International Paper and The Conservation Fund Accepting Online Nominations for Conservation Partnership and Environmental Educat
February 20 2007 - 1:41PM
PR Newswire (US)
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Feb. 20 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- International
Paper and The Conservation Fund will provide national recognition
and $10,000 cash grants to two conservation/environmental education
leaders at an awards ceremony in Washington, D.C., this summer.
International Paper, one of the world's largest forest products
companies, partners each year with The Conservation Fund, a
non-profit organization seeking sustainable conservation solutions
for the 21st Century, to sponsor the International Paper
Conservation Partnership Award and the International Paper
Environmental Education Award. The $10,000 awards are unrestricted
grants from the International Paper Foundation. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20020701/IPLOGO )
"International Paper is deeply committed to environmental
protection and the long-term health and productivity of our
nation's forests," said Dr. Sharon G. Haines, IP's director,
sustainable forestry and forest policy. "These awards provide a
great opportunity to recognize others who make a significant
contribution to the environment." Award nominations are being
accepted through April 15. The online application forms are
available at International Paper's website,
http://www.internationalpaper.com/ and on The Conservation Fund's
website, http://www.conservationfund.org/. Current or former
employees of International Paper, its subsidiaries and acquired
companies or The Conservation Fund are not eligible for
consideration. A panel of independent judges will select the
winners. The winners will be recognized in an awards ceremony in
June at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. The
International Paper Conservation Partnership Award, in its 18th
year, is presented annually to an individual who has achieved
significant results in the protection of habitat through a
cooperative relationship with a business or company. By
demonstrating that a healthy environment and a healthy economy are
not mutually exclusive, this person leads in a conservation effort
benefiting the environment and encourages others to form similarly
productive alliances with businesses. Nominees must have achieved
significant results in the protection of terrestrial or wetland
habitats in the United States and demonstrated the positive value
of cooperative partnerships between business and the conservation
community. Last year's 2006 Conservation Partnership Award went to
Keith Kirkland, executive director of the Wolf River Conservancy.
For more than 20 years, Kirkland has been a volunteer, employee and
leader in the conservancy dedicated to protecting and enhancing the
land and waters along Tennessee's Wolf River. Since his appointment
as executive director in 2003, Kirkland has raised $12.5 million to
support the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers' Wolf River Restoration
Project. By bringing together leading companies, nonprofits,
elected officials and state and local governments, he has led the
protection of 17,000 acres of forest and wetland within the Wolf
River floodplain. Kirkland's efforts also helped to establish the
Ghost River State Natural Area. All told, this protected landscape
serves as a recharge area for the region's aquifer, safeguarding
drinking water for one of the state's fastest- growing areas and
habitat for threatened and endangered species The International
Paper Environmental Education Award, in its 13th year, is presented
annually to an educator who has developed an innovative approach to
environmental education that significantly improves student
comprehension of environmental issues, fosters an understanding of
the link between environmental protection and economic growth,
demonstrates leadership and inspires achievement. Potential
candidates are elementary or secondary school educators or
university faculty or staff members. Last year's 2006 IP
Environmental Education Award went to Laura Patterson, of Los
Alamos, New Mexico. Patterson has served as an educator for 17
years across the U.S., and was honored for developing an innovative
response to a local catastrophe. The Cerro Grande Fire that
destroyed more than 40,000 acres and displaced nearly 430 families
in 2000 moved her to lead students and fellow teachers in the
restoration and improvement of the fire-damaged Quemazon Nature
Trail. She wrote an interdisciplinary, field-based forest ecology
curriculum combining forestry, biology and geology that was later
adopted by other schools in northern New Mexico and recognized
nationally. Thus far, more than 1,500 students from 12 regional
schools have participated in the program. The Conservation Fund,
the nation's top rated environmental nonprofit by the American
Institute of Philanthropy, acts to protect the nation's legacy of
land and water resources in partnership with other organizations,
public agencies, foundations, corporations, and individuals.
Seeking innovative conservation solutions for the 21st century, the
Fund works to integrate economic and environmental goals. Since its
founding in 1985, the Fund has helped its partners safeguard
wildlife habitat, greenways, community "greenspace" and historic
sites totaling more than five million acres throughout the nation.
Headquarters are in Arlington, Va. Headquartered in the United
States, International Paper has been a leader in the forest
products industry for more than 100 years. The company is currently
transforming its operations to focus on its global uncoated papers
and packaging businesses, which operate and serve customers in the
U.S., Europe, Latin America and Asia, as well as xpedx, an
extensive North American merchant distribution system.
International Paper is committed to environmental, economic and
social sustainability, and has a long-standing policy of using no
wood from endangered forests. To learn more, visit
http://www.internationalpaper.com/.
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20020701/IPLOGO
http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: International Paper
CONTACT: Amy Sawyer of International Paper, +1-901-419-4312; or
Jena Thompson of The Conservation Fund, +1-703-908-5809 Web site:
http://www.internationalpaper.com/ http://www.conservationfund.org/
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