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NEWS ALERT

First-Ever Independent Audubons Lobby Day – February 8, 2018

NEWS ALERT

Environmental Advocates from Maine to Montana to Converge on Capitol Hill for First-Ever Independent Audubons Lobby Day – February 8, 2018

MD-based Audubon Naturalist Society will lead Independent Audubons to press Congress for support for EPA Grants, the Clean Water Rule, Migratory Birds, the Chesapeake Bay, and more

For Immediate Release: January 29, 2018
For more information, contact Caroline Brewer, caroline.brewer@anshome.org or 202-830-5115

Chevy Chase, MD – Leaders of environmental conservation, preservation, stewardship, and education organizations from Maine to Montana will converge on Capitol Hill Thursday, February 8, 2018.

Known as the Independent Audubons, the leaders will press Congress on legislative and funding issues ranging from full funding for EPA grants, to protection of the Clean Water Act and reinstatement of the Clean Water Rule, to protection of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which inspired the founding of each Audubon. Also on the agenda is full funding for regional initiatives in land conservation and habitat restoration, such as the Chesapeake Bay and its Watershed, a source of drinking water for nearly 6 million people in the DC metropolitan region.

Lobby Day is organized by Lisa Alexander, Executive Director of the Audubon Naturalist Society, representing members in the DC metropolitan area, and founded in 1897.

Continuing and emerging threats to the lands, waterways, and wildlife habitats of our nation make this first-ever Independent Audubons Lobby Day a significant development in the environmental movement. Details to come on meetings with congressional representatives, along with stories about the major progress that Independent Audubons across America have pioneered.

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About ANS: ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV. Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Follow ANS at www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

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NEWS RELEASE

Preschoolers Become Scientists During Statewide STEMfest

NEWS RELEASE

Preschoolers Become Scientists During Statewide STEMfest

Audubon Naturalist Society (ANS) invites kids to see how nature recycles itself on November 8!

October 19, 2017

For more information, contact ANS Communications Director Caroline Brewer at caroline.brewer@anshome.org or call, 301-652-9188 x 23.

Chevy Chase, MD – Preschoolers, ages 3 to 5, will explore the magical underground world of decomposers at the Audubon Naturalist Society’s (ANS) Woodend Sanctuary, as part of the Maryland statewide STEMfest, which celebrates innovations in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, and runs from October 31 to November 12.

Decomposers are organisms that help break down plant material and return the nutrients to the soil plants need to grow.   The kids will see how these organisms work their magic, by looking at soil collected from the sanctuary garden under microscopes, investigating composting worms, feeding the garden soil with worm compost, going on a mushroom hunt and starting a mushroom farm.

“(This event) will let them explore and be scientists, and that will inspire them to be confident and curious,” said ANS School Garden Manager Jenny Brown.  “Maybe they also start to see the environment as a loop, that there is no waste and that nature recycles.”

ANS is focusing on worms and mushrooms because they are the most readily available decomposers this time of year, and Brown thinks the youngsters will get a kick out of them.

“Worms are an instant hit with kids,” she said.  “(When it gets cold) they dig down deep to stay in the unfrozen parts of the ground, and then poop out (which helps the soil)… Poop always gets lots of giggles.”

What: ANS Celebrates STEMFEST with Preschoolers
Date: November 8, 2017
Time: 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Location: Woodend Nature Sanctuary, 8940 Jones Mill Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815

# # #

About ANS: ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV. Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Follow ANS at www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

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NEWS RELEASE

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NEWS ALERT

Headline goes here - Heading 2

Subhead goes here - Paragraph

For Immediate Release: Month Day, Year
For more information, contact Caroline Brewer, caroline.brewer@anshome.org or 301-652-9188, ext. 23

CITY, STATE – Text of news release or alert.

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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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NEWS RELEASE Uncategorized

VA Students Show Off How Much They Dig Science and Healthy Eating

NEWS RELEASE

VA Students Show Off How Much They Dig Science and Healthy Eating

More than 150 Virginia students enjoyed the fruits of their garden labor on November 16, as part of American Education Week.

November 16, 2017

For more information, contact ANS Teacher Ellen McDougall at ellen.mcdougall@anshome.org or cell, 703-585-9179, or ANS Communications Director Caroline Brewer at caroline.brewer@anshome.org or cell, 202-830-5115

Sterling, VA – How do you get young people to dig science and eat healthy? Let them literally dig into the topic using shovels, seeds, compost, worms, water hoses, and training on how to grow something edible.

That’s the art and science behind Salad Science, an Audubon Naturalist Society (ANS) program that’s sprouting love for nature and healthy eating by blending indoor and outdoor education with harvest parties. In celebration of hands-on science projects and American Education Week, around lunchtime at their school on Thursday, November 16, more than 150 Sully Elementary students in Sterling, VA (Loudoun County Public Schools District) harvested mature lettuce and made and ate salads from it.

