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2022 Annual Meeting Notice

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Annual Meeting Notice 2022

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VA Grant

NEWS ALERT

Virginia is for Lovers … of the Environment

ANS Ramps Up Environmental Literacy, Advocacy Efforts Thanks to New Funding 

For Immediate Release: September 8, 2022
For more information contact Lisa Goodnight at lisa.goodnight@anshome.org or 301-523-5394.

CHEVY CHASE, MD – The Audubon Naturalist Society works with communities throughout the Washington, DC region to spark environmental action around specific issues. Now, ANS is focusing even greater attention on Fairfax and Loudoun Counties under a new, two-year program called “Empowering Environmental Stewards in Northern Virginia.”  

Thanks to a generous $50,000 grant from the Virginia Environmental Endowment, ANS is strengthening its environmental education presence in Loudoun County Schools following Covid interruptions and expanding its work within historically excluded communities in Fairfax County around two issues: the ongoing redevelopment of the eight-mile-long Route 1 Corridor, from south of Alexandria to Dogue Creek in Fairfax County and the stream health of Little Hunting Creek. 

“With the disruptions caused by the global pandemic, schools need more support than ever to provide the outdoor learning experiences that foster early connections to the natural world and communities need partners in the ongoing fight for cleaner, heathier watersheds,” said ANS Deputy Director Alison Pearce. “We’re grateful to Virginia Environmental Endowment for being a significant supporter of ANS’s ongoing efforts in Northern Virginia.”  

On the environmental literacy front, ANS has provided environmental education in Loudoun County for 20 years through school programs. This summer, ANS hired a Virginia-based environmental education program manager to provide outdoor educational experiences to school children and build a sustainable model for environmental education in the county. On the advocacy front, ANS recently released its Story of the Streams Report Card to spur action around stream health in Northern Virginia and beyond. To get Route 1 right and improve the health of Little Hunting Creek, ANS will build on previous partnerships to connect residents to the creek and provide them with skills and knowledge to advocate for improved public transit and pedestrian safety, stormwater management, and green infrastructure. This program can serve as a regional and national model for more just, inclusive and sustainable land use.  

"The Virginia Environmental Endowment is pleased to support ANS’s important work to further the environmental education of the region's school children and on projects relating to healthy and cleaner communities,” said VEE Executive Director Joseph H. Maroon. “The organization's work is consistent with the Endowment's mission to improve the quality of the environment by encouraging all sectors to work together to prevent pollution, conserve natural resources, and promote environmental literacy.” 

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Follow ANS at: www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety,  www.Twitter.com/ANStweet 
and @ANSNature on Instagram.

About ANS: Throughout its history, ANS has championed nature for all by playing a pivotal role in conserving our region's iconic natural places from development including the C&O Canal, Dyke Marsh and, most recently, Ten Mile Creek. Past ANS member and board president, Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, is credited with launching the now global environmental movement. ANS's nature experts provide hundreds of opportunities each year for children and adults to enjoy, learn about, and protect the environment. 

About VEE: The Virginia Environmental Endowment (VEE) is a non-profit, grant-making foundation based in Richmond, Virginia that is focused on improving the quality of the environment by using its capital, expertise and resources to encourage all sectors to work together to prevent pollution, conserve natural resources and promote environmental literacy. The Endowment celebrated its 40th Anniversary in 2017.

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Story of Streams Released

NEWS RELEASE

Environmental Groups Release Unique Stream Analysis to Spur Community Action

Holmes Run, Nothwest Branch and Oxon Run in Moderatly Poor to Fair Health

For Immediate Release: August 10, 2022
For more information contact Lisa Goodnight lisa.goodnight@anshome.org or 301-523-5394, or ANS Communications Director vince.robinson@anshome.org, or 904-710-8224

CHEVY CHASE, MD – The Story of the Streams, a first-of-its-kind report released by the Audubon Naturalist Society, Neighbors of the Northwest Branch, Friends of Holmes Run, and the Friends of Oxon Run, gives the three area streams surveyed Moderately Poor to Fair ratings.  But the health of those streams, and all our region’s streams, can improve through public engagement.

