EPA AWARDS $2.1 MILLION FOR ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION PROJECTS
Frank McIntyre, Office of External Programs, (617) 918-1095
For immediate release: October 24, 1996; Release # 96-10-21
BOSTON -- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is awarding $2.1 million in grants to states, tribes, schools, universities, and non-profit organizations nationwide for environmental education initiatives.
There are 23 recipients of grants totaling $167,474 in EPA's New England region, including 11 in Massachusetts. The New England recipients were selected from 153 proposals requesting funds of more than $1.6 million. Sixty-seven proposals seeking $798,519 came from Massachusetts.
"These grants represent our smartest investment in the future," said John P. DeVillars, regional administrator of the EPA-New England. "There is nothing more important we can do than educate people about their role in protecting the environment to ensure future generations will inherit a cleaner world.
"Whether it's focused on the streets of South Boston or the wilderness of Maine, environmental education provides us with the most valuable tool in protecting our natural resources," added DeVillars. "I commend the recipients of these grants for their good work to infuse greater environmental awareness into the lives of New Englanders."
The Massachusetts winners of 1996 Environmental Education grants
are:
(Note to editors: A contact for grant recipient is also listed)
Urban Stewards Program -- Appalachian Mountain Club, Boston
$5,000
This community-based conservation project, as well as an environmental
careers training program is for urban youth in the diverse and disadvantaged
community of Chelsea. The program is designed to teach outreach
and advocacy skills through the process of planning, promoting and
implementing a neighborhood environmental service project. The project
seeks to provide youth with the necessary training to become more
competitive candidates for employment in the environmental and recreational
fields, as well as help young people originate a community base
for the maintenance of local parks and green spaces and the support
of environmental issues of community concern. (Kevin Knobloch 617/523-0655
x365)
Environmental Health Education Project -- Harvard School of
Public Health, Boston $9,000
This expansion of an existing Harvard School of Public Health program
aims to increase awareness of the environment and its effects on
health among fifth grade public school students by sharing technical
expertise with teachers and students. The project is a hands-on
educational outreach program that brings high quality instruction
about human health and its relation to the environment to inner-city
school children. (Marshall Katler 617/432-3485)
The Merrimack River: Our Ecological and Industrial Lifeline
-- E.N. Rogers Middle School, Lowell $5,000
This project will focus on educating teachers, students, and public
about human health problems from environmental pollution. The E.N.
Rogers Environmental School, in collaboration with several partners,
will use an environmental thematic curriculum to have students:
compare and correlate the effects of water quality on an urban river;
collaborate via the Internet with students from Great Britain on
historical comparative research; and develop critical thinking,
problem solving, decision making and laboratory skills. (Joseph
Mastrocola 508/937-7675)
An Urban Collaborative Providing Environmental Field Trips
for minority Holyoke Youth -- Massachusetts Audubon Society, Arcadia
Wildlife Sanctuary, Easthampton $5,000
The Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary is continuing its partnership with
local organizations to involve more Holyoke youth in a summer environmental
field trip program. Hispanic children between the ages of 5 and
12 who live in Holyoke housing development projects or are served
by social agencies or nonprofit agencies. Will be introduced to
environmental science through field trips to nearby natural areas,
hands-on activities, and simple biological testing techniques. (Tony
Symasko 413/584-3009)
Urban Youth: Bridging the Gap to Nature -- Massachusetts Audubon
Society, Broad Meadow Brook Wildlife Sanctuary, Worcester $5,000
The Broad Meadow Brook Wildlife Sanctuary plans to educate the undeserved,
minority residents of Worcester through their program "Urban Youth:
Bridging The Gap to Nature." Participants will be engaged in one
of types of activities: after-school workshops for elementary students,
teen parenting programs, summer programs in the parks, and preschool
workshops. The emphasis is on hands-on, inquiry-based, self-directed
learning, in which the minds and hearts of students are engaged.
(Deborah Carey 508/753-6087)
Riverways Shoreline Survey -- Massachusetts Department of Fisheries,
Wildlife, & Environmental Law Enforcement, Riverways Program,
Boston $20,000
This project promotes the protection and restoration of rivers in
Massachusetts by teaching citizens about the components of healthy
rivers and encouraging active stewardship through stream "adoption."