5th graders and kindergartners at Sully planted lettuce seeds in September and watered and watched them sprout and grow inside large wooden beds in the school’s courtyard. Week by week, as the seeds grew, the students learned about plant life cycles, habitats, worms, decomposition, composting, nutrition, and much more. They made predictions, recorded their observations in journals and now have a better understanding of where food comes from and what it takes to get it to the table.

ANS Environmental Educator Ellen McDougall said Salad Science is a big deal for the students because they have fun while learning about the complex aspects of plant biology and nutrition.

“Salad Science has had many cross-curricular touch points – everything from science, math, art, and general health and nutrition. Eating a rainbow of toppings and discussing edible parts of a plant are key themes of the program. And students love eating salads made with the lettuces that they have grown with their friends,” McDougall said.

The Salad Science program has been a hit in Montgomery County for at least a decade and has now spread to schools in D.C. and Virginia. McDougall said Salad Science is also a great way to get kids to work together. After learning how to plant and take care of the lettuce, the 5th graders underwent “teacher training” and taught the kindergarteners how to make a garden grow. Both grades tended the garden and will party together with their harvest.

“I’m excited to see how this unique project will affect students at both grade levels,” she said. “The teaching teams believe Salad Science will become part of the school’s culture of working together to make progress.”

# # #

About ANS: ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV. Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Follow ANS at www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

Categories
NEWS RELEASE

Preschoolers Become Scientists During Statewide STEMfest

Audubon Naturalist Society (ANS) invites kids to see how nature recycles itself on November 8!

For Immediate Release – October 19, 2017
For more information contact caroline.brewer@anshome.org or call 301-652-9188 x 23

Chevy Chase, MD – Preschoolers, ages 3 to 5, will explore the magical underground world of decomposers at the Audubon Naturalist Society’s (ANS) Woodend Sanctuary, as part of the Maryland statewide STEMfest, which celebrates innovations in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, and runs from October 31 to November 12.

Decomposers are organisms that help break down plant material and return the nutrients to the soil plants need to grow.   The kids will see how these organisms work their magic, by looking at soil collected from the sanctuary garden under microscopes, investigating composting worms, feeding the garden soil with worm compost, going on a mushroom hunt and starting a mushroom farm.

“(This event) will let them explore and be scientists, and that will inspire them to be confident and curious,” said ANS School Garden Manager Jenny Brown.  “Maybe they also start to see the environment as a loop, that there is no waste and that nature recycles.”

ANS is focusing on worms and mushrooms because they are the most readily available decomposers this time of year, and Brown thinks the youngsters will get a kick out of them.

“Worms are an instant hit with kids,” she said.  “(When it gets cold) they dig down deep to stay in the unfrozen parts of the ground, and then poop out (which helps the soil)… Poop always gets lots of giggles.”

What: ANS Celebrates STEMFEST with Preschoolers
Date: November 8, 2017
Time: 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Location: Woodend Nature Sanctuary, 8940 Jones Mill Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815

# # #

 About ANS:  ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV.  Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Learn more about ANS here: www.anshome.orgwww.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety, and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

Categories
NEWS RELEASE

VA Students Show Off How Much They Dig Science and Healthy Eating

More than 150 Virginia students enjoyed the fruits of their garden labor on November 16, as part of American Education Week.

For Immediate Release – November 16, 2017

For more information, contact ANS Teacher Ellen McDougall at ellen.mcdougall@anshome.org or cell, 703-585-9179, or ANS Communications Director Caroline Brewer at caroline.brewer@anshome.org or cell, 202-830-5115

Sterling, VA – How do you get young people to dig science and eat healthy? Let them literally dig into the topic using shovels, seeds, compost, worms, water hoses, and training on how to grow something edible.

That’s the art and science behind Salad Science, an Audubon Naturalist Society (ANS) program that’s sprouting love for nature and healthy eating by blending indoor and outdoor education with harvest parties. In celebration of hands-on science projects and American Education Week, around lunchtime at their school on Thursday, November 16, more than 150 Sully Elementary students in Sterling, VA (Loudoun County Public Schools District) harvested mature lettuce and made and ate salads from it.

5th graders and kindergartners at Sully planted lettuce seeds in September and watered and watched them sprout and grow inside large wooden beds in the school’s courtyard. Week by week, as the seeds grew, the students learned about plant life cycles, habitats, worms, decomposition, composting, nutrition, and much more. They made predictions, recorded their observations in journals and now have a better understanding of where food comes from and what it takes to get it to the table.

