
Two New Members Elected to the NNIP Executive Committee
The National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership (NNIP) was founded by the partner organizations, and it continues to be led by an Executive Committee of elected partner members who help steer the direction of the network. NNIP is pleased to announce two fantastic additions to the Executive Committee — Amy Rohan, program manager of data access and community engagement at Data You Can Use, and Lysa Moore, data fluency and training manager at Neighborhood Nexus — who joined the Executive Committee in January 2026.
The Executive Committee is the central mechanism guiding NNIP. Along with leadership from the Urban Institute, the six members serve three-year terms to plan partnership strategy, monitor performance under the plan, and advise on ongoing activities and policies of the partnership. More information on NNIP's governance is available here.
The four continuing Executive Committee members are Sarah Eisele-Dyrli (Hartford-Connecticut), Lee Guekguezian (Minneapolis-St. Paul), Amanda Phillips de Lucas (Baltimore), and Elly Schoen (Los Angeles). We also want to express our appreciation for the members who served through 2025, Victor Amaya (Milwaukee) and Elizabeth Monk (Pittsburgh).
More information on the newest Executive Committee members:
Amy Rohan is a community-based geographer and program manager who is passionate about incorporating residents’ voices in both data collection and sharing. In her role at Data You Can Use, she convenes data users groups, develops publicly available data resources, and works closely with community-based organizations on initiatives related to housing, health, and other neighborhood development goals.
Lysa Moore is an experienced nonprofit worker with a background ranging from assisting youth navigating the mental health and foster care systems to training, data and outcomes management. Her passion lies in helping teams and communities understand what data says about their population and working with them to advance their work in ways that improve the lives of the people they serve.
