Wednesday, July 18, 2018

PROTECT to Honor The Nature Conservancy Saturday

Whallonsburg Grange HallProtect the Adirondacks is set to hold its annual membership meeting at The Grange in Whallonsburg on Saturday July 21st. The annual meeting includes the Conservation and Advocacy report, financial report, membership report, and election to the Board of Directors.

Protect the Adirondacks will also present the Howard Zahniser Adirondack Award to The Nature Conservancy’s Heart of the Adirondacks Team who worked for 10 years to protect 161,000 acres of the former Finch, Pruyn & Co. lands. More than 95,000 acres were protected by conservation easement and 65,000 acres were protected in the Forest Preserve, including Boreas Ponds, Essex Chain Lakes, Blue Ledges in the Hudson Gorge, and OK Slip Falls. Accepting these awards on behalf of the team will be Mike Carr, former executive director of the Adirondack Chapter of The Nature Conservancy and current executive director of the Adirondack Land Trust, and Dirk Bryant, science director of the Adirondack Chapter of The Nature Conservancy.

The day starts with a welcome and refreshments at 9:30 am, followed by a business meeting for Protect the Adirondacks, the awards ceremony, and presentation by Tim Butler concluding by 12:30 pm, when lunch will be served.

The day will end with a presentation from Tom Butler “From the Adirondacks to Patagonia: Forever-wild People, Places, and Future.” Tom Butler is the author and volume editor of more than a dozen books including Wildlands Philanthropy: The Great American Tradition and Protecting the Wild. He is a founding board member of Northeast Wilderness Trust and currently serves as vice president for conservation advocacy for Tompkins Conservation, a nonprofit that has helped create or expand 13 national parks in Chile and Argentina.

The cost is $35 and people can register online.

Photo of Whallonsburg Grange provided.

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6 Responses

  1. Mick Finn says:

    Would someone kindly ask them to explain Charitable Remainder Trusts and their place in Conservation Protection?

    The taxpayers need to know where their money is really going.

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