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Archive | March, 2010

GYF Goes to Washington!

Angelou Ezeilo reports on White House Conference

Angelou Ezeilo with Queen Quet, Chieftess of Gullah Geechee Nation

Angelou Ezeilo with Queen Quet, Chieftess of Gullah Geechee Nation

As the Executive Director of the Greening Youth Foundation, I was invited to attend the White House Conference on America’s Great Outdoors on April 17th. I eagerly journeyed to Washington to participate in crucial discussions about the importance of connecting both people of color as well as youth to the outdoors and the Green Revolution. Newark Mayor Cory Booker was there. New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson was there, too, as were the heads of the Departments of Interior, Agriculture, and the Environmental Protection Agency. And President Barack Obama even addressed the crowd and signed a Memorandum committing the administration to supporting community efforts to protect our nation’s beautiful green spaces while connecting people and our youth to the outdoors.

What an incredible experience meeting and interacting with an administration that is passionate about connecting people and the next generation to the outdoors AND supporting grass roots organizations like GYF. Exciting times! However, must keep up the pressure so that the wonderful initiatives that are being mandated at a national level trickle down regionally and locally—so that the community FEELS the change!

Remarks by The President at America’s Great Outdoors Conference

Department of the Interior
Washington, D.C.

10:17 A.M. EDT

obama

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  Thank you so much.  Thank you.  Please, everybody have a seat.  Thank you.

It is a great privilege to join [you] for this conference on America’s Great Outdoors.  There are a number of people that obviously I want to acknowledge here who have worked tirelessly to move this agenda forward.  At the top of our list, our Secretary of the Interior — who I believe is going to be one of the best Secretaries of Interior in American history — Ken Salazar, who has just fully embraced this issue, we’re thrilled with the work he’s done.  Thank you.  Thank you, Ken.  (Applause.)

Secretary Tom Vilsack, Administrator Lisa Jackson, Nancy Sutley — all have been part of what we call our “green team,” and are consistently providing creative ideas to make sure that we understand that conservation is not contrary to economic growth, it is an integral part of economic growth.  And they have just done a fabulous job on that so please give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

We have my outstanding NOAA Administrator, Dr. Jane Lubchenco.  We have Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works, Jo-Ellen Darcy.  Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Installations and the Environment, Dr. Dorothy Robyn.  And in the audience, if I’m not mistaken, we’ve got some luminaries.  Is Governor Bill Richardson in the house?  There he is — from New Mexico, a great conservationist.  (Applause.)  Former Secretary of the Interior, Secretary Bruce Babbitt is here.  (Applause.)  One of the finest young mayors in the country, Mayor Cory Booker.  (Applause.)  And to all the outstanding members of Congress who have been so diligent in promoting a conservation agenda.

Angelou with Sally Jewell, REI President and CEO

Angelou with Sally Jewell, REI President and CEO

Now, I am mindful that the first such conference was held over one century ago by one of my favorite Presidents, one of our greatest Presidents — and certainly our greatest conservation President.  Upon taking office, Theodore Roosevelt –- avid birdwatcher, bear hunter –- set out on a tour of the American West that would change his life and the life of a nation forever.

He stood in awe of the geysers at Yellowstone.  He camped in a snow blizzard at Yosemite.  He stood on the lip of the Grand Canyon.  “The ages have been at work on it,” he declared.  “Man can only mar it.”

And from that sense of commitment sprang five national parks, 18 national monuments, 51 federal bird reservations, and 150 national forests.  From that commitment sprang an effort to save the great Redwoods of California and the Petrified Forest of Arizona, the great bird rocks of the Aleutian Islands and the Tongass of Alaska.  From that commitment sprang a breathtaking legacy of conservation that still enhances our lives.

Now, that legacy is an extraordinary achievement -– and no matter how long I have the privilege of serving as President, I know I can never match it.  And I will probably never shoot a bear.  (Laughter.)  That’s a fair bet there, fair guess.  (Laughter.)  But I do intend to enrich that legacy, and I feel an abiding bond with the land that is the United States of America.

The Black and Brown "Green" Team

The Black and Brown "Green" Team

I do, for the same reasons that all of you do; for the same reason families go outside for a picnic or campers spend a night in a national park, and sportsmen track game through the woods or wade deep into a river.  It’s a recognition passed down from one generation to the next, that few pursuits are more satisfying to the spirit than discovering the greatness of America’s outdoors.