Community groups will conduct shoreline surveys using Adopt-A-Stream
manuals and supported by Riverways staff. Each surveys will provide
baseline data on non-point source pollution, stream flow, and riparian
habitat so the groups can determine priorities for their stream
section and implement their action plan with the assistance of local
citizens, municipal governments, businesses, civic organizations,
and Riverways staff. (Maria Van Dusen 617/727-1614 x360)
Environmental Education Obstacle Course -- Metropolitan District
Commission, Boston $4,500
The Environmental Education Obstacle Course will offer Metropolitan
Boston area teachers and community group leaders an experiential
program that fosters an understanding of key environmental concepts
and enhances their environmental teaching skills. The project involves
a 0.75 mile loop trail with four stations. Using a workbook provided,
teams of teachers will perform a variety of tasks (including such
things as water quality sampling and map reading) and answer a series
of questions related to the environment. (Karl Pastore 617/727-5380)
Environmental Teacher Workshop -- The Thoreau Society, Inc.,
Lincoln $20,000
The capacity of teachers to teach environmental studies across disciplines
and to raise the environmental consciousness of high school students
to prepare them to be committed, environmentally literate adults
will be done by means of a six-week summer workshop at the Thoreau
Institute in Lincoln. During the workshop, high school teachers
will learn a multi-disciplinary approach to environmental studies
and will have an opportunity to work with world-class Thoreau scholars,
botanist, geologists, environmentalists and others to prepare lesson
plans for units to be taught the following fall. (Tom Harris 617/
259-9411)
Model for Community Environmental Education -- University of
Massachusetts Extension Services, Amherst $5,000
This project will complete the "Taunton River Watershed Connections
Curriculum" for grades 6-12, which has been in development for four
years. It will serve as a model for watershed outreach in pollution
prevention from the school to the local community and businesses.
The Connections Project team of scientists and educators will test,
evaluate, and finalize the curriculum and disseminate the final
product along with resource kits through workshops for teachers
in the Taunton River watershed. (Barbara Waters 508/945-3631)
Summer Exploratory Program in Environmental Technologies --
Upper Cape Cod Regional Technical School, Bourne $5,000
The goal of this program is to attract students into the school's
Environmental Technology Program and ultimately into environmental
careers by providing seventh and eighth graders with a summer exploratory
education program. They hope that students will: a) increase their
own awareness of the environment; b) become more knowledgeable about
careers in the environmental field; and c) enroll in an environmental
technology career pathway. (Margaret Wise 508/759-7711 x205)
Aquinnah Environmental Education Project -- Wampanoag Tribe
of Gay Head $12,555
This project will use existing environmental curricula and case
studies to develop a tribal environmental handbook. The goal of
the project is to protect the Tribal Lands' ecologically sensitive
watershed from pollution, loss of wildlife habitat, and fisheries
decline. It also includes hands-on field investigations and workshops
to provide project participants with the skills they need to make
informed environmental policy decisions. (Philippe Jordi 508/645-9265)
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METADATA
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TITLE: EPA Awards $2.1 Million for Environmental Education Projects
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IDENTIFICATION NUMBER: N/A
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ABSTRACT: The U.S. EPA is awarding $2.1 million in Grants to states, tribes, schools, universities and non-profit organizations nationwide for environmental education initiatives.
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PURPOSE: Public Information
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ORIGINATOR: Regional Administrator's Office
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PUBLICATION DATE: 10/29/96
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ACCESS CONSTRAINTS: N/A
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AVAILABILITY: N/A
a. Distributor:
b. Order Process:
c. Technical Prerequisites:
d. Automated Linkage:
e. Downloadable Files: -
COVERAGE: N/A
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TIME PERIOD OF COVERAGE: N/A
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POINT OF CONTACT FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Frank McIntyre
Office of the Regional Administrator
EPA Region 1, New England
JFK Kennedy Building (RAA)
Boston, MA 02203
617-918-1095 -
RESPONSIBLE PARTY:
Doug Gutro
Office of the Regional Administrator -
DATE OF CREATION: 10/29/96
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AGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION: N/A
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EXPIRATION DATE: 11/22/96
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