The report. highlights the personal connections between the streams and the communities that regularly interact with them, and it makes it easy for people to get involved in efforts to protect local waterways. 

 “The science is clear -- the road to better health depends on three things: less pavement, more trees & wetlands, and cleaner air. What’s good for the streams is good for humanity and wildlife,” said ANS Director of Conservation Eliza Cava.  

The report’s methodology is unique because the metrics don’t solely focus on what’s in the water. The Story of Streams report also highlights who (both human and wildlife) is accessing the streams. The four score categories are Water Quality, Climate, Access to Nature, and Biodiversity & Habitat. 

“The story of the streams is really our story,” Cava added. “We are proud to have produced this comprehensive report allowing us to deepen our connection with our neighbors in this fight for our streams.” 

 Here’s what some of ANS’s partners have to say about Story of the Steams: 

"The ambition and commitment to tracking and working to improve the conditions of the streams highlighted here, shown by all participants in this work, is impressive. Through this project, Audubon Naturalist Society and their collaborators are leading the way in doing the work that communities and the ecosystems we depend on need." -- Katie May Laumann, PhD, consulting scientist 

“Neighbors of the Northwest Branch is immensely grateful for ANS's leadership in making our watersheds more visible. We look forward to welcoming new neighbors to our collective stewardship of the Northwest Branch. The Story of Streams makes it clear: we all need healthy streams and healthy streams depend on us!” - Nora Swisher, President of the Board, Neighbors of the Northwest Branch 

 “Streams are ubiquitous - they’re everywhere - and yet somehow manage to be invisible to us. That little stream that runs under the road you’re driving on, or behind your property line, only to disappear into the next neighborhood, is actually going somewhere. Inland streams are literally the lifeblood for wildlife, from your nearest pocket park all the way to the Potomac River and the Chesapeake Bay. Often, they’re also the de facto stormwater system. What this report does is remind us of steps we can take to help the environment and water quality in our own communities. Pay more attention to what goes into your local inland, urbanized, channelized or intermittent stream – and you will protect your local drinking water and all the waterways downstream, too.” - Whitney Redding, president, Friends of Holmes Run 

"The Friends of Oxon Run would like to thank the Audubon Naturalist Society for their leadership and shedding light on the beauty that is Oxon Run. We understand the importance of healthy streams and what we must do to improve our watershed. The Story of the Streams is an excellent resource and reminder of why we protect our environment.”- Absalom Jordan, Chair of Friend of Oxon Run

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Follow ANS at: www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety,  www.Twitter.com/ANStweet 
and @ANSNature on Instagram.

 About ANS: Throughout its history, ANS has championed nature for all by playing a pivotal role in conserving our region's iconic natural places from development including the C&O Canal, Dyke Marsh and, most recently, Ten Mile Creek. Past ANS member and board president, Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, is credited with launching the now global environmental movement. ANS's nature experts provide hundreds of opportunities each year for children and adults to enjoy, learn about, and protect the environment.

The Story of Streams
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Alert-Story of Streams

NEWS ALERT

Local Leaders, Environmentalists Gather in Adelphi, Md. to Address New Report About Stream Health 

Speakers to talk about stewardship, improving the health of three local streams - Holmes Run, Northwest Branch and Oxon Run

For Immediate Release: August 8, 2022
For more information contact Lisa Goodnight lisa.goodnight@anshome.org or 301-523-5394, or ANS Communications Director vince.robinson@anshome.org, or 904-710-8224

ADELPHI, MD –

Local government and environmental leaders officials will gather at the Northwest Branch to discuss a new report, The Story of the Streams, which found three streams around the Washington, DC region to be in moderately poor to fair health.  Speakers, listed below, will encourage the public to take action to help their streams.