And when we see America’s land, we understand what an incredible bounty that we have been given.  And it’s our obligation to make sure that the next generation enjoys that same bounty.

That recognition has been a touchstone of this presidency thanks to the outstanding leadership of Ken Salazar and Secretary Vilsack and Lisa Jackson and Nancy Sutley.  They have done extraordinary work.

Last year, I signed into law a public lands bill –- the most significant in decades -– that designated 2 million acres of wilderness, over 1,000 miles of wild and scenic rivers, and three national parks.  We better protected cherished places like Oregon’s Mount Hood.  We’re taking a new approach to our National Forests to make sure they’re not just providing timber for lumber companies, but water and jobs for rural communities.  We are restoring our rivers and coasts, from the Chesapeake Bay to the Gulf Coast, from the Great Lakes to the Everglades.

Angelou with Charles Thomas of Outward Bound LA

Angelou with Charles Thomas of Outward Bound LA

So, yes, we are working faithfully to carry on the legacy of Teddy Roosevelt in the 21st century.  But we also know that we must adapt our strategies to meet the new challenges of our time.  Over the last century, our population grew from about 90 million to 300 million people, and as it did, we lost more and more of our natural landscape to development.  Meanwhile, a host of other factors –- from a changing climate to new sources of pollution -– have put a growing strain on our wildlife and our waters and our lands.

So rising to meet these challenges is a task and an obligation, but it’s one that government cannot and should not meet alone.  There are roughly 1,600 privately run land trusts in this country that have protected over 10 million acres through voluntary efforts.  And by working with farmers and ranchers and landowners, the Department of Agriculture’s Conservation Reserve Program has protected over 30 million acres, and its Natural Resource Conservation Service -– a service that is 75 years old this year –- has protected almost 3 million more.  So together, we are conserving our working lands in a way that preserves the environment and protects local communities.

And that’s the kind of collaborative spirit at the heart of the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative that we’re launching today.  In the months ahead, members of this administration will host regional listening sessions across America.  We’ll meet with everybody — from tribal leaders to farmers, from young people to businesspeople, from elected officials to recreation and conservation groups.  And their ideas will help us form a 21st century strategy for America’s great outdoors to better protect our natural landscape and our history for generations to come.

Angelou with Roger Rivera, President and Founder of National Hispanic Environmental Council

Angelou with Roger Rivera, President and Founder of National Hispanic Environmental Council

Understand, we’re not talking about a big federal agenda being driven out of Washington.  We’re talking about how we can collect best ideas on conservation; how we can pursue good ideas that local communities embrace; and how we can be more responsible stewards of tax dollars to promote conservation.

First, we’re going to build on successful conservation efforts being spearheaded outside of Washington -– by local and state governments, by tribes, and by private groups -– so we can write a new chapter in the protection of rivers, wildlife habitats, historic sites, and the great landscapes of our country.

Secondly, we’re going to help farmers, ranchers, property owners who want to protect their lands for their children and their grandchildren.

Third, we’ll help families spend more time outdoors, building on what the First Lady has done through the “Let’s Move” initiative to encourage young people to hike and bike and get outside more often.

And fourth, we want to foster a new generation of community and urban parks so that children across America have the chance to experience places like Millennium Park in my own Chicago.

We’re launching this strategy because it’s the right thing to do -– because, as TR said, we must not mar the work of the ages.  But we’re also doing it because it’s the right thing to do for our economy.  It’s how we’re going to spur job creation in the tourism industry and the recreation industry.  It’s how we’ll create jobs preserving and maintaining our forests, our rivers, our great outdoors.

In a time of great difficulty, when we are recovering from the worst recession in generations, and waging two wars abroad, some may ask whether now is the time to reaffirm our commitment to our national heritage.  But I want everybody to recall, it was in the midst of civil war that Abraham Lincoln set aside lands that are now Yosemite.  It was in midst of a great depression that FDR formed the Civilian Conservation Corps that built the trails and campgrounds and parks we enjoy today.

Even in times of crisis, we’re called to take the long view to preserve our national heritage –- because in doing so we fulfill one of the responsibilities that falls to all of us as Americans, and as inhabitants of this same small planet.  And that is the responsibility that we are rising to meet today.

