Save Mount Diablo’s 2024–2025 Impact Report

Bobcat
Photo by Vishal Subramanyan

Protecting and Defending Mount Diablo and the Diablo Range

Download the Impact Report (PDF) 


Table of Contents

Letter from the Executive Director

PRESERVE | Land Acquisition

DEFEND | Advocating for Conservation

RESTORE | Building a Stewardship Community

EDUCATE | Education and Outreach

ENJOY | Hikes and Outings

DIABLO RANGE | Long-Term Vision and Bold Action

GRATITUDE | Thanks to Our Supporters and Partners

FINANCIALS | A Successful Fiscal Year


Letter from the Executive Director

Dear Supporters,

We are celebrating and giving thanks for the outstanding fiscal year we recently completed. Together, we delivered a successful fiscal year financially, programmatically, and organizationally.

This April 1, 2024 to March 31, 2025 fiscal year is outlined for you in this impact report.

Save Mount Diablo has consistently delivered successful fiscal years for many years now, and a wonderful team is key to making consistent wins possible.

At the heart of our team are our great staff, Board, and supporters. I want to thank you all for making our land conservation success, year in and year out, possible.

Another key to our ongoing success has been not taking our success for granted. We are deeply grateful for it and the people who help make it possible.

Also important to our ongoing success is our remaining actively strategic as a team.

We have a rolling three-year strategic plan process where we regularly engage with our strategic direction, work to build team alignment around it, and consistently check our progress with our strategic plan goals—making adjustments and improvements as we go.

Your generous investments in us are also critical. Your investments this past fiscal year created numerous lasting green returns that will benefit Mount Diablo, and its Diablo Range and associated communities (flora, fauna, and peoples), for years to come.

Here are just a few examples of the returns your investments created this past fiscal year.

mount diablo sunrise with black sage

Photo by Ted Clement

We were part of the campaign for Prop. 4 this past November. Its passage created the largest state climate bond in the history of our country and will make resources available for conservation in the Diablo Range for years.

We bolstered the campaign for slow-growth Measure A in San Benito County in November. Its passage added new open space protections to the county with the largest swath of the Diablo Range.

We successfully acquired the strategic 98-acre Ginochio Schwendel Ranch from the most important landowning family in Contra Costa County. This strategic land is contiguous with Marsh Creek and other land we previously protected.

We successfully made our annual payment of $100,000 towards our planned acquisition of the 88 +/- acre North Peak Ranch on the slopes of Mount Diablo. That was our ninth of 10 regular annual payments we must make. Then in December 2026 we will make a final balloon payment of over $250,000, closing escrow thereafter.

We opened two new public trails at our Curry Canyon Ranch. In the last few years, we have created more than seven miles of public trails!

We stewarded thousands of conserved acres—such as removing numerous 40-yard dumpsters of debris from the Balcerzak inholding property, within Mount Diablo State Park, that we acquired in 2023.

We connected thousands of people to nature through our education and communication efforts like our new Young Diablo Explorers program for third to fifth graders.

The fiscal year covered in this impact report was also meaningful to me for another reason. For more than half of the fiscal year my family and I were dealing with a major crisis. Last September, my wife, Boonsuay, was diagnosed with an aggressive type of breast cancer.

She is such a positive light and foundation for our family so when we learned she was at risk it was scary.

The chemotherapy phase of her cancer treatment started last October and was completed in late February. The chemo was hard on her system and triggered emergency room visits and other frightful experiences.

Ted & family at Mount Diablo State Park

Ted (left), Boonsuay (right), and their youngest son (center) out for Boonsuay’s first return hike in the Diablo mountains since completing her chemotherapy. Photo by Ted Clement

Boonsuay is now in the radiation phase of her treatment and there will be other phases that run until at least October. However, we are grateful because since completing chemo she is doing well and getting stronger by the day.

Despite this big challenge we did not collapse but kept moving forward in a positive and successful way. That fills me with immense gratitude. Gratitude for my wife and family. Gratitude for our Save Mount Diablo team.

Gratitude for the kindness of so many people who helped us during our time of need. Gratitude for nature and our mountains, which helped me get through this past year.

For all the reasons above and more, I extend a heartfelt thanks to you and the rest of our team for helping Save Mount Diablo complete another successful fiscal year.

Thankfully, we come into the new fiscal year that started on April 1, 2025 with momentum, gratitude, and confidence knowing we have a great team, with people like you, and we have a clear strategic plan to continue advancing our land conservation mission for Mount Diablo and its Diablo Range.

