State Autism Strategy, and an Autism Stakeholder Group, on which she serves as the chair of the Housing and Community Integration Committee.
Ms. Wiederlight has previously worked as a public affairs specialist at the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, a media relations and public education consultant in various Washington, DC-based consulting firms, a development consultant and grant writer for numerous local jurisdictions, and a real estate investor.In 2023, Ms. Wiederlight joined the board of the Autism Society of Maryland, after co-founding the Autism-Asperger Association of Calvert County in 2005. She has participated in numerous media interviews on the nature and extent of the autism crisis in the United States.
Ms. Wiederlight graduated magna cum laude with a B.A. in government and politics and a Master of Public Policy degree from the University of Maryland at College Park. She was a member of the University Honors Program and the 1987 Division I National Championship field hockey team as an undergraduate, and a finalist in the competitive Presidential Management Internship Program in graduate school. -
Tom Carr, Board Vice President/Treasurer
Thomas H. Carr recently retired as the executive director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy’s (ONDCP) Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (W/B HIDTA) Program, a position he held since 1994. He still manages the National HIDTA Program’s Performance Management Process, and chairs the Performance Management Process Committee, which has established metrics to measure the efficiency and effectiveness of drug control efforts in the fields of drug law enforcement, criminal intelligence, treatment, and prevention for the HIDTA Program. Mr. Carr was awarded the ONDCP Director’s Award for his work in performance management in 2004.
In response to the Nation’s opioid epidemic, Mr. Carr has worked with ONDCP and other HIDTA programs on the Overdose Response Strategy (ORS). This Strategy has resulted in the creation of a public health-public safety partnership supported by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the hiring of drug intelligence officers and public health analysts across the country.
Mr. Carr also spearheaded the development of the Overdose Detection and Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), a real-time overdose syndromic surveillance system used to identify spikes in fatal and non-fatal overdoses. ODMAP was cited in both “Good Morning America” and Roll Call newspaper for identifying a rise in overdoses during the COVID-19 pandemic in May 2020.
Mr. Carr was the lead designer for HIDTA’s Case Explorer system. Case Explorer is both a case management system and an event deconfliction and target coordination system. It is used nationwide by law enforcement agencies at all levels of government. Overdose investigations reported in the system are instantly reported to ODMAP, allowing analysts to explore links to drug trafficking organizations that are likely responsible for spikes in overdoses.
Prior to his work at the W/B HIDTA, Mr. Carr was a Lt. Colonel with the Maryland State Police, and retired as chief of the Bureau of Drug Enforcement. He graduated with honors from Towson University, and was first in his class at the Maryland State Police Academy in 1971. Mr. Carr attended the FBI National Academy, DEA Drug Commanders School, and the Federal Executive Institute; and served as an adjunct instructor with the University of Maryland College Park, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology for six years. -
Michelle Berkovitz, Esq., Board Member
Michelle Berkovitz recently retired after 36 years as a telecommunications lawyer, most recently at Verizon. She was a radio news director and television newscaster before law school. Ms. Berkovitz is now the owner of Spring Green Coaching LLC, where she provides health and wellness coaching, specializing in helping caregivers. She is the primary caregiver for her young adult son Eli, who was born with Familial Dysautonomia, a progressive neurological disease. Ms. Berkovitz served as a board member and general counsel of Familial Dysautonomia Hope, which raised funds for research into treatments for the disease.
Ms. Berkovitz loves the outdoors and has led several Sierra Club backpacking trips. She enjoys hiking, throwing pottery on the wheel, doing yoga, spending time with friends, creative writing, and learning new information related to health and wellness. Ms. Berkovitz is married to Dan Berkovitz, and has an adult daughter Zoe.
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Aryanna Graf-Jones, Board Member
Aryanna Graf-Jones is a model, singer, actress, and disability advocate focusing on fashion and lifestyle. Her lived experience with cerebral palsy motivates her to increase understanding and acceptance in both the entertainment and typical world. Ms. Graf-Jones has six years of experience working as staff and community group leader for the children and student ministry at Bay Area Community Church. She also works with FlyBrave and A Touch of Understanding, which support neurodiverse adults and educate children on understanding and acceptance of disabilities within the school system. Outside of work, she enjoys dancing, horseback riding, attending concerts, and traveling. Ms. Graf-Jones graduated from Anne Arundel Community College with an A.A in Biochemistry Transfer Studies.
