Nature Restoration Trust Awards Over $310,000 to California Fish and Wildlife Habitat Conservation Projects
May 29 2008 - 1:02PM
PR Newswire (US)
PG&E and National Fish and Wildlife Foundation Partnership
Fosters Stewardship of California's Natural Resources SAN
FRANCISCO, May 29 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The Nature Restoration
Trust, a collaboration between Pacific Gas and Electric Company and
the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF), today announced
it is donating over $310,000 in grants to 10 community
organizations to foster stewardship of California's diverse
wildlife and habitats. With these grants, PG&E and NFWF are
renewing their successful program, which previously invested over
$2 million in projects to conserve and enhance wildlife in habitat
from Redding to Bakersfield. "Conservation at the local level
builds community connections to the land and is a solid, long-term
investment in our natural resources," said Jeff Trandahl, executive
director, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation. "We are extremely
proud to collaborate with PG&E and pleased that The Nature
Restoration Trust is the newest member of NFWF's Five Star
Restoration Program, which brings together diverse organizations to
help restore America's streams and wetlands." The Nature
Restoration Trust brings together public and private resources to
conserve and enhance the natural habitats of fish and wildlife.
Major funding for the program comes from PG&E, which has
committed $1 million over 2008-2010 to support projects throughout
the company's northern and central California service area. In
addition, federal funding of the program is provided by the
Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Office of Wetlands, Oceans
and Watersheds, and in-kind contributions are made by the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, EPA Region IX, and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Restoration Center Southwest.
"Since this unique, public-private team was launched in 1999, it
has helped advance critical habitat and wildlife restoration
projects, while inspiring our youth to protect California's natural
heritage for generations to come," said Ophelia Basgal, vice
president of civic partnerships and community initiatives at
PG&E. "PG&E is proud to be part of this creative program
which empowers communities to restore native habitats in urban,
suburban and rural areas." Winning projects were ranked and
selected by an Advisory Panel that included representatives from
NOAA, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, EPA Region IX, PG&E
and Foundation staff. Consideration for funding was based on
hands-on experiential education opportunities, benefits to the
resource, partnership with other organizations and geographical
distribution in California -- from coastal dunes and tidal marsh to
Sierra streams. The 2008 recipients of Nature Restoration Trust
grants are: Organization Grant Project American $31,500 Sediments
& the Next Generation: Restoration Rivers & Education in
Deer Creek American Rivers will work with multiple partners and
integrate their work in-field water quality monitoring, floodplain
restoration along a Sierra stream, and historical and cultural
research into local 7th - 12th grade curricula. High school
students will partner with middle school students in an "Eco-Pal"
program to jointly learn about a riverine system. Audubon $40,000
Audubon Bobcat Ranch Oak Woodland Corridor California Audubon
California Landowner Stewardship Landowner project will
re-establish an ecological Stewardship connection between the Dry
Creek tributaries Program and the main channel of Putah Creek while
creating a viable wildway managed by local landowners. High school
students will do restoration work to better learn about the
connection between a healthy ecosystem and responsible stewardship
of working landscapes. Children's $11,290 BioSITE SEED Discovery
The BioSITE (Students Investigating Their Museum of Environment)
SEEDS program of Children's San Jose Discovery Museum of San Jose
will work with the San Jose Unified School District, the Santa
Clara Water District, and other entities to restore riparian
habitat in the Guadalupe Watershed. Students will conduct
vegetation surveys, remove invasives, re- plant appropriate
natives, and collect data at three sites to measure the success of
the project. Community $30,504 Enhancing Red-legged Frog Habitat at
Alliance Serendipity Farms with Working with the Monterey Bay
Aquarium and Family the Wild Farm Alliance, Community Alliance
Farmers with Family Farmers will restore wetland and riparian
habitat for the endangered red- legged frog and Carmel River
steelhead trout and monitor water quality and vegetation on
Department of Parks and Recreation land at Serendipity Farms.
