EPA Celebrates Earth Day by Recognizing Seven from Vermont With Environmental Merit Awards
Contact: Peyton Fleming, EPA Press Office, 617-918-1008
For Immediate Release: April 22, 2003; Release # 03-04-20
BOSTON In honor of Earth Day, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's New England Office today recognized seven individuals and organizations from Vermont with Environmental Merit Awards. The awards, given out since 1970, honor individuals and groups who have shown particular ingenuity and commitment in their efforts to preserve the region's environment. This year's competition drew nearly 100 nominations from across New England.
|
"The individuals and groups we are honoring today are New England's real environmental heroes," said Robert W. Varney, regional administrator for EPA's New England Office. "Often with little fanfare, they have invested huge amounts of their time to make New England's environment cleaner and safer for future generations. We owe them all a huge debt of gratitude."
The winners from Vermont were among 40 from across New England. Awards were given in the categories of individual; business (including professional organizations); local, state or federal government; and environmental, community, academia or nonprofit organization. Also, for the first time, special lifetime achievement awards were presented this year.
Winners from Vermont were:
Individual Awards
Rebecca Basch and Susan McMahon, VT
Rebecca Basch and Susan McMahon have pioneered Brownfields redevelopment
in southern Vermont through their work as planners with the Southern
Windsor County Regional Planning Commission and the Windham Regional
Commission, respectively. Both successfully applied for EPA Brownfields
grants in 1999 and 2000, despite little prior experience with the
subject. More importantly, they made their programs a success, by
forming steering committees, identifying properties and hiring consultants
to perform technical work. McMahon's program has 15 properties already
assessed or undergoing assessment work, including the Bellows Falls
Waypoint Interpretive Center which was assessed using EPA funding.
The visitor center is currently under construction and when it is
completed later this year it will be one of 10 centers along the
NH/VT portion of the Connecticut River. Basch has 11 properties
in her program, including the former Burnham property, an old dump
in Windsor, VT which has been redeveloped to house an eight-person
accounting firm. Their enthusiasm and effectiveness has encouraged
other regional commissions to become interested in Brownfields development,
with several regional planning commissions subsequently applying
for and receiving EPA Brownfield grant
James M. Northup, Bristol, VT
As executive director of Forest Watch over the past four years,
Northup revitalized the organization and enlarged its mission. Northup
transformed Green Mountain Forest Watch, a small, struggling not-for-profit
with a fairly narrow wilderness mission, into the larger Forest
Watch, a financially sound, respected environmental organization.
He has been a leader for and active participant in meetings that
include divergent interests in national forest issues. He is an
effective communicator who has authored many articles on forest
related issues, stimulating both discussion and debate. A proposal
to enlarge the designated wilderness areas of the Green Mountain
National Forest has broad support and James Northrup has been a
driving force behind this issue.
Eric Smeltzer, Waterbury, VT
Eric Smeltzer, state limnologist at the Vermont Agency of Natural
Resources, is the primary author of an important report on reducing
phosphorus pollution into Lake Champlain. The report, known as the
Lake Champlain Phosphorus TMDL (Total Maximum Daily Load), determines
necessary cutbacks in phosphorus pollution in order for Lake Champlain
to meet water quality standards by 2016. The report also identifies
sources of the pollution that will have to reduce their loadings.
Phosphorus pollution is harmful to water quality because it fertilizes'
the water, causing unwanted algal blooms and other vegetative growth
which eventually causes oxygen depletion. A complex and challenging
endeavor, the TMDL report provides a detailed, comprehensive phosphorus
management plan for 60 Vermont wastewater treatment plants, 136
Vermont cities and towns and nearly half the land area of Vermont,
as well as a portion of eastern New York. The report went through
extensive public review before getting final approval from EPA,
including two draft reports, 13 public information meetings and
dialogue with over 400 parties. Smeltzer's career managing Vermont
lakes spans more than two decades. His work has contributed tremendously
to better understanding the water quality dynamics of the Lake Champlain
Basin.
Organizations
Alliance for Climate Action, 10 Percent Challenge Program, Burlington,
VT
The 10 Percent Challenge is a creative grassroots public education
program designed to help homeowners, businesses and public institutions
achieve targeted greenhouse gas reductions in Burlington, VT. The
voluntary program, sponsored by professionals through the three-year-old
Alliance for Climate Action, was launched a year ago and continues
to expand to more than 200 households and 40 Burlington area businesses.
