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Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali

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Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali, an Environmental Justice Gladiator blending sports, culture, policy, and activism to win on Climate Change, is a National Environmental Champion.

Dr. Ali serves as the Vice President of Environmental Justice, Climate, and Community Revitalization for the National Wildlife Federation. He is also the founder of Revitalization Strategies, a business focused on moving our most vulnerable communities from “surviving to thriving.”

Before joining the National Wildlife Federation, Dr. Ali was senior vice president for the Hip Hop Caucus, a national non-profit and non-partisan organization that connects the hip-hop community to the civic process to build power and create positive change. In that role, he led the strategic direction, expansion, and operation of the Hip Hop Caucus’ portfolio on climate, environmental justice, and community revitalization.

A frequent television commentator, Dr. Ali is also a regular guest on WURD radio, Roland Martin Unfiltered, and The Dean Obeidallah Show.

Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali
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Rabiah Nur

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Rabiah Nur

HEALER, ACTIVIST,
SPEAKER & STORYTELLER

Rabiah Nur is an Indigenous healer, activist, storyteller, speaker, ceremonialist and daughter of the Great Mother. Nur’s work in the world is to heal and empower through connection to nature, to spirit, and to their innate wisdom. She works to facilitate a rebirth of a new and healthy society where women are valued, empowered, whole and are held as the sacred beings that they are.

Currently, Nur consults with and teaches at conferences, gatherings, schools, religious organizations, and retreat centers to offer Earth-based spiritual teachings, grounding energetic work, collective healing for teams and work groups, and education about appropriate use of Indigenous practices and traditions. She has co-designed an initiative in partnership with the Patuxent Riverkeeper called Honoring Our Sacred Waters, which exists to increase awareness of the spiritual connection between people and water through honoring, ceremony, and education. Nur was given an initial vision for this initiative which has been adopted by numerous organizations in the Chesapeake Bay area.

As a dedicated activist and educator, Nur has spent the past 30 years hosting leaders and wisdom keepers from Maori, Mayan, Aztec, and Senegalese Indigenous communities to organize cross-cultural and immersive educational gatherings and ceremonies. For 17 years, she worked on the organizing committee for the annual gathering called A Prayer Vigil for The Earth. Nur attended multiple iterations of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and she was part of the delegation of Indigenous people from North America invited to Bolivia to craft the Rights of Mother Earth document that Eva Morales delivered to the United Nations.


 

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ANS Testifies for Smart Funding to Fight Climate Change

NEWS RELEASE

 ANS to Testify for Smart Funding to Combat Climate Change, Sprawl at MD Senate Hearing

Conservation Advocate will make the case for the Transit Safety and Investment Act Today

For more information, contact caroline.brewer@anshome.org, or 240-899-9019, or lglisagoodnight@gmail.com, or 301-523-5394

For Immediate Release – February 12, 2020

Chevy Chase, MD - The Audubon Naturalist Society will submit written testimony in support of SB424 – Maryland Transit Safety & Investment Act (MTA) before the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee Hearing.

ANS Maryland Conservation Advocate Denisse Guitarra is also a speaker at today's MTA funding rally which starts at 4 p.m. in front of the Maryland House Office Building in Annapolis.

“The Transit Safety & Investment Act will provide a much-needed infusion of funds to make Maryland’s transit systems more reliable, safe and efficient,” Guitarra said. "Funding this act helps us strike a blow against climate change. Instead of more pavement, cars, and sprawl, we need to fully fund transit to move people quickly and safely into a greener, cleaner, more sustainable future. Building more lanes is a mind-boggling and utterly backward move."

Read her full SB424 testimony. 

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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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ANS to Honor Environmental Champions

NEWS RELEASE

ANS to Honor DMV-area Environmental Champions at
Taking Nature Black Awards Ceremony

Honorees include First African Nobelist, Nation’s Only African American Riverkeeper, and High School Senior Leading DC’s Movement for Climate Action

For Immediate Release – February 11, 2020

Contact Lisa Goodnight, ANS Media Outreach Coordinator, at lglisagoodnight@gmail.com or Caroline Brewer, Chair of Taking Nature Black and Director of Marketing and Communications for ANS, at caroline.brewer@anshome.org to schedule interviews with this year’s Environmental Champions.

CHEVY CHASE, MD - The Audubon Naturalist Society will salute seven African American environmental advocates during the 2020 Taking Nature Black conference on February 27 at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), 4000 Jones Bridge Road in Chevy Chase, MD.  The 2020 Environmental Champions will be awarded for engaging in service that improves the quality of life for under-resourced African American communities in ways that are unique, groundbreaking, and pioneering.