  • When: Wednesday, August 10th, 2-3 pm
  • Where: Along the Northwest Branch, behind Adelphi Mill Recreation Center (Google maps link), 8402 Riggs Rd. in Adelphi, MD (Prince George’s County). The event will take place outdoors.
  • Who: Audubon Naturalist Society, Friends of Holmes Run, The Neighbors of Northwest Branch, and Friends of Oxon Run produced the report. Environmental stewards & advocates; elected officials; and stream, parks, and stormwater agency leaders will be in attendance.
  • Speaker List: Eliza Cava, Director of Conservation, Audubon Naturalist Society; Nora Swisher, President, Neighbors of the Northwest Branch, Ab Jordan, Jr., Chair, Friends of Oxon Run; Whitney Redding, President, Friends of Holmes Run; Vanesa Pinto, CHEER & Friends of Sligo Creek; Anthony Nolan, Prince George's Parks Special Programs Division Director;  Karina Navas, Chief of Staff to Prince George’s Councilmember Deni Taveras (PG District 2); Virginia Del. Kaye Kory; Councilmember Tom Dernoga (PG District 1);  Coucilmember Dannielle Glaros (District 3)

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Follow ANS at: www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety,  www.Twitter.com/ANStweet 
and @ANSNature on Instagram.

 About ANS: Throughout its history, ANS has championed nature for all by playing a pivotal role in conserving our region's iconic natural places from development including the C&O Canal, Dyke Marsh and, most recently, Ten Mile Creek. Past ANS member and board president, Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, is credited with launching the now global environmental movement. ANS's nature experts provide hundreds of opportunities each year for children and adults to enjoy, learn about, and protect the environment.

The Story of Streams
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Sligo Creek Health

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Naturally Latinos 4

NEWS ALERT

Naturally Latinos Conference to Showcase Power of Latino Engagement

Otro mundo es possible (Another world is possible) Injects Hope into Climate Narrative

For Immediate Release -- February 24, 2022
For more information contact Lisa Goodnight at lglisagoodnight@gmail.com or 301-523-5394, or ANS Communications Director vince.robinson@anshome.org, or 904-710-8224

CHEVY CHASE - The Audubon Naturalist Society and its partners are proud to announce the dates for the fourth Naturally Latinos Conference (NLC4). Themed “Otro Mundo es posible/Another world is possible,” the event will take place virtually Tuesday, March 22 through Thursday, March 24, with an in-person day on Friday, March 25 at the Silver Spring Civic Center. Saturday, March 26 will include outdoor nature experiences.

“The serious environmental challenges that we face across our region, country, and planet affect us all. The Naturally Latinos Conference is important because it recognizes that all communities need to be part of the solution,” said NLC4 Conference Co-Chair Serenella Linares.

Naturally Latinos and its sister conference Taking Nature Black reflect the pressing need to engage a larger and more diverse community of people who treasure the national world and work to preserve it. Linares said NLC4 “is a place for Latine professionals to come together and have our voices centered and celebrated not only by our community but also by our allies.”

NLC4 session topics will include: "Land Acknowledgement & Indigeneity in the Latinx Community," "Hecho por Manos Verdes, The Role of Latinos in the Watershed Restoration Movement" and "Urban Agriculture: Growing, Sharing, Learning in Community."

Ana Luz Porzecanski, Director of the Center for Biodiversity and Conservation at the American Museum of Natural History, will deliver the opening day keynote presentation. Adam Ortiz, Regional Administrator for EPA's Mid-Atlantic Region (Region 3), will give the closing keynote.

The March 26 outdoor experiences will take place at 10 am ET in the Washington, DC area. Attendees who purchase "Hybrid" tickets will have access to the Friday & Saturday in-person activities. Bilingual English Spanish interpretation will be available. See the full agenda at: Naturally Latinos 2022 | Audubon Naturalist Society (anshome.org)

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Follow ANS at: www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety,  www.Twitter.com/ANStweet 
and @ANSNature on Instagram.

 About ANS: Throughout its history, ANS has championed nature for all by playing a pivotal role in conserving our region's iconic natural places from development including the C&O Canal, Dyke Marsh and, most recently, Ten Mile Creek. Past ANS member and board president, Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, is credited with launching the now global environmental movement. ANS's nature experts provide hundreds of opportunities each year for children and adults to enjoy, learn about, and protect the environment.