With Gratitude,

Edward Sortwell Clement, Jr., Executive Director


PRESERVE

Ginochio Schwendel Ranch

Ginochio Schwendel Ranch. Photo by Cooper Ogden

Through focused strategy, collaborative effort, and a dedicated community of supporters, the success of Save Mount Diablo’s land conservation program continues to grow.

This year’s acquisition work highlights the organization’s endurance and ability to increase the amount of permanently protected land in the Diablo region, year after year.

“I’m pleased to make this deal with Save Mount Diablo. When you think of influence, people often think about big environmental groups. Personally, I think Save Mount Diablo is the most influential environmental organization in our area. I’ve worked cooperatively with them for over 50 years. They’re financially sound and have the funds to make solid deals and the integrity to go with it. We graze cattle on a number of SMD properties. I’m happy to see this part of the Ginochio Schwendel Ranch go to Save Mount Diablo because they have always been a good neighbor.” —John Ginochio

Acquisition

Ginochio Schwendel Ranch

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

We purchased and permanently protected 98 acres in the Marsh Creek corridor, with generous support from the Wildlife Conservation Board and a dedicated conservation community, including readers of Joan Morris’s column in the East Bay Times and The Mercury News.

This high-priority acquisition is our first conservation purchase from the Ginochio family, owners of significant lands on and around Mount Diablo.

Its conservation will protect rare volcanic habitat, enhance conservation values of our adjoining Marsh Creek 5 property, and provide increased protection to the Marsh Creek corridor.

North Peak Ranch

north peak ranch

North Peak Ranch. Photo by Scott Hein

We completed the ninth of 10 annual option payments toward the purchase and permanent protection of 88.5 acres, in the same area as our Krane Pond property (protected in 2023), our Young Canyon property (protected in 2006), and the Concord Mt. Diablo Trail Ride Association conservation easement (protected in 2022).

We’re already preparing for our stewardship role at North Peak Ranch when its acquisition is concluded, which will be by January 2027.

Acquisition Partners

This year, we formed a coalition working group of many of the state’s leading land trusts and conservation organizations and began meeting monthly, with the shared goal of increasing land acquisition activity by California State Parks.

We also made multiple trips to Sacramento to meet with California State Parks and with state Assemblymembers, Senators, and other officials to draw attention to this issue.

Encouraging progress was made this year, including California State Parks hiring a Chief of Acquisition and Real Property Service, a role that been unfilled for nine years.


DEFEND

Mount Diablo

Photo by Sean Burke

Smart land use decisions that protect natural land, connect recreational trails, and link wildlife corridors are a critical piece of Save Mount Diablo’s conservation strategy.

The undeveloped land that remains in the Diablo region is a precious, and dwindling, natural resource.

This work requires ongoing advocacy and a watchful eye—it’s easier to create a good plan than undo a bad one.

Advocating for Conservation

Proposition 4

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

We invested significant time and resources into the successful passage of Proposition 4, the $10 billion California climate bond, which will provide new and essential funding for conservation work in the Diablo region and throughout the state.

Save Mount Diablo served on the Board of the Committee for Clean Water, Natural Resources, and Parks, which had a seat on the official Yes on Prop. 4 campaign.

The climate bond is the largest ever voter-approved climate investment, and includes up to $80 million dedicated to the greater
Diablo Range through a “San Andreas Corridor/ Inner Coast Range” program. We are making plans for projects that could be made possible by this extraordinary opportunity.

Measure A, San Benito County

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

Our expanded advocacy work is already having a positive impact and helping to increase protection for sensitive, open space land in the Diablo Range.

We supported the efforts of Protect San Benito, a grassroots organization in San Benito County, and helped bring about the passage of slow-growth Measure A in November 2024.

Thanks to Measure A, voter approval is now required to change the land use designation of unincorporated rangeland or agricultural land in San Benito County.

Measure II, Dublin

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

We led the campaign in opposition to Dublin’s Measure II, which undermines the 2014 Urban Limit Line protections and could lead to significant development in the open space between Dublin and Livermore.

Regrettably, confused voters approved the deceptive Measure II in November 2024 by a narrow margin, but we were prepared for the possibility of that outcome. We had already filed a lawsuit under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and made a legal challenge to the measure.

Our work to challenge Measure II and any development plans that would cause harmful fragmentation of this essential wildlife corridor continues.


