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Gulf Guardian Award Winners 2004

Civic/Nonprofit Organization Category - 3rd Place
TIE - Adopt A Spot: Learn-Work-Play

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Dec. 1, 2004

LACOMBE HERITAGE CENTER WINS 3RD PLACE GULF GUARDIAN AWARD

STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. – The Gulf of Mexico Program presented the Lacombe Heritage Center today with a third place Gulf Guardian Award for 2004 in the Civic and Nonprofit Organization Category for “Project Adopt-a-Spot: Learn-Work-Play.” The award ceremony was held aboard the Creole Queen Riverboat in New Orleans, La.

Project "Adopt A Spot: Learn-Work-Play” started in 1999 using litter abatement funds from the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality. The Lacombe Heritage Center, through its environmental divisions, the St. Tammany Environmental Patrol, and Lacombe Environmental Action Project, organized, educated, and employed Slidell High School students as recruits in its Junior Ranger Corps to clean up and restore areas in the Big Branch Marsh National Wildlife Refuge. For decades the refuge had been used for illegal dumping. Leaders of the project provided in-classroom instruction and hands-on field operations. They also designed and installed a Bee, Bug, Bat, Bird and Butterfly bog Garden and Environmental Learning Center at Slidell High School as a prototype for continuing wetland restoration installations at their schools.

"The Gulf Guardian Award winners for 2004 are prime examples of collaborative environmental efforts leading to neighborhood solutions that transcend political boundaries,” said Benjamin Grumbles, EPA Assistant Administrator for Water in Washington, D.C. “I commend all of the winners for their innovative partnerships, common sense ideas, and hard work. Their efforts are making a difference in protecting and restoring the Gulf of Mexico.”

The Gulf of Mexico Program initiated the Gulf Guardian awards in 2000 as a way to recognize and honor the businesses, community groups, individuals, and agencies that are taking positive steps to keep the Gulf healthy, beautiful and productive. The Gulf of Mexico Program began in 1988 to protect, restore, and maintain the health and productivity of the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem in economically sustainable ways. Award entries were received from Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. A first, second, and third place award are given each year in six categories – individual, business, youth and education, nonprofit organizations, government, and partnership efforts.

Gulf of Mexico Program Office Director Bryon O. Griffith said, “This year’s Gulf Guardian Award winners encapsulate the essence of the Gulf of Mexico Program and our efforts to attain environmental solutions in concert with economic growth." “Environmental successes are exponential when you bring the resources of many to the table, as the 2004 winners have so successfully demonstrated."

For a list of all the Gulf Guardian Award winners for 2004, visit the Gulf of Mexico Program web site at https://www.epa.gov/gmpo and click on the Gulf Guardian Award button.

The Gulf of Mexico Program is underwritten by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and is a non-regulatory, inclusive consortium of state and federal government agencies and representatives of the business and agricultural community, fishing industry, scientists, environmentalists, and community leaders from all five Gulf States. The Gulf Program seeks to improve the environmental health of the Gulf in concert with economic development.

Editor’s Note: For more information about the Gulf Guardian Awards and the Gulf of Mexico Program, call Terry Hines Smith at 228-688-1159. For more information about the Lacombe Heritage Center and this project, call Tom Aicklen at 985-882-7218.

 

Gulf of Mexico Program Office
Mail Code: EPA/GMPO
Stennis Space Center, MS 39529-6000
228-688-3726
FAX: 228-688-2709


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