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STATEMENT

ANS Testifies on Proposed Beltway Expansion

ANS TESTIMONY TO MARYLAND DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION STATE HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION (MDOT SHA)

Audubon Naturalist Society’s testimony to Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration (MDOT SHA) and Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) on the I-495/I-270 Managed Lanes Study Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement.1 

Denisse Guitarra
Maryland Conservation Advocate, Audubon Naturalist Society (ANS) 

November 1, 2021

Dear MDOT SHA and FHWA,  

For 124 years, the Audubon Naturalist Society has inspired people to enjoy, learn about and protect nature. ANS demands that last year’s DEIS “No Build” option still remains as the preferred alternative, as the SDEIS still lacks complete studies on environmental justice, climate change, wildlife, and waterways impact, and fails to include transit alternatives. The Managed Lanes highway expansion project pushes far beyond the climate constraints people and the environment are currently experiencing today. The United Nations IPCC report2 released earlier this year makes it clear – we have no time left to get ourselves off of fossil fuels and save as much of our planet as possible.  Maryland and Virginia need a more equitable, transit, and climate-friendly solution to solve our traffic congestion problems. We need excellent transit and not an inch more of car-coddling pavement. ANS demands that MDOT SHA and FHWA do not move forward with the project’s “Preferred Alternative” option.  

The preferred alternative would negatively impact people’s lives and wellbeing. On Chapter 4 of the SDEIS, it mentions that 501 properties would be impacted by the project, the majority of these being residential properties.3  Even more alarming, the SDEIS does not provide details on how communities, especially POC communities, would be impacted by the new bottlenecks on I-270 beyond its intersection with I-370. Equally disturbing, the SDEIS fails to include a complete study of the overall cumulative impacts the project will have on people. Under our four concurrent public health, climate, economic, and social crises, it does not make sense to add more air-polluting lanes. 

Moreover, the preferred alternative listed in the SDEIS does not properly mitigate the negative impacts the highway expansion project will have on air, water, wildlife, and people. The SDEIS, like its predecessor the DEIS, fails to properly account for and provide any solutions and dangerously underestimates the devastating impacts the project will have on people and the environment. The SDEIS fails to consider the mitigation of 1,000,000 sq ft of floodplains and over 186,000 sq ft of wetlands.4 Lacking these critical pieces of information, when climate change is already causing major flooding issues in the region, is completely irresponsible of MDOT SHA and FHWA. In terms of water quality, the SDEIS’s preferred alternative will reduce Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties capacity to reduce and meet its Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) goals. Furthermore, the project will impact 500 acres of forests and 26 acres of Parkland.5 In terms of rare, threatened, and endangered (RTE) species, 41 species are in peril due to the project.6 The irreplaceable destruction the “Preferred Alternative” is expected to have on the environment is so extensive that no built infrastructure could ever replace the natural infrastructure this project would take down, placing  Maryland and Virginia at a higher climate catastrophe risk for the next 50 years.   

ANS and our partners recommend that MDOT SHA and FHWA do not approve the SDEIS’s “Preferred alternative” due to its incomplete, faulty, and deceiving information and instead opt for the “no build alternative” option listed in the DEIS. On behalf of ANS and our 28,000 members and supporters, ANS respectfully requests that MDOT SHA and FHWA to act responsibly and not move forward with the SDEIS’s Managed Lanes Preferred alternative today. 

 

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Follow ANS at: www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety,  www.Twitter.com/ANStweet 
and @ANSNature on Instagram.

 About ANS: Throughout its history, ANS has championed nature for all by playing a pivotal role in conserving our region's iconic natural places from development including the C&O Canal, Dyke Marsh and, most recently, Ten Mile Creek. Past ANS member and board president, Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, is credited with launching the now global environmental movement. ANS's nature experts provide hundreds of opportunities each year for children and adults to enjoy, learn about, and protect the environment.