RESTORE

planting milkweed

Planting milkweed. Photo by Haley Sutton

Building a Stewardship Community

Volunteer Opportunities This Year

  • DiRT (Diablo Restoration Team) Days
  • DiRT Watering Crew
  • Volunteer Property Stewards
  • Eagle Scout Service Project
  • Student Stewardship Volunteers
  • Classroom Stewardship Service Days
  • Coastal Cleanup Day
  • Diablo Conservation Experience
  • Fifth Annual Pine Canyon Cleanup

10,000 Trees and Plants Project

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

This pragmatic initiative, part of our organizational Climate Action Plan, inspired hundreds of students and volunteers through hands-on stewardship opportunities this year.

After four years of progress, and the help of many people, we’ve planted or protected more than 4,400 native trees and plants on conserved land.

Milkweeds for Monarchs

We planted 300 native California milkweeds and hundreds of native nectar plants to support migrating monarch butterflies and other pollinators.

American Kestrels

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

With grant support and a working partnership with The Kestrel Campaign, we expanded our multi-year effort to support the American kestrel population in the Mount Diablo area.

We added 12 new cameras, and we now monitor activity at 19 of the 37 nest boxes that we’ve installed.

Managing Wildfire Risk

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

As land stewards and rural landowners, we successfully fulfilled our annual fire abatement requirements and managed wildfire risk on 16 of our properties.

Our staff and volunteers also helped reduce fuel load in Mount Diablo State Park during organized workdays by chipping and clearing material.

One staff member, who recently completed rigorous training and certification, volunteered to support two prescribed burns in the Mitchell Canyon area of Mount Diablo State Park.


EDUCATE

young diablo explorers

Young Diablo Explorers. Photo by Emily Sherwood

Nature is an age-old teaching tool, and we’re helping students discover its priceless, timeless lessons at our Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve and Curry Canyon Ranch field station.

Students and school groups are benefiting from dynamic lessons in our outdoor classrooms, where they can hike, observe wildlife, sample creek waters, and experience the natural world up close, sometimes for the first time.

Young Diablo Explorers

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

To reach even more elementary school students and educators, we made the curricula for our new third- to fifth-grade outdoor learning program available to the public on our website.

Diablo Conservation Experience

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

Our staff helped inspire more than 220 students from Campolindo High School, De La Salle High School, Pittsburg High School, and Concord High School this year.

Students benefitted from a classroom learning session followed by an impactful day in nature, where they contributed to a restoration project, completed an interpretive hike, and enjoyed a period of solo reflection and writing in nature.

Mangini Ranch Educational Preserve

Our 208-acre preserve, with support from our crew of volunteer docents, provided space for a private and peaceful day in nature to return visitors and new community groups.


ENJOY

mount diablo

Photo by Sean Burke

A primary goal of Save Mount Diablo’s conservation programs is to encourage participants to deepen their relationship with nature through service, education, and responsible recreation.

By inviting people into these wilder spaces, where nature can be a counterbalance to the demands of modern life, we inspire durable community support for the land we’ve worked hard to protect together.

New Trails

knobcone point trail

Photo by Sean Burke

In 2024, we opened 1.7 new miles of publicly accessible trails through the upper portion of Save Mount Diablo’s Curry Canyon Ranch, connecting more trails to Knobcone Point Road and opening several new loops for hikers, runners, mountain bikers, and equestrians.

In the past three years, we’ve opened more than seven miles of trails on our protected lands and improved access to remote and wild aspects of Mount Diablo.

Moonlight on the Mountain

Moonlight on the Mountain 2024

Moonlight on the Mountain. Photo by Jessamyn Photography

This spectacular mountain gala provided an unforgettable experience to more than 500 guests, who generously helped raise more than $550,000 to support conservation on and around Mount Diablo and in the Diablo Range.

Discover Diablo

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

Through this free public outing series, staff and volunteers offered 36 informative hikes and outings—birding, geology, wildflowers and botany, plein air painting, mountain biking, meditation, yoga, and more—to hundreds of participants from around the Bay Area.

This year, Discover Diablo also offered a growing number of opportunities to explore the Diablo Range through photography, hiking, and rock climbing.


DIABLO RANGE

California condor

California condor. Photo by Scott Hein

The Diablo Range is extremely high in biodiversity and home to many rare and endemic plant and wildlife species.

Last August, a flock of seven endangered California condors flew from San Benito County to Mount Diablo, demonstrating once again how the Diablo Range is a critical wildlife corridor that sustains Mount Diablo.

In this time of the climate and biodiversity crises, long-term vision and bold action are vitally needed.

