Tuesday, April 20, 2010

40 Environmentalists Honored Today

Today we recognized 40 environmentalists who represent the significant work toward better climate policies, energy efficiency, renewable energy or other environmental goals in Montgomery County in the past 40 years. They include current and historical policy makers, community activists, farmers, scientists and others with a passion for the environment. We are grateful to these awardees and the numerous other people who have advanced environmental causes in the county.

The awardees (in alphabetical order):

The Abramson Family has been constructing green buildings since the 1960’s beginning with a mixed-use development called The Blairs. The family continued its green practices with The Tower Building, the first green office building in the County, and Blair Towns, the first LEED certified rental apartments in the United States. In 2008, the family co-developed 2000 Tower Oaks Boulevard, the first and largest multi-tenant commercial office property to achieve LEED Platinum designation in the metropolitan region. Their business is 100 percent carbon-neutral and has been recognized nationally by the EPA and DOE for its achievements in Green Power purchasing.

Anne Ambler is a long-time County environmental advocate and former chair of the Montgomery County Sierra Club. She has served on a County task force aimed at improving implementation of the Forest Conservation Law and as president of the Neighbors of the Northwest Branch of the Anacostia River, an organization which protects, promotes and restores the water quality of the Northwest Branch Watershed.

Ron Balon was Montgomery County Public Schools’ energy manager and led key initiatives such as creating and expanding the School Energy Response Teams, dramatically improving the efficiency of schools and overseeing purchases of clean energy and deployment of on-site photovoltaic solar arrays on a number of schools. His projects embedded an environmental ethos into the youth of Montgomery County.

Ginny Barnes has led grassroots water quality and stormwater management efforts for 20 years. She has served on the Legacy Open Space Program, the C & O Canal Stewardship Task Force, the Forest Conservation Task Force and the Forest Conservation Advisory Group to bring about good environmental policies Countywide. She is known for spearheading efforts to maintain the “green wedge” within the County.

Arlene Bruhn championed revisions in Maryland’s Roadside Tree Law that protects trees during development or redevelopment of property. She has advocated for legislation to conserve street trees in Montgomery County to ensure that neighborhoods are pleasant and walkable, and she has called attention to the interface between tree health and stormwater runoff.

Diane Cameron is a leader of the Storm Water Partners Network, which is devoted to protecting and restoring the waters in the County. She currently works on implementing the County stormwater permit, one of the most progressive such permits in the country, and training citizens to restore the Anacostia River to vibrant health. She is currently the Director of the Audubon Naturalist Society Conservation Program.

Rachel Carson is considered the mother of the modern environmental movement. She authored the controversial book, Silent Spring, which denounced the indiscriminate use of chemicals and pesticides in agriculture and the environment as a whole. After Silent Spring, she received many honors for her contributions to the scientific and literary communities. Although Ms. Carson died in 1964, her legacy has continued to inspire leaders throughout the decades.

Carol Carter has been the primary leader of the County’s landscape beautification awards program for 23 years. As a member of the Keep Montgomery County Beautiful Task Force, she helped create in 1986 the concept for recognizing landscaping efforts by residents, community associations and commercial operations. She has kept the entranceway to her own community beautiful since 1974.

Jimmy Clifford founded the Building Lot Termination Program, building on the success of the Transfer Development Rights Program, which focuses development in designated areas while preserving farmland. A no-till farmer, he has championed numerous agricultural preservation initiatives.

Margaret and Morrill “Don” Donnald oversaw numerous nature programs at Adventure, a nature and research facility administered by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission. The Donnalds and a host of volunteers carried out a bird banding program that investigated bird migration from 1972 to 1995 and banded more than 98,000 birds of 154 species.

David Feldman is the executive director of Bethesda Green, an initiative to make Bethesda more environmentally friendly. He also is CEO of the Livability Project, a firm dedicated to helping communities develop sustainability initiatives. He combines his previous economic development and business experience to innovatively further environmental and community development.