The 2020 #TakingNatureBlack Environmental Champions are:

Wangari Maathai, the first African woman to receive a Nobel Prize, is the 2020 Taking Nature Black Legacy Environmental Champion. In 1977, she founded the Green Belt Movement (GBM) an environmental organization that empowers communities, and particularly women, to conserve the environment and improve livelihoods. Professor Maathai was appointed Goodwill Ambassador for the Congo Basin Forest Ecosystem, the world’s “second lung” after the Amazon Rainforest. Her four books (The Green Belt Movement: Sharing the Approach and the Experience, Unbowed: A Memoir, The Challenge for Africa, and Replenishing the Earth: Spiritual Values for Healing Ourselves and the World) and the documentary Taking Root: The Vision of Wangari Maathai expanded on and deepened the key concepts behind the Green Belt Movement’s work and approach. The work of Professor Maathai and the Green Belt Movement continues to stand as a testament to the power of grassroots organizing, proof that one person’s simple idea—that a community should come together to plant trees, can make a difference.

Fred Tutman, one of the longest serving riverkeepers in the Chesapeake region and the only African American riverkeeper in the United States, is a National Environmental Champion. Tutman is a grassroots community advocate for clean water in Maryland’s longest and deepest intrastate waterway. He holds the title of Patuxent Riverkeeper, an organization that he founded in 2004. He was recently featured in the national magazine, Waterkeepers, and explained that, “In some ways, Patuxent Riverkeeper is a cross-cultural bridge between the have and the have-nots in this watershed, fighting some of the most controversial battles and, frankly, the hardest to fund.”

In the same piece, Eagle Harbor, MD Mayor James Crudup spoke to Tutman’s significant impact on his small community. “Before Fred we didn’t have anyone that we could turn to and find out what was going on in regard to the town’s waterfront. Recently he was very instrumental in our receiving grants from the Department of Environmental Resources, including a $100,000 grant to help creek flooding and erosion.” Over 16 years, Patuxent Riverkeeper has litigated 19 cases and prevailed in eight of them, winning nearly a half-billion dollars in judicial penalties, fines and reparations from polluters. Tutman is known as a thoughtful listener, skilled strategist, and dogged fighter for what’s right.

Tutman also lives and works on an active farm located near the Patuxent that has been his family’s ancestral home for nearly a century. Prior to river keeping, Tutman spent nearly three decades as a media producer and consultant on telecommunications assignments across the globe.

Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali, an Environmental Justice Gladiator blending sports, culture, policy, and activism to win on Climate Change, is a National Environmental Champion. Ali serves as the Vice President of Environmental Justice, Climate, and Community Revitalization for the National Wildlife Federation. He is also the founder of Revitalization Strategies, a business focused on moving our most vulnerable communities from “surviving to thriving.” Before joining the National Wildlife Federation, Ali was senior vice president for the Hip Hop Caucus, a national non-profit and non-partisan organization that connects the hip-hop community to the civic process to build power and create positive change. In that role, he led the strategic direction, expansion, and operation of the Hip Hop Caucus’ portfolio on climate, environmental justice, and community revitalization. A frequent television commentator, Ali is also a regular guest on WURD radio, Roland Martin UnfilteredThe Dean Obeidallah Show.

Akiima Price, a nationally respected thought leader at the intersection of social and environmental issues and the relationship between nature and community well-being, is a Regional Environmental Champion. Currently, Price works with the National Park Foundation and the National Park Service to build a friends group for Anacostia Park which includes River Terrace Park, Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens, and the Frederick Douglass Historic Home. This group will ultimately use Anacostia Park to engage Ward 7 & 8 families in activities that support mental health, physical health, and social well-being. From her early career experiences as a National Park Service Interpretation Ranger in Boulder City, Nevada to her national work with environmental and social service organizations, Price has cultivated over 20 years of experience into cutting-edge best practices in trauma-informed environmentalism.

Tiaa Rutherford,  Prince George’s County’s Litter Reduction Program Manager,  who also responds to the affectionate title of “Trash Czar,” is a Regional Environmental Champion. Rutherford oversees the county’s efforts to reduce the amount of plastic and other debris in the Anacostia River and meet the goals of the county’s stormwater discharge permit under the Clean Water Act. She is also working to increase the number of “Big Belly” trash compactors at high-litter locations in order to make it easier for county residents and visitors to dispose of recyclables and trash in separate containers. Twenty-nine Big Belly systems have been installed to date, and it is anticipated that 75 will be in use by the end of 2021.