So thank you all for the outstanding work that you’re doing individually.  I look forward to the work that you’re going to be doing collectively and advising this administration.  Thank you.  God bless you.  God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)

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GYF Presents Awards to Contest Winners

Students were challenged to answer the question: What would MLK have done about environmental issues?

Student winners from MLK High School

Student winners from MLK High School

Martin Luther King High School was a big winner at the ceremony for the Greening Youth Foundation’s environmental video contest, which took place on Friday, May 7, at the Martin Luther King National Historic Site.

Clearly inspired by their namesake, students from King High School in Lithonia produced an impressive short-form movie for the contest, which challenged them to come up with a video or Powerpoint answer to the question: If Dr. King were alive today, how would he approach current environmental issues? King High School won in the category of best high school presentation and also for most creative presentation.

More than 120 people, including students and staff from several Atlanta and Dekalb schools, gathered for the ceremony under a big tent outside the visitors center at the Martin Luther King National Historic Site.

Atlanta City Council member Kwanzaa Hall, sporting his GYF t-shirt

Atlanta City Council member Kwanzaa Hall, sporting his GYF t-shirt

Before the awards were handed out, Atlanta City Council member Kwanzaa Hall addressed the crowd, telling the students that he was encouraged by their efforts to “green our community.”

“You are the best ambassadors for this initiative,” Hall said. “The world is your oyster; the future is yours. It’s up to you all to be the environmental engineers and the marine biologists who are going to help us solve our environmental problems. Without you, the world won’t be all it can be.”

Student winners from Cook Elementary

Student winners from Cook Elementary pose with Superintendent Judy Forte

In addition to Martin Luther King High School, other winners were Ed Cook Elementary in Atlanta for best elementary school presentation, BEST Academy in Atlanta for best middle school, and the Girl Scouts Troop of Brumby Elementary in Cobb County for best after-school club. The winning schools received beautiful engraved glass trophies; and the students each received Junior Ranger badges and patches from the National Park Service.

Angelou Ezeilo, Executive Director of the Greening Youth Foundation, told the gathering that she was “floored” by the quality of their presentations.

“Your creativity is amazing,” she said. “I look out at you all and know that you are our future environmental leaders. I know you will be thinking of the next thing that will preserve our national resources.”

Student winners from BEST Academy

Student winners from BEST Academy

In a moving speech, Judy Forte, Superintendent of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site, told the students about the lessons that her parents passed along to her and her six brothers and sisters, “that the blessings of the earth do not come free.”

“They taught us that we must serve as faithful stewards of the earth and if we do, it will sustain us, season after season,” Forte said. “Yet today, people are breaking this expectation. Mistakes such as the recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico are impacting man, plant and animal life along the Gulf Coast, the carbon from the cars we drive is polluting our air and making it difficult for many of us to breath, and the chemicals that are in our food are putting our world—and our way of life—in danger. The places we love, the resources on which we rely, the peoples of the world who are most vulnerable, are all at risk if we do not take action. That is why I am so pleased to partner with the Greening Youth Foundation.  With our Greening Youth partners, we have the opportunity to introduce young people to the National Park Service, expose them to their heritage, as well as to the land their ancestors helped to build.”

Superintendent Judy Forte and GYF Executive Director Angelou Ezeilo

Superintendent Judy Forte and GYF Executive Director Angelou Ezeilo

To help inspire the students for the contest, the Greening Youth Foundation launched a partnership effort to bring the students to the MLK National Historic Site in Atlanta, a unit of the National Park Service. The foundation called the contest the “Environmental Series at the MLK Jr. National Historic Site.” Over the past three months, students visited the historic site to learn about King’s life by touring his birth home, his tomb and other important markers in his life and by watching an inspirational video about the Civil Rights Movement. They also met with Park Rangers and Superintendent Forte.

The public school students were members of GYF’s Eco-Force® Clubs that currently operate in elementary, middle and high schools throughout Metro Atlanta.

Girl Scout winners from Brumby Elementary in Cobb County

Girl Scouts winners from Brumby Elementary in Cobb County

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CLICK TO PLAY : Executive Director, Angelou Ezeilo’s interview on Celebrate Green radio show, July 15, 2010

Green The Nu Black

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