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Lori Scott, RN, MHA, BSN, Board Member
Lori Scott is a National School Health Consultant and the mother of a daughter with multiple disabilities. Ms. Scott has been a registered nurse for over 30 years, and has extensive experience in school health, pediatrics, home health administration, and consulting for educational and residential programs that support people with disabilities. She is an educational advocate and attends IEP meetings with families who are struggling to get a free and appropriate public education for their student(s). Ms. Scott is a strong advocate for her daughter, and has developed and promoted several legislative bills and new laws in Maryland to ensure students and people with disabilities receive appropriate accommodations in schools.
Ms. Scott is the past president of the board of the Arc of Maryland, and has served on several other nonprofit boards. She holds a BSN from Salisbury University, and a Masters in Health Administration from Towson University.
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Rev. Megan Stewart-Sicking, M.Div., Board Member
Megan Stewart-Sicking is the former chair of the Special Education Citizens’ Advisory Committee for Baltimore County Public Schools. She has spent years serving as an advocate in all areas of special education, including funding, policy, training, curriculum, and student and family supports. In 2018, she received an Executive Citation and was honored with a volunteer award by the Baltimore County Commission on Disabilities.
Rev. Stewart-Sicking trained for her professional career at the Virginia Theological Seminary, and interned at the Washington National Cathedral with a special interest in spiritual disciplines. She earned her M.Div. with honors after having earned a B.A. in Theology with honors from Xavier University (Cincinnati). In her 20 years of ordained ministry, she has served Episcopal churches in Columbus Ohio, suburban northern Virginia, and Sparks, Maryland. Rev. Stewart-Sicking is passionate about using her time to serve the wider community around issues of equity, awareness, and funding. She is married to Dr. Joseph Stewart-Sicking, professor and chair in the Department of Education Specialities at Loyola University, and together they love spending time with their two fantastic children, one on the Autism Spectrum. -
David Vigilante, Esq., Board Member
David Vigilante is executive vice president and general counsel for CNN and Turner Sports. Mr. Vigilante’s responsibilities include service as chief counsel for CNN’s worldwide operations as well as legal oversight of all U.S.-based sports brands and programming owned and operated by Warner Bros. Discovery, such as the NBA on TNT, NHL on TNT, MLB, Bleacher Report, March Madness and NCAA.com. Mr. Vigilante occasionally contributes to CNN and in 2013, he was awarded the national Edward R. Murrow Award for writing.
Mr. Vigilante has been a long-time board member of Kenny Leon’s True Colors Theater, an organization founded by Tony Award-winning director Kenny Leon to preserve the African American theater canon and to be a platform for new voices of color. He also serves on the board of the Academe of the Oaks, a 9-12 private high school in Atlanta based on the Waldorf educational model.
Mr. Vigilante served for several years on the board of the Community School, now known as Threshold Community Program, in Decatur, Georgia. Threshold is a program committed to providing resources to teens and adults on the Autism spectrum to ensure they live full and enriching lives to the greatest of their capabilities. He also held the TBS, Inc. seat on the Georgia Chamber of Commerce directorate for several years.
Based in Atlanta, GA., Mr. Vigilante is an elder at Druid Hills Presbyterian Church and has served multiple terms on the church’s Session, the governing council for the congregation.
Mr. Vigilante is a 1989 graduate of the University of Maryland and a 1993 graduate from Emory Law School. -
Rachel Barcellona, Advisory Board
An advocate for people with disabilities, Rachel created her platform, "The Ability Beyond Disabilities," to inspire those who have challenges to strive for their dreams, and to educate those who might not understand the challenges they face. As an individual with autism, she faced many social challenges as a child, but now serves as the spokesperson for the Center for Autism and Related Disabilities at the University of South Florida, and as a board member.