Michael Carter Jr., an 11th generation farmer in the United States and the 5th generation to farm on Carter Farms - his family’s century farm in Orange County, Virginia -  is being honored as a Regional Environmental Champion as well.  Carter leads workshops on how to grow and market ethnic African/Asian vegetables. He has worked in Ghana, Kenya and Israel as an agronomist and organic agricultural consultant.  As a cliometrician, curriculum developer and program coordinator for his educational, cultural and vocational platforms, Hen Asem (Our Story) and Africulture, Carter shares the contributions of Africans and African Americans to agriculture worldwide and the many stories that history almost forgot. He trains students, educators and professionals in African cultural understanding, empathy, and implicit bias recognition.

Jerome Foster II, founder of The Climate Reporter, an international online publication with youth reporters from eight countries, DC youth organizer of the Global Youth Climate Strike and Fire Drill Friday veteran, is the conference's Youth Environmental Champion. Foster, who led strikes in front of the White House months before Jane Fonda’s highly visible protests, is also the Founder and Executive Director of OneMillionOfUs, which is mobilizing young people to register and turn out to vote in the 2020 Presidential Election. He has written op-eds on Yes! Magazine, E&E News, and has spoken at UNICEF and on a panel at the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights facilitated by CIVICUS.

The Taking Nature Black Conference is a signature Black History Month event that celebrates African Americans in the environmental space, and provides educational, career-building, and networking opportunities.

###

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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Jerome Foster II

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Jerome Foster II

FOUNDER & EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
OneMillionofUs

Jerome Foster II is a 17-year-old African-American author, Harvard graduate law school dual-enrollment student, MIT climate science dual-enrollment student, climate change activist, high school senior, and virtual reality/augmented reality business owner. Jerome strikes in front of the White House and coordinated and led the climate march from the White House to the Supreme Court as apart of the Climate Strikes Movement, he is the Founder and Executive Director of OneMillionOfUs which is mobilizing a new generation to young people to register and turnout to vote in the 2020 Presidential Election.

Jerome is also a Smithsonian Ambassador, a World Bank SustainUS Delegate, a National Geographic Icelandic Explorer, a Certified Climate Reality Leader, and interned for Congressman John Lewis at the House of Representatives. He is also the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of The Climate Reporter which is a youth-led climate change journalism organization which has writers out of 8 countries. Jerome has won the World Series of Entrepreneurship and has been featured in TIME Magazine, ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, Teen Vogue, Telemundo, ELLE, Axios, VICELAND, and many others. Also, he has written op-eds on Yes! Magazine, E & E News, and UNICEF and has spoken on a panel at the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights facilitated by CIVICUS.


 

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Akiima Price

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Akiima Price

EDUCATOR/CONSULTANT
Akiima Price Consulting

Akiima Price is an award-winning creative thinker and doer who links people, places, and programs with stressed, underserved communities. A Washington, DC native, Akiima is a nationally-respected thought leader at the intersection of social and environmental issues and the relationship between nature and community well-being.

Her innovative programming strategies feature nature as a powerful medium to connect
stressed youth, adults, and families in meaningful, positive experiences that affect the way they feel about themselves, their communities, and their parks. From her early career experiences as a National Park Service Interpretation Ranger at Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Boulder City, Nevada to work her national work with environmental and social service organizations, Akiima has cultivated over 20 years of experience into cutting-edge best practices in trauma-informed environmentalism.

Currently, Akiima is working with the National Park Foundation and the National Park Service to build a friends group for Anacostia Park which includes River Terrace Park, Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens, and the Frederick Douglass Historic Home. This group will ultimately use Anacostia Park to engage Ward 7 and 8 families in activities that support mental health, physical health, and social well-being while using community assets to help support park challenges.

In her almost 27 years of work, she has consistently, unapologetically devoted herself to supporting stressed African American youth and families.


 

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Dennis Chestnut

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Dennis Chestnut

FOUNDING EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
(RETIRED)
Groundwork Anacostia River DC.

Dennis Chestnut is a native Washingtonian, and is a lifetime resident of
Ward 7. Dennis is a master carpenter and vocational educator by profession,
but his dedication to youth development, community improvement and civic
duty has led to his involvement with many civic and conservation projects,
and enriching experiences. He is also a lover of the outdoors, has a passion
for conservation and the environment, and has advised many community,
business and government leaders on civic ecology and civic engagement
issues.