Neal Fitzpatrick serves as executive director of the Audubon Naturalist Society of the Central Atlantic States. He has served on the Maryland State Water Conservation Committee and the Attorney General’s Environmental Advisory Committee. Through his work with Audubon, he has championed stormwater runoff regulations, habitat and greenspace preservation, and fisheries protections.

Sally Gagné is a founding member and first president of the Friends of Sligo Creek, a local non-profit dedicated to the protection of the Sligo Creek Watershed. The original “weed warrior,” she began her advocacy after noticing the large numbers of invasive plants surrounding the creek. She also authored North Hills of Sligo Creek - History, People and Surroundings.

Seth Goldman is president and TeaEO of Honest Tea, an organic, fair trade beverage company that has been a leader in promoting green business practices in Montgomery County. He co-founded Bethesda Green, a sustainability initiative that promotes eco-friendly practices and incubates emerging green businesses.

Gilbert Gude, a former Republican congressman from Montgomery County, championed environmental causes and introduced a bill to preserve the 185-mile Chesapeake and Ohio Canal and make it the Country’s narrowest national park. He introduced many environmental bills in his tenure, including one to protect the Potomac River valley. In his later years, he wrote two books about the Potomac River.

Frederick Gutheim was known as the sage of Sugarloaf for his advocacy on behalf of the Agricultural Reserve and the historic preservation ordinance. He authored several books including The Potomac, which is a history of the river and its region.

Royce Hanson is the current and a former chair of the Montgomery County Planning Board. He has dedicated his professional life to land use planning and has been the face of smart growth in Montgomery County. He is most recognized as the architect of the Agricultural Reserve, 93,000 acres of protected agricultural land that plays a vital role in Countywide environmental conservation and has been emulated by jurisdictions nationwide.

Robert Harrigan spent decades as a scientist and conservation advocate who led efforts to preserve open space and waterways in Montgomery County. A national champion whitewater racer, he was a founder of the Potomac River Whitewater Race and, through the race, called attention to the need to preserve the Potomac River shoreline.

David Hauck is the current chair of the Montgomery County Sierra Club and has worked on the innovative Cool Cities/Cool Counties campaign that seeks to address climate change by encouraging local governments to commit to substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and document reductions through annual greenhouse gas inventories.

Jack Hewitt invested his career in acquiring and operating park lands for the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission. During his tenure, he was centrally involved in increasing the park system from fewer than 2,000 acres to over 20,000 acres. His innovative purchasing plan, which was a win-win for the park system and the land owners, made the program a tremendous success.

Joe Howard, as the longtime manager of the Lathrop E. Smith Center, has provided hands-on environmental experiences to thousands of school children, inspiring a generation of new environmental leaders. He also founded the county’s Champion Tree Program, which recognizes trees that are the largest of their species.

Malcolm King was instrumental in the creation of Great Seneca State Park and Lois Green Conservation Park. Through his work with the Isaac Walton League, he was responsible for the formation and implementation of the Save Our Streams Program. He also played a pivotal role in bringing the National Headquarters of the Isaac Walton League of America to Montgomery County.

Barbara Knapp is a founding member and Secretary of the Maryland Chapter of the American Chestnut Foundation, which is working to restore this important tree, to the Appalachian forest. The chestnut tree had been decimated by blight. The chapter now has 15 orchards in Maryland, including several in Montgomery County.

E. Brooke Lee founded the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission to plan for orderly development and protection of the natural resources in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties. He laid the foundation for one of the nation’s most successful park systems and made Montgomery County almost flood-proof by putting the floodplains into the park system.

Lonnie Luther manages L & M Farm, a family-owned beef operation that also produces poultry and sheep. He and his family have done an outstanding job of conserving the natural resources on their farm, and Dr. Luther has served as an example to other farmers and new residents in the Agricultural Reserve in the areas of land conservation and land management practices.

Sally McGarry has pioneered grassroots environmental activism in Montgomery County. A former board member of the Maryland League of Women Voters and the Montgomery County Conservation Corps, she has championed protection of the Chesapeake Bay, recycling, beautification of our roadways and public spaces and environmental education.