Students will learn principles of on-farm biodiversity conservation
practices and benefits for wildlife. Friends of $38,800
Community-based Coastal Dune Restoration at the Dunes Manila Dunes
Friends of the Dunes will develop a service learning curriculum for
the Adopt-A-Dune education project and work with Humboldt county
students, community volunteers, and the California Conservation
Corps to restore 4 acres of coastal dune habitat at the Manila
Dunes Recreation Area. Three rare plant species occur on the
property: beach layia (Layia carnosa), dark eyed gila (Gilia
millefoliata), and pink-sand verbena (Abronia umbellata ssp.
Breviflora) and the endangered Humboldt Bay wallflower is expected
to spread onto the property in the future as a result of increased
suitable habitat created. Golden $20,000 Eco-Oakland Environmental
Education Program Gate Golden Gate Audubon Society will provide
Audubon experiential learning opportunities for Society Oakland
children and their families to help restore critical marshlands at
Martin Luther King, Jr. Regional Shoreline Park's wetland complex
and additional riparian lands. The wetlands are a critical habitat
for endangered California clapper rails and endangered brown
pelicans and California least terns. Golden $20,000 Mori Point
Habitat Restoration Gate Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy
will National work with local youth and community groups to Parks
remove and control the spread of non-native Conservancy plants and
debris and revegetate with native plants near Pacifica on the coast
to create and improve breeding and foraging habitat for the
threatened California red-legged frog and endangered San Francisco
garter snake. Round $40,000 Mill Creek Enhancement Project Valley
The Round Valley Indian Tribes will enhance Indian instream and
riparian conditions for salmon, Tribes steelhead, migratory birds,
and sensitive species on nearly 2.5 miles of Mill Creek. Working
with the tribes, local schools will incorporate the project area
into their "Adopt-A-Stream" program for hands-on learning
experiences. Save the $40,000 San Francisquito Creek Restoration
Project Bay Save the Bay will mobilize and train 750 middle school,
high school, and community volunteers to revegetate and enhance
tidal salt marsh and restore over 6 acres of critical habitat at
the mouth of San Francisquito Creek in Palo Alto for the benefit of
fish, shorebirds, and other wildlife. Urban $39,573 Rheem Creek
Restoration and Watershed Creeks Education Project Council Urban
Creeks Council will reach out to neighborhoods close to Contra
Costa College to help restore native riparian habitat on Rheem
Creek. The Council will establish a Watershed Curriculum at the
college and provide stipends to 10 interns to design and install
the project. PG&E has a long history of making charitable
grants tailored to the wide variety of needs of the communities it
serves. The company's broader program of support to communities
includes cash grants, in-kind contributions, and volunteers for
community-based nonprofit organizations, and for schools and other
governmental programs throughout northern and central California.
All charitable contributions are entirely funded by PG&E
Corporation shareholders and the level of charitable giving does
not affect gas and electric rates. Pacific Gas and Electric
Company, a subsidiary of PG&E Corporation, is one of the
largest combined natural gas and electric utilities in the United
States. Based in San Francisco, with 20,000 employees, the company
delivers some of the nation's cleanest energy to 15 million people
in northern and central California. For more information, visit
http://www.pge.com/. A nonprofit established by Congress in 1984,
the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation sustains, restores and
enhances the Nation's fish, wildlife, plants and habitats. Through
leadership conservation investments with public and private
partners, NFWF is dedicated to achieving maximum conservation
impact by developing and applying best practices and innovative
methods for measurable outcomes. Since its establishment, NFWF has
awarded nearly 9,500 grants to over 3,000 organizations in the
United States and abroad and leveraged -- with its partners -- more
than $400 million in federal funds into more than $1.3 billion for
on-the-ground conservation. For more information, visit
http://www.nfwf.org/. DATASOURCE: Pacific Gas and Electric Company
CONTACT: PG&E News Department, +1-415-973-5930; or John Butler
of National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, +1-202-715-0710, Web
site: http://www.pge.com/
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