Map of the proposed expansion of I-495 and I-270
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NEWS RELEASE

Naming the Future

NEWS ALERT

AUDUBON NATURALIST SOCIETY ANNOUNCES DECISION TO CHANGE ITS NAME

New name will build on strengths of the past and usher in a more inclusive future

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 22, 2021

Media Contacts:  Caroline Brewer at caroline.brewer@anshome.org or Vince Robinson at
vince.robinson@anshome.org

CHEVY CHASE, MD – After listening to the voices of ANS community of members, volunteers, program participants, donors, board and partners, the organization has decided to update its name to signal a new chapter that builds on the strengths of ANS’s past and moves forward toward a stronger, more inclusive future. With temperatures climbing, fires raging, and storms becoming more deadly, it’s clear we cannot address the substantive challenges to nature conservation without engaging with all communities. 

“The mission and vision of the organization have not changed,” said Lisa Alexander, Executive Director of ANS. “The deliberate and thoughtful decision to change our name is part of our ongoing commitment to creating a larger and more diverse community of people who treasure the natural world and work to preserve it. It has become clear that this will never be fully possible with the current name,” she said. 

ANS acknowledges that the art of John James Audubon was a catalyst for bird conservation in our nation, and that the Audubon community has achieved much together over the past century. However, ANS knows that names matter and can cause harm and stress to many members of its community. Retaining the name Audubon without regard to the pain that John James Audubon inflicted on Black people and other people of color is a disservice to the ANS community. 

“This is about more than what we call ourselves,” said Diane Wood, incoming Board President. “We can and must do better to address equity and racial justice in everything we do. We are deeply invested in breaking down barriers and acknowledging our part in an exclusionary past,” she said. 

This name change is part of a process started in 2010, when ANS began to reassess its policies and practices and found that some of  its work did not fully realize its mission to connect everyone to nature in the Washington, D.C. metro region that ANS has a mission to serve. The decision to change the name is due to the organization’s increasingly diverse set of programs and is rooted in its commitment to the communities ANS serves in the DC region.

“Our organization has been on this path for more than a decade,” explained Alan Spears, ANS Board Member. “I appreciate the bravery, steadfastness and willingness to listen to members, staff, partners and allies on this issue, which is about the future of ANS and how we become a better organization.” 

ANS is excited to continue this work, and looks forward to collaboratively changing the organization’s name to one that reflects the growing and rich diversity of the region ANS serves and sends a clear message: Nature needs all of us.

The new name and brand identity will be decided after a deliberate and thoughtful process of listening and learning from the current ANS community as well as the nature lovers that the organization aspires to partner with in the future. 

Learn more at https://archive.anshome.org/namingthefuture

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The Audubon Naturalists Society (ANS) is the oldest independent environmental organization in the Washington, D.C. region. ANS inspires residents of the greater Washington, D.C., region to appreciate, understand, and protect their natural environment through outdoor experiences, education, and advocacy.

Follow ANS at: www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety,  www.Twitter.com/ANStweet 
and @ANSNature on Instagram.

 About ANS: Throughout its history, ANS has championed nature for all by playing a pivotal role in conserving our region's iconic natural places from development including the C&O Canal, Dyke Marsh and, most recently, Ten Mile Creek. Past ANS member and board president, Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, is credited with launching the now global environmental movement. ANS's nature experts provide hundreds of opportunities each year for children and adults to enjoy, learn about, and protect the environment.

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Nature Needs All of Us: Join Us!

Three water quality monitors are posing for a photo while standing in a stream.
An ANS educator shows a small bird to a group of young children gathered around her.
Three women, one in a wheelchair, are strolling along the accessible trail at Woodend Nature Sanctuary.
A man is looking up into the trees at Woodend Nature Sanctuary.
Adult students in a Master Naturalist program inspect a plant alongside an ANS instructor.
Two panelists are pictured during a presentation at a recent Naturally Latinos conference
Camp Audubon youth sit on a mountain ledge overlooking a green landscape
Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali talks to the crowd at a recent Taking Nature Black conference
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Participants at an Adult field trip pose for a photo outdoors
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A group of birdwatchers look through binoculars and point to something out of frame
ANS Garden coordinator Jenny Brown poses with a group of students holding vegetables they grew in the garden.
A group of teenage campers walk through a wooded area.
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Bicyclists are riding on a nature trail during an ANS field trip
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