The goal of the alliance and its challenge program is to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions to 10 percent below 1997 levels by 2010.
To achieve the goal, the alliance has invested significant efforts
in developing a web-based emissions measurement tool, building institutional
capacity and extensive outreach and public education. From bus signs
and tip cards to Climo-Dino, the alliance's extinction consultant
the group's aim is to make the challenge easy and fun. Another
goal of the alliance is to share the 10 Percent Challenge with other
communities. Four communities in Chittenden County had similar resolutions
on their town meeting ballots this spring and 85 communities are
doing the same across the country.
Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT
Middlebury College has shown that an institution of higher learning
can not only teach environmentally sound practices, but can also
set an example. Middlebury has exhibited this leadership by championing
the establishment and rapid growth of a certified wood industry
in Vermont. Over the past five years, Middlebury has created demand
by using nearly 200,000 board feet of green certified Vermont wood
in campus construction projects, including previously under-utilized
species like beech. Among the biggest highlights last year was launching
an employee-owned woodworkers' cooperative, Island Pond Woodworkers,
which is aiming for the niche market of environmentally-friendly
Vermont furniture. Last September, the college awarded a $509,000
contract to the cooperative for custom designed and constructed
study carrels for the new library. Other accomplishments: catalyzing
institutional purchasing of green certified furniture from Vermont
manufacturers and working with more than 60 certified small forest
lot owners and businesses in Vermont to log and supply wood for
campus projects.
Business and Industry
Target Corp./Target Stores, Minneapolis, MN - The Target
Corp. has demonstrated how a large retail operation can make significant
strides in environmental improvements and reducing waste. Recycling
goals are set for each store based on sales amounts. Last year,
company stores recycled over 270,000 tons of materials and additionally
reduced waste through community salvage programs. In New England
alone, Target's 27 stores last year recycled 6,766 tons of paper
and cardboard. The company also recycles outdated computers, aluminum,
cadmium, nickel, lead acid, aluminum and shrink-wrap (as well as
glass and bottle recycling on a local level). Target also works
with vendors to reduce product packaging. Nearly 100 percent of
the clothing Target sells arrives without excess packaging and 95
percent of all shoes arrive without stuffing. Target also requests
that overseas vendors ship goods in traditional corrugated cardboard,
without rice paper, ensuring that boxes can be recycled. Target's
Environmental Team is also active in national recycling and cleanup
programs. Last year, more than 6,300 volunteers participated in
the Keep America Beautiful Operation Clean Up America. The results
of those efforts: 83 playgrounds cleaned and 26,000 flowers planted.
![]()
METADATA
-
TITLE: EPA Celebrates Earth Day by Recognizing Seven from Vermont With Environmental Merit Awards
-
ABSTRACT: BOSTON In honor of Earth Day, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's New England Office today recognized seven individuals and organizations from Vermont with Environmental Merit Awards. The awards, given out since 1970, honor individuals and groups who have shown particular ingenuity and commitment in their efforts to preserve the region's environment. This year's competition drew nearly 100 nominations from across New England
-
PURPOSE: Public Information
-
ORIGINATOR: Regional Administrator's Office
-
PUBLICATION DATE: 04/22/03
-
ACCESS CONSTRAINTS: N/A
-
AVAILABILITY: N/A
a. Distributor:
b. Order Process:
c. Technical Prerequisites:
d. Automated Linkage:
e. Downloadable Files: -
COVERAGE: N/A
-
TIME PERIOD OF COVERAGE: N/A
-
POINT OF CONTACT FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Peyton Fleming
Office of the Regional Administrator
EPA New England
1 Congress Street, Suite 1100 (RAA)
Boston, MA 02114-2023
617- 918-1008
-
RESPONSIBLE PARTY:
Peyton Fleming, EPA Press Office, 617-918-1008
Office of the Regional Administrator
-
DATE OF CREATION: 04/23/03
-
AGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION: N/A
-
EXPIRATION DATE: 05/23/03
![[logo] US EPA](http://www.epa.gov/epafiles/images/logo_epaseal.gif)