Save Mount Diablo’s advocacy work spans all 12 counties in the Diablo Range. We’re forging new collaborative partnerships, strategically planning for the long term, thinking holistically and ambitiously, and working with urgency to protect more land faster.

BioBlitz

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

This year’s 24-hour event was held at the San Antonio Valley Ecological Reserve (SAVER) in the Diablo Range.

The group of 40 scientists, researchers, and Save Mount Diablo volunteers and staff recorded 400 species within the reserve, including rare and charismatic species like golden eagles, bald eagles, and a herd of 30 or more tule elk.

A mountain lion was spotted near SAVER, the first time one has been recorded during a BioBlitz event.

Blunt-Nosed Leopard Lizard

Blunt nosed leopard lizard

Blunt-nosed leopard lizard. Photo by Scott Hein

We launched a new partnership with the Fresno Chaffee Zoo to support recovery of the endangered blunt-nosed leopard lizard, which lives in the Panoche area and other parts of the southern Diablo Range.

Diablo Range Convening

Pinnacles National Park

Pinnacles National Park. Photo by Scott Hein

This year, we’ve connected with dozens of conservation organizations, lined up speakers, and planned a one-day conference, held in San Juan Bautista on June 5, 2025.

Organizational partnership and collaboration will be key to achieving increased land protection throughout the 12-county Diablo Range.

San Benito County

Previous Image
Next Image

info heading

info content

Although Measure A led to a significant win for conservation in San Benito County, our continued advocacy support was still needed after the election, when the outgoing Hollister City Council quickly approved General Plan updates that would have undermined Measure A’s slow-growth protections that had not yet been implemented.

With our support, our grassroots partner, Protect San Benito, organized a successful signature drive and referendum, and the General Plan updates were rescinded.


GRATITUDE

four days diablo hikers

Photo by Scott Hein

We’re deeply grateful for the incredible community of individuals, foundations, and partner organizations whose generous support made this year’s inspiring conservation progress possible.

Every contribution has helped build the momentum for our conservation work by providing hope, energy, and meaningful impact.

Together, we’re making tangible progress—protecting natural lands, inspiring the next generations of conservationists, enhancing habitats for local wildlife, and helping to shape a bright, sustainable future for the Diablo region.

This year’s success is a powerful tribute to the generosity and dedication of our amazing community.

We truly could not do this work without you.

Thank you!

For a list of donors, please click here.


FINANCIALS

mount diablo globe lily

Mount Diablo globe lily. Photo by Scott Hein

This fiscal year (April 1, 2024 to March 31, 2025), Save Mount Diablo successfully raised more operating revenue than operating funds expended, thereby achieving a large surplus with its general operating budget.

Save Mount Diablo’s total revenue for this fiscal year was just over $5.9 million. More than 74 percent of our funding comes from donors like you!

Operating and nonoperating expenditures for this fiscal year totaled approximately $5.7 million (including our Ginochio Schwendel Ranch property purchase of $1.39 million with a generous grant of $728,000 from the California Wildlife Conservation Board and our ninth option payment of $100,000 for North Peak Ranch).

Program expenses other than land acquisition include stewardship projects on 22 properties and conservation easements we own, education and outreach programs, and advocacy to counter land conservation threats.

Numbers are based on unaudited financials for April 1, 2024 to March 31, 2025. Please go to our financials page to see our most recent 990 tax returns.

Total Revenue 4/1/2024–3/31/2025          

Total Revenue Approximately $5.98 m

Individual Contributions $4,452,257

Foundations & Grants $984,408

Interest, Fees, & Other $368,314

Corporate Support $177,400

 

Total $5,982,379

Total Expenditures 4/1/2024–3/31/2025

Total Expenditures Approx. $5.69 m

Program $4,059,088

Administration & Management $918,296

Fundraising $716,470

 

 

Total: $5,693,85

 

 


THANK YOU TO OUR CONTRIBUTORS

Editor: Laura Kindsvater

Contributing Writers: Ted Clement, Samantha Kading, Monica Oei

Photographers: Sean Burke, Ted Clement, Gavin Emmons/National Park Service, Fresno Chaffee Zoo, Juan Pablo Galván Martínez, Scott Hein, Jessamyn Photography, Laura Kindsvater, Floyd McCluhan, Mary Nagle, Cooper Ogden, George Phillips, Protect San Benito, Emily Sherwood, Haley Sutton, Vishal Subramanyan, Cecilia Zefeldt

Map: Seth Adams, Samantha Kading, and Laura Kindsvater

Design: Brit Hutchinson

Join us to save the remaining natural lands of Mount Diablo!

Make a Donation