Archive for the 'Local Experts' Category

Late this afternoon, Grassroots Outdoor Alliance received the following video dispatch from Lin Peterson at Great Outdoor Provision Co. Lin was in the middle of climbing in the Tetons, and took time out to enjoy some of the Trail Mix Crunch that samples that Grassroots retailers passed out this summer.

Thanks Lin for taking time out during that great climb to check in with us back home.

To see Lin’s video, click here

In June, Grassroots Retailers worked with Post Cereal to promote Trail Mix Crunch to benefit the environment. Grassroots Outdoor Alliance and Post Cereal partnered to benefit American Forests’ Global ReLeaf Program. In a joint effort, Post Cereals donated $50,000 to American Forests-enough to plant 50,000 trees in 2008. The partnership brings together the effort of 34 independent retailers across 22 states to lend support to the program.

The effort is highlighted in Grassroots’ member stores across the country in conjunction with the launch of Post’s new Cranberry Vanilla cereal. Customers will receive samples of the new cereal and learn more about getting involved with the American Forests restoration program in each location. American Forests is a world leader in planting trees for environmental restoration, a pioneer in the science and practice of urban forestry, and a primary communicator of the benefits of trees and forests. The joint effort is kicking off this weekend with National Trails Day and Land Trust events at Grassroots’ retailers throughout the U.S.

Grassroots President, Dave Matz says of the partnership, “We were approached by Post to help them develop a conservation program in all of our member locations, and we are excited for the opportunity.” About the restoration initiative, Matz says, “We are committed to supporting conservation efforts, and helping companies do their part for the environment. Post has pledged to donate $50,000 to plant trees via Global ReLeaf, and we are happy to be the leaders helping them coordinate this outreach.”

For more information on the Global ReLeaf Program and to support local Grassroots’ members, please visit, www.americanforests.org

CCC receives 2008 Access Fund Grant, 1% For the Planet and Triple Crown Donation!

The 1% For the Planet Program made a $1500 donation on behalf of Travel Country Outdoors.  This unique program allows Patagonia retailers to designate awardees who are actively working to preserve, conserve and protect natural resources.

In Spring 2008, the CCC received an Access Fund Grant for $6,000 towards the Laurel Knob ProjectThe Access Fund has been behind the landmark purchase of Laurel Knob since the start, both in financial and moral support.  The CCC wants to publicly thank the Access Fund for this recent award.  Folks should join the Access Fund with confidence that they are bringing it home to the local level.

Just this week, Chad Wykle and Jim Horton, the Organizer Extraordinaires of the Triple Crown, stepped up with a $1,000 donation from the SCC and the Triple Crown to kick-off the “Playing for the Payoff” event.  The Triple Crown is recognized as one of the leading grass-roots events in the US for raising money that promotes climbing access.  We are psyched that these NC gents do what they do and bring it back to all of us.  Many thanks!!

To date, the CCC owes roughly $29,000 on the Laurel Knob bridge loans. (The ‘roughly’ is due to the changing timeframe of the interest.) The CCC greatly appreciates the generosity of both the Access Fund and the 1% For the Planet Program who are giving back.  These monies will lower the overall bridge loan balance to around $20,500.

There is still a lot of work to be done to dissolve these loans.  Watch for more info on the CCC sponsored event “Playing for the Payoff” on July 19th, the upcoming 2009 CCC Calendar and other local fund raisers.  Check the Events and Meetings forum often!

To support Carolina Climbers Coalition in all of the projects they are working on, go to http://www.carolinaclimbers.org

By LANCE BROCK and DAWSON WHEELER •  Originally Printed in Tennessean.com

That’s right: Mining on public lands is still governed by a law from 1872.

The idea back then was to encourage pioneering prospectors to find and develop gold, silver and copper. The government wanted to settle the vast frontier and foster local economies from Appalachia to California, so mining was given top priority for use of public land, which miners could buy land for as little as $2.50 an acre. And they didn’t pay a dime for the riches they removed. Not a bad deal … in 1872.

More than a century later, the frontier has been tamed and populated, and picks and shovels have been exchanged for chemical processing, large-scale blasting and house-sized earthmovers. Communities have grown up alongside public lands and now look to those lands for watershed protection, wildlife habitat and recreation. Today, rock-climbing, kayaking, hiking and mountain biking are widely popular, making important economic contributions to many communities and promoting an ethic of protection for treasured routes, waterways and trails.