Growing up in the far-northeast section of Washington, DC, Dennis became
connected to the many green spaces, parks, streams, and the Anacostia
River, where he learned to swim as a child. Dennis is the carpentry
internship instructor at the Academy of Construction and Design at IDEA
Public Charter High School, and retired founding executive director of
Groundwork Anacostia River DC. Among the many programs and projects
developed by Groundwork, managing the bandalong litter traps and
removing tons of trash and debris from the Anacostia River became one of
Groundwork’s signature programs. Dennis is a board member of the East of
the River Steel Band, the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay, and is a Senior
Fellow of the Chesapeake Region Environmental Leadership Program.
Dennis is an appointee to Mayor Muriel Bowser’s Leadership Council for a
Cleaner Anacostia River and the Urban Forestry Advisory Council. Dennis
is a member of the United for a Healthy Anacostia River Coalition, the

National Capitol Region Anacostia Watershed Stewards Academy, and the
Anacostia Watershed Community Advisory Committee. Dennis has
received numerous awards including the Greater Washington Interfaith
Partnership Vision Award, the Lankford/Giles/Vaughn Minority Architect
Award for Community Activism, the DC Appleseed Sustainable Living and
Leading Award, and most recently the 2019 River Network River Hero.
Dennis has also appeared in numerous publications and video documentaries
that highlight his work on restoring the health of the Anacostia River,
improving the East of the River communities, and developing high quality
youth programs.

Ward 7 and areas east of the Anacostia River have been described as the
“Greenest” Ward and section of Washington, D.C. outside of the National
Mall, but also is where some of the most environmentally challenging
conditions in the city exist. This is the reason why Dennis has committed
himself to restoring the health of the Anacostia River, improving the natural
resources located in this community and throughout Washington, D.C., and
connecting the residents, schools, businesses, civic and community
organizations to the many outdoor resources and natural environment
through tangible on-the-ground projects that Change Places and Change Lives.


 

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Jacqueline Goodall

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Ms. Jacqueline Goodall is the President of Maryland Black Mayors, Inc. and a Trustee member of the  African  American  Mayors Association. She was previously the Mayor of Forest Heights, MD which has achieved the status of “Green Municipality”, and she has been at the forefront of advocacy and implementation of numerous sustainable practices. Ms. Goodall was the  2011 recipient of the Chesapeake Bay Trust’s Ellen Fraites Wagner Steward of the Year Award. She is currently a Board Member for the Forest Heights/Oxon Hill Community Development Corp.


 

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Rocio Treminio-Lopez

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Mayor Rocio Treminio-Lopez is the first Latina mayor ever elected in the state of Maryland. Originally from El Salvador, she came to the United States when she was fourteen.

She currently resides in the Town of Brentwood, Maryland with her husband and four children.


 

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Charles Glass

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Charles C. Glass, Ph.D., P.E. was appointed Deputy Secretary at the Maryland Department of Natural Resources in December, 2019 after serving as Assistant Secretary for Transportation Policy Analysis and Planning and Director of Bicycle and Pedestrian Access at the Maryland Department of Transportation.

Dr. Glass’ credentials include serving as a research and engineering professional for more than 20 years in academia and the consulting engineering industries. Throughout his distinguished career, Dr. Glass has held important positions as a teacher, researcher, and consulting professional in Civil and Environmental Engineering. He has sustained two successful long-term funding relationships involving the District Department of Transportation in Washington D.C. and the National Science Foundation. He has published numerous peer-reviewed journal articles, participated in a variety of widely-attended conference proceedings, and is recognized nationally as an expert in stormwater management, green infrastructure and wastewater treatment.

Dr. Glass came to the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) from Howard University, where he served on the faculty for seventeen years. For eight months in 2010, he spent time as an Environmental Engineer at the United States Environmental Protection Agency as the lead on a potential new regulation for the mitigation of sanitary sewer overflows.

He graduated from Montgomery Blair High School in 1989 and completed his undergraduate degree requirements in Civil Engineering in 1992 at The Johns Hopkins University. He completed his Master of Science and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Colorado at Boulder in 1994 and 1997, respectively.

In 2017, Dr. Glass became a member of the 25 th class of Leadership Maryland, a professional
development program dedicated to building a better Maryland by harnessing the strength of its local business and community leaders.

Dr. Glass is an avid golfer, mystery reader, and soccer coach. He is happily married to attorney Heather Morris-Glass and enjoys his time with their two boys, Caden and Michael.