Ms. Barcellona also serves as a board member for the Unicorn Children's Foundation, Els for Autism Center of Excellence, Dyspraxia Foundation USA, and works with The Global Autism Project, Doug Flutie Jr. Foundation for Autism, and Victoria's Voice foundation, all of which work to impact the lives of families everywhere.
Ms. Barcellona is an actress currently with a lead role in the Broadway production of Tartuffe, a model, and vocalist. She also works with several organizations that provide services to individuals with disabilities, including such therapies as occupational, physical, music, and art. Ms. Barcellona graduated from the University of South Florida with a B.A. in English, and a minor in communication.
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David Bulitt, Esq., Advisory Board
Family law specialist David Bulitt has been praised as the lawyer who “epitomizes stability and old-fashioned common sense” by Bethesda Magazine, and routinely makes every top Washington, DC Metro lawyer list.
Mr. Bulitt is a shareholder of Joseph, Greenwald and Laake, PA., one of Maryland’s largest and most prominent law firms. His practice focuses on all areas of family law, and he is often appointed by local courts to serve in one of the most difficult and demanding legal roles, as a best interest attorney for children whose parents are embroiled in high-conflict custody disputes. Mr. Bulitt also has extensive experience working with families that have children with special needs.
Mr. Bulitt has been recognized as one of the “Best Lawyers in America” and as one of Maryland and Washington, D.C.’s “Super Lawyers.” For more than a decade, he has been selected as one of the D.C. area’s “Top Divorce Lawyers” by both Washington and Bethesda magazines.
Mr. Bulitt spends his spare time writing and working on his books. His latest, “The 5 Core Conversations for Couples,” is co-written with his wife of 35 years. Julie Bulitt is a family therapist and their book is filled with relationship insights, often from quite different perspectives. Their book was published by Skyhorse Publishing and Simone & Schuster ebooks on Valentine’s Day, 2020. Mr. Bulitt’s novels, “Card Game,” and “Because I Had To,” were published in 2015 and 2017 respectively. -
Mike DiMayo, Advisory Board
Mr. DiMayo has enjoyed a prominent career spanning 29 years as the most successful producer in the history of The Hartford Life, until starting his own insurance company, The Affluence Group, LLC in 2008. He joined forces with Kevin Myers, CPA, M.S. Taxation, to form the Oxford Risk Management Group family of companies. Mr. DiMayo is a 30-year member of the Society of Financial Service Professionals, and a member of the Baltimore Estate Planning Council. He also received the Associate in Captive Insurance (ACI) designation in 2016, and received recognition by Captive Review as one of the “Top 20 Influencers for Enterprise Risk Captives” for the past two years.
In his spare time, Mr. DiMayo plays rhythm guitar for High Voltage, one of the nation’s premier AC/DC tribute bands. He serves as board chairman for the Casey Cares Foundation, a non-profit organization providing uplifting programs for critically ill children and their families, and is also an active board member for SafeMinds, a non-profit organization working to resolve the autism epidemic through research, treatment and awareness. A graduate of Franklin and Marshall College, Mike resides in Monkton, Maryland.
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Wes Guckert, PTP, Advisory Board
Wes Guckert is a certified Professional Transportation Planner (PTP), a fellow with the Institute of Transportation Engineers, and a past instructor in the Office of Executive Education at Harvard University. He served in a leadership position for a National Product Council with Urban Land Institute (ULI) and is a member of the Texas A&M Transportation Technology Advisory Council, RELLIS Campus development for transportation technology research and testing; and Texas A&M Campus Transportation Technology Initiative deployment.
Mr. Guckert is an expert in traffic engineering and transportation planning, and a technical adviser in transit planning, traffic impact analysis, traffic signal design, and traffic circulation and access studies. He has played a major role in urban and suburban area projects in the Mid-Atlantic. and has consulted on projects throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico, as well as overseas in China, Indonesia, South Africa, Istanbul, and Dubai.As the president and CEO of The Traffic Group, Inc.—a traffic engineering and transportation planning specialty firm he founded in 1985, Mr. Guckert has championed automated parking solutions in the United States. Working closely with system manufacturers, he and his team provide project pro forma, queuing analysis and conceptual plans.