Caren Madsen, a Silver Spring resident and chair of the Montgomery County Forest Conservation Advisory Committee, has been a long-time advocate of preserving trees in the County and developing new legislative solutions to preserve the tree canopy. She works on national environmental issues in her position with NOAA, one of the County's federal partners.

Adrienne Mandel has spent the past quarter of a century serving as a legislative lobbyist for Montgomery County as a three-term State delegate representing District 19, and now as a Commissioner of the WSSC. Her career has been marked by strong advocacy for a clean and healthy environment. As a delegate, she sponsored more than 35 pieces of environmental-related legislation.

John Menke served as a member of the Montgomery County Council and head of the Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection. Major accomplishments include legislation for the first County energy conservation requirements, support for Metro and establishment of the integrated solid waste system including recycling and advanced waste to energy conversion.

Steven Morrison personally assumed the mission of protecting and preserving the Matthew Henson Trail in Silver Spring. Recently, he and his team of volunteers removed more than two tons of trash from the trail including a toilet bowl, more than 100 tires, a refrigerator, auto parts and hundreds of beverage containers.

Jane Nishida serves as co-chair of the Montgomery County Sustainability Working Group that coordinates the County’s sustainability practices and presented the County’s first Climate Protection Plan. She is the former secretary of the Maryland Department of the Environment and former executive director of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

John Parrish is a botanist/ecologist, specializing in botanical research and environmental education. He recently published a compilation of the native woody plants of Montgomery County in the botanical journal, Marilandica, as well as a compilation of the native flora of the Sligo Creek Watershed for the Friends of Sligo Creek. He continues to speak out for the protection of the county’s last remaining natural areas.

Neal Potter was the Montgomery County Executive from 1990-94 and a long-time member of the County Council. While on the Council, he sponsored bills to establish the Montgomery County Conservation Corps. He authored Council-sponsored State legislation on taxation, farmland preservation and farmland assessment. He also served as co-chair of the Metropolitan Washington Coalition for Clean Air and received of the Audubon Naturalist Society's Legislator of the Year Award.

Mike Rubin orchestrated a joint land protection effort that included the State of Maryland, the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, Montgomery County, the Trust for Public Land and himself. At 800 acres, the resulting Hoyles Mill Conservation Park represents the largest single land preservation acquisition in the County.

Robert Schueler was one of the first generation of wildlife biologists in the country and an active member of Trout Unlimited. He had a passion for restoring the brown trout population to the Paint Branch Watershed. Through several decades of testimony at public meetings, technical comments and continuous advocacy with County and state agencies, he left an enduring legacy that trout and streams matter in Montgomery.

Kevin Selock is a leader in WSSC’s efforts to improve the effluent quality of water leaving the utility’s plants. He is currently involved in a feasibility study that is looking into the possible use of an anaerobic digestion process that could allow WSSC to lower its dependence on carbon-based fuels. He is also working with the Maryland MDE to develop water reuse regulations.

Lathrop Smith was a member of the Montgomery County Council, the Upper County Planning Commission and the Board of Education. Throughout his career, he was a staunch advocate for conservation. The Lathrop E Smith Center for outdoor education in Rock Creek Regional Park, which is named for him, provides on-site, hands-on environmental education to the County’s total sixth grade population.

Robert Taylor spearheaded WSSC’s effort to become the first local government agency in the region to directly purchase renewable energy. For the past 15 years, he has overseen the innovative wind power program that is both economically and environmentally friendly for WSSC, Montgomery County and the region.

Mike Tidwell is the founder and director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, a non-profit organization that raises awareness about global warming in the region. He has fought the trash incinerator in Dickerson and promoted alternatives to sprawl development. He lives in a green home that is often open to the public for educational purposes.

Sammie Young has served since 1984 on the Keep Montgomery County Beautiful Task Force that has developed the Adopt-a-Road anti-litter campaign, the Storm Drain Marking program, a beautification grant program and an annual landscaping and photography competition.

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