Many of these committed outdoor enthusiasts have been appalled to find that the lands they revere are still treated with century-old disregard, and that priorities set in the days of Ulysses S. Grant still rule the use of millions of acres of national forests and other public lands.

As the people of Tennessee know well, mining, without modern safeguards, can have catastrophic impacts. Millions have been spent to restore Polk County’s Copper Basin mining district, which suffered devastating pollution from mining and sulfuric acid processing, until a solid partnership of state, federal and private efforts restored the area.

Sadly, the pre-restoration story of Copper Basin is repeated across much of our nation’s public lands. Mining under 19th-century policies has left a legacy of more than a half-million abandoned mines, and hard-rock mining has polluted 40 percent of Western watersheds. The estimated cleanup costs of this toxic legacy are more than $50 billion, and American taxpayers may be on the hook for a good portion of this total. Even if funds were readily available, cleanup would require decades. Enough is enough.

Last year, the U.S. House of Representatives passed meaningful reform with the Hard-rock Mining and Reclamation Act of 2007, which protects special places like wild and scenic rivers, roadless national forests and areas of critical environmental concern. This bill institutes a reasonable royalty for extracting hard-rock minerals from public lands, as is required for coal, oil and natural gas. These funds would pay for long-overdue mine cleanup. The bill would also authorize denial of mine permits if operations would cause “undue degradation” of public lands and waters, and it improves enforcement of environmental laws and citizen participation.

But for these reforms to become law, the U.S. Senate must also act — and it must do so soon. With the approaching summer breaks and fall election, time is running out. If the Senate doesn’t act the House’s hard work will be lost and our elected representatives will need to start over next year. New claims on public lands have jumped by 80 percent in recent years, so the Senate must get moving now, not only so existing pollution can be remedied but also to protect important recreation areas and prevent future contamination.

Tennessee Sens. Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker both know the value of recreation, so we look to them for leadership and initiative. Alexander has led presidential commissions on recreation and Corker, a member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, has supported outdoor recreation since his days as Chattanooga mayor. They are both positioned to help usher mining reform through the Senate. Their efforts could protect both our public lands and American taxpayers.

Lance Brock is co-owner of Climb Nashville and has served on the Access Fund and Southeastern Climbers Coalition boards. Dawson Wheeler is co-owner of Rock/Creek Outfitters in Chattanooga and serves on several boards, including the retail advisory board for National Geographic Explorer and Grassroots Outdoor Alliance.

Conservation Land Trust

 

RALEIGH, NC – Customers of Great Outdoor Provision Co. got more than a great deal on outdoor gear this month – they helped preserve open space within North Carolina.
Customers voted for natural areas to save as a new recreation destination.  The contest was a part of Great Outdoor Provision Co.’s celebration of Land Trust Day, an annual celebration in which local businesses and the state’s land trusts work together to save natural areas in the community. Patagonia, the manufacturer of outdoor clothing and equipment, provided underwriting for the contest with a $3,000 grant to help protect the chosen site which was the Piedmont Regional Greenway. To read about details of this project, visit: http://greatoutdoorprovision.com/culture/wesupport/patagonia-land-grant/

In addition to sponsoring the contest, Great Outdoor Provision Co. donates 10 percent of sales on Land Trust Day from each of its nine stores to land trusts that serve the stores’ regions.  Volunteers from the local land trusts were on hand to share information with customers.  The North Face, Royal Robbins and ExOfficio provided gifts for those who joined the land trust that day. Including the grant, Great Outdoor Provision Co. donated $13,000 to local land trusts this year.

“We wanted to use this year’s Land Trust Day to highlight the rapid rate at which North Carolina is losing – and will continue to lose – its beautiful open spaces to development.” said Tom Valone, Great Outdoor Provision Co. president.  “The contest was a way for us to make our customers aware of the work land trusts are doing to save the places we all love.”

Land Trust Day was founded by Great Outdoor Provision Co. in 1992 as a way to celebrate National Trails Day, which is always the first Saturday of June.  To read more about Land Trust Day, visit: http://greatoutdoorprovision.com/culture/wesupport/land-trust-day/

“We see Land Trust Day as a way for businesses to participate in a self-imposed ‘earth tax’,” said Valone.  “Many people do not realize the important work land trusts are doing in their communities.  We hope by supporting land trusts we are calling attention to their good work and contributing to it.”

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