Mr. Guckert is sought after to provide presentations to various community and government associations, and travels throughout the U.S. speaking on the topics of self-driving vehicles, Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) systems, traffic calming measures and automated/mechanical parking systems. He is also involved in a number of community and philanthropic ventures. -
Lora Peppard, Ph.D., DNP, PMHNP-BC, Advisory Board
Dr. Lora Peppard is the Deputy Director for Treatment and Prevention for the Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) and the Director of ADAPT, a national training and technical assistance division supporting the integration of evidence-based substance use prevention strategies into HIDTA communities. Prior to her appointment with HIDTA, she was an Associate Professor at George Mason University and Project Director for multiple federally funded substance use and behavioral health prevention initiatives.
As a licensed psychiatric nurse practitioner for almost 20 years, Dr. Peppard has clinical experience in emergency, inpatient, and outpatient settings working with underserved, military, and serious mental illness populations. She has developed system-wide programs to address the unmet substance use and behavioral health needs of youth, caregivers, and adults. She serves as the President-Elect for the American Psychiatric Nurses Association and as a community, state, national, and international consultant on substance use and behavioral health prevention. She has authored several peer-reviewed publications on her work.
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Emily Pratt, Ph.D., Advisory Board
Emily Pratt serves as the clinical lead BCBA for Proud Moments ABA, providing clinical support to the board-certified behavior analysts (BCBAs) in Maryland and Virginia. Ms. Pratt has been providing in-home and center-based services as a BCBA since becoming certified in 2017. Prior to this, she worked for the Honolulu District Public Schools as an autism consultant to teachers, helping them build programs for their students with autism. Ms. Pratt also served as a special education teacher for 10 years in a variety of educational environments, such as self-contained, resource, and inclusion.
Ms. Pratt earned a B.A. in elementary and special education from Bloomsburg University. She then earned a Master’s degree in autism, with a specialization in applied behavioral analysis, at the University of Hawaii, and is currently in the dissertation stage of her Ph.D. in psychology with a concentration in ABA. Her passion for working with individuals with autism is evident in her smile, energy, and creativity at work. -
Delegate Michele Guyton, Ph.D., Advisory Board
Delegate Dr. Michele Guyton, an autism parent herself, has been an active champion for the disability community for years. In addition to sponsoring and passing numerous bills that would protect and serve children and adults with disabilities, she has served on the board of directors for the Kennedy Krieger Institute since 2020, and the board of directors for the Tourette Association of America Mid-Atlantic Chapter since 2006.
Delegate Guyton served as a board member of the Maryland State Department of Education from 2015 to 2019, and a member of the Maryland Adult Learning Access Commission from 2017-2018. She also served as a member of the Maryland School Safety Sub-Cabinet Behavioral Threat Assessment Workgroup in 2018.
As an active member of Maryland’s House Ways and Means Committee, Delegate Guyton served as a member of the subcommittee on early childhood, and a member of the subcommittee on education. She now serves on the Committee on the Environment and Transportation. She was also recently appointed to serve on Maryland Autism Stakeholder Group, which has been charged with creating the State and Nation’s first annual Autism Strategic Plan. Notably, Delegate Guyton sponsored and shepherded the historic legislation through the Maryland General Assembly that created the Maryland Autism Stakeholder Group, mandated the development and evaluation of an annual Autism Strategic Plan, and created the Nation’s first state autism coordinator position—in her first year in Annapolis.
Delegate Guyton also has a distinguished academic career. She earned a B.A. in in psychology/anthropology from Vanderbilt University, and went on to earn an M.A. in psychology/women’s studies from Radcliffe College, and a Ph.D. in developmental and social psychology from Brandeis University. She served as a graduate research assistant at Wellesley College’s Center for Women, and as an adjunct professor/post-doctoral researcher at the University of Iowa Department of Psychology for six years.