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The Nature Conservancy receives $2.5 million gift to protect Pennsylvania forests, and parks around the world - Funds from private donor support new forest conservation and restoration endowment
(Note: Language deception is employed to cloy the reader's senses into thinking that such vast amounts of real estate will be 'protected' -- when the accurate word is 'controlled.' This, of course, includes all the natural resources found on and under such lands.)
February 21, 2006
No author provided at originating website URL.
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania -
Longtime Nature Conservancy member and supporter Don Hamer recently
donated $2.5 million to protect
lands, waters, and natural areas in Pennsylvania and around
the world. The gift will provide funding for the creation of
the chapter’s Donald Hamer Pennsylvania Forest Conservation and
Restoration Fund, help protect habitat at West Branch Wilderness
http://nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/pennsylvania/preserves/art821.
html in Pennsylvania’s North
Central Highlands, and support the Conservancy’s international
World Parks program. “This
is a significant gift that will have a long-lasting effect on our
ability to protect the
woods, waters and wildlife of Pennsylvania and elsewhere for
generations to come,” said Bill Kunze, state director of The Nature
Conservancy in Pennsylvania.
http://nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/pennsylvania/ “Don
is the kind of forward-thinking member who is crucial to the success
of The Nature Conservancy. His support allows us to continuously seek
new ways to restore balance between the
needs of nature and the needs of people.” “It
gives me great pleasure to support The Nature Conservancy and help protect
land in the West Branch Wilderness,”
said Mr. Hamer. “This gift is a wonderful way to support my
interests in conservation,
as well as community and economic development. Creation of the
Pennsylvania Forest Conservation and Restoration Fund will preserve
this magnificent landscape and also offer
local economic opportunities to the community.” Home
to the state’s most rugged and wild
lands, Pennsylvania’s North
Central Highlands is the most contiguously forested
region between New York City and Chicago. The Conservancy’s West
Branch Wilderness
preserve near Williamsport consists of deep forested ravines,
beautiful mountain views, and two excellent native trout streams.
Vistas on the property afford an unspoiled view that stretches for
approximately 50 miles across mountains to the northwest and
southeast. Located beside Hyner View State Park http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/parks/hynerview.aspx,
a popular hang gliding area, this wilderness
is a recreational paradise. Partnering
with the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation
and Natural Resources http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/,
the Department of Environmental Protection
http://www.depweb.state.pa.us/dep/site/default.asp,
and the North Central Pennsylvania Conservancy http://www.npcweb.org/,
the Nature Conservancy is using forest
restoration and land acquisition to protect
these lands for future
generations to enjoy. Most of the forests in the
region have been cut over and replanted several times. They have been further
weakened by disease and invasive
species, resulting in
forests that are severely fragmented and degraded. The
Conservancy http://nature.org/ is
working to restore the health of these
forests and their historic composition. This includes
planting hybrid American chestnut trees, which are resistant to the
blight, an invasive pathogen from Asia, which reduced this species to
a fraction of its historic range. The American chestnut once covered
millions of acres on the East Coast. In
addition to protecting
the forests of Pennsylvania, this gift will be used to support The
Nature Conservancy’s World Parks program. In 2004, governments
of 188 nations around the world agreed to an ambitious pledge: to
create a global network of parks and protected areas by 2012. As a
result, the Nature Conservancy launched the World Parks & Protected
Areas Fund to support these governments and communities in creating
strong, sustainable regional and national park systems connected
across the world. By working with local communities,
as well as national governments in efforts to conserve
lands and waters, the Conservancy is forging close partnerships to
ensure a future where people and nature thrive. Born in Illinois and now a resident of Bellefonte, Don traces his family roots back 200 years to Huntington County, Pennsylvania. He earned engineering degrees from the University of Illinois and Penn State, as well as an MBA from the University of Chicago. Don founded his own company, State of the Art, Inc., based in State College, which manufactures microelectronics components.
Copyright 2006, The Nature Conservancy. http://nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/pennsylvania/press/press2276.h tml |