Nearly $1.1 Million in Funding from Audubon and Toyota's Conservation
Initiative to Support Local, Solutions-based Environmental Projects
Nationwide
New York, December 9, 2010 - Restoration of a
wildlife sanctuary damaged by the Gulf oil spill, conservation
internships for urban teenagers, and promotion of sustainable ranching
are only three of the 43 projects in 27 states that will receive a total
of nearly $1.1 million in the latest round of TogetherGreen Innovation
Grants. This will mark the third year of TogetherGreen funding to
facilitate people-powered conservation action in urban, suburban, and
rural areas. Projects are selected for innovation, potential gains in
habitat, water, and energy conservation, and opportunities to engage new
audiences in helping the environment. TogetherGreen is funded by a $20
million grant from Toyota over five years.
TogetherGreen
Innovation Grants provide seed money for projects that use innovative
approaches and technologies to engage new and diverse audiences in
conservation and tackle pressing conservation problems. Innovation
Grants enable awardees and their partner organizations to inspire,
equip, and engage people to tackle environmental concerns and improve
the health of their communities.
"The conservation solutions
pioneered by TogetherGreen Innovation Grant winners are inspiring models
of both ingenuity and conservation commitment," said Audubon President
David Yarnold. "Each project represents an investment in our shared
environment and future - and an opportunity for many of our nation's
most creative and dedicated individuals and communities to transform
their dreams into effective conservation action. As our alliance with
Toyota shows, when organizations work together, they can magnify
conservation results."
Since 2008, the TogetherGreen Innovation
Grants program has awarded over $3.5 million to more than 130
environmental projects nationwide. The 2010 awardees are receiving
grants ranging from $5,000 - $66,100. Funds were awarded to partnerships
between Audubon groups (local Chapters or programs of Audubon's large
national network) and organizations in their communities - with more
than 125 partner organizations involved in Innovation Grant projects in
the coming year. Most of the projects involve audiences previously
underserved or not engaged in environmental action, from urban youth to
rural ranchers.
The Innovation Grants program not only supports
innovation in communities across the country; it also strives to build
the capacity of conservation professionals. In addition to financial
support, grantees receive opportunities for professional development,
including a multi-day workshop held at the U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service's National Conservation Training Center in Shepherdstown, West
Virginia, and online trainings. Audubon staff provides further support,
including communications assistance, which leads to more public
recognition at the local, state, and national level, and grantees are
networked with each other so that they can share best practices and
learn from others.
Audubon's partner groups benefit considerably
from Innovation Grants, too. As Teola Brady, Environmental Director for
the Yomba Shoshone Tribe, said, "We are pleased to be partners with
Audubon Nevada Important Bird Area Program in participating in the
Sagebrush Celebration Project. We see this project as an excellent
opportunity to help expand the way that tribal families experience,
understand and participate in the conservation of sagebrush habitats. It
will also expose them to the various ways that the Upper Reese River
Valley - which is right in their backyard - is important to their lives
and the fabric of their local community and culture."
2009
Innovation Grantees helped tens of thousands of people take conservation
action in their communities, including Los Angeles kids who cultivated
and planted native species in degraded coastal habitat, Denver students
who assessed and reduced their schools' electricity bills, and Dayton
businesses that improved water quality in Ohio's rivers. Grant
recipients leveraged their grants by over four million dollars through
matching and in-kind support, allowing them to reach more people and
deliver even greater conservation results.
"Toyota has a long
history of utilizing technical innovation to preserve natural resources,
reduce waste, and improve sustainability." said Patricia Salas Pineda,
Toyota's group vice president of national philanthropy and the Toyota
USA Foundation. "We are so proud of the TogetherGreen program and the
incredible results it has produced in communities across the U.S. We
know this latest group of Innovation Grants will continue to have a
tremendous positive impact."
For complete details about the 2010 TogetherGreen Innovation Grants projects, please visit: www.togethergreen.org/grants.
[Source] http://pressroom.toyota.com/pr/tms/43-environmental-projects-receive-187085.aspx