ANS Environmental Educator Ellen McDougall said Salad Science is a big deal for the students because they have fun while learning about the complex aspects of plant biology and nutrition.

“Salad Science has had many cross-curricular touch points – everything from science, math, art, and general health and nutrition. Eating a rainbow of toppings and discussing edible parts of a plant are key themes of the program. And students love eating salads made with the lettuces that they have grown with their friends,” McDougall said.

The Salad Science program has been a hit in Montgomery County for at least a decade and has now spread to schools in D.C. and Virginia. McDougall said Salad Science is also a great way to get kids to work together. After learning how to plant and take care of the lettuce, the 5th graders underwent “teacher training” and taught the kindergarteners how to make a garden grow. Both grades tended the garden and will party together with their harvest.

“I’m excited to see how this unique project will affect students at both grade levels,” she said. “The teaching teams believe Salad Science will become part of the school’s culture of working together to make progress.”

# # #

About ANS: ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV. Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Learn more about ANS here: www.anshome.org, www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety, and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

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NEWS RELEASE

Tree-Safe Rain Garden Debuts

Audubon Naturalist Society’s new and innovative tree-safe rain garden reduces flooding and is a model for good environmental living.

For Immediate Release – October 13, 2017
For more information contact caroline.brewer@anshome.org or call 301-652-9188 x 23

Chevy Chase, MD –– How do you help prevent stormwater pollution – the only growing source of pollution to the Chesapeake Bay – and flooding that can lead to home damage? You build a lot of rain gardens, like the innovative “tree-safe” one ANS unveiled today.

ANS’s “tree-safe” rain garden spans 4,000 square, includes more than 300 native trees and shrubs and two lengthy compost-filled berms that will filter and slow polluted stormwater.

“We believe our rain garden is a practical and ecologically powerful thing of beauty,” said ANS Executive Director Lisa Alexander. “We are thrilled that our funding partners, the Chesapeake Bay Trust and the Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection, enthusiastically supported our vision for a higher level of ecological functioning and biodiversity for our 40 acres here at Woodend. The support they’ve shown us is available as well to our neighbors in the county and region.”

“The Chesapeake Bay Trust is proud to combine forces with funding partners like Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to provide the necessary resources to green and beautify neighborhoods, community spaces, and improve local waterways.” said Dr. Jana Davis, executive director of the Chesapeake Bay Trust. “Projects such as the tree-safe rain garden completed at the Audubon Naturalist Society are the perfect example at solving water quality issues while providing a space for community education and outreach.”

ANS’s Conservation Director, Eliza Cava, explained why “tree-safe” was a conscious and environmentally-friendly choice for this rain garden. “Washington, D.C. and other major cities have used rain gardens for years to help manage polluted stormwater runoff. We, at ANS, chose a tree-safe rain garden because its design is cutting-edge and tree-friendly,” said Cava, “and that’s important because trees are the very best way to manage stormwater because they absorb so much water and hold the soil in place.”

“The tree-safe rain garden is an excellent example of how ANS implements unique, sustainable, projects that help manage stormwater within the constraints of a challenging, historic, site,” said Michelle Kokolis, director of Programs and Operations, Rock Creek Conservancy. “This garden, and projects like it, are essential to the health of Rock Creek and the watershed. Rock Creek Conservancy is happy to have the opportunity to partner with ANS on such projects and looks forward to our continuing collaboration.”

How rain gardens help
After a hard rain, many areas flood because they’re covered with pavement that can’t absorb the excess water. That standing water collects debris, oil, fertilizer, and other dirty, often toxic, stuff and “whooshes” down streets, causing problems like pollution and erosion to our roads, homes, businesses, rivers and streams. Rain gardens capture the rain shortly after it falls, before it wreaks havoc, and recycle it in a way that doesn’t harm the human and natural community.

Aren’t trees already safe in rain gardens?
Unlike traditional rain gardens, which capture rain runoff in deep pits filled with gravel, our innovative tree-safe rain garden holds the water above ground in temporary ponds. By using this technology, we didn’t have to dig underground and disturb mature tree roots.

During the unveiling, guests saw firsthand how the tree-safe rain garden works, and how homeowners and institutions can use elements of its design in their own yards to manage runoff.

“This project shows that trees and rain gardens go well together,” said Diane Cameron, Project Manager, and former Director of Conservation for ANS. “We encourage our neighbors, including churches and temples, along with private homeowners, to follow suit on their own lands by planting more trees, keeping the trees they now have, and building rain gardens wherever that makes sense.”

Homeowners can get money to build rain gardens
Most of the counties and cities in our region also provide financial incentives – rebates worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars – to homeowners and institutions who install certain types of rain gardens and other projects to manage polluted runoff.

What: Woodend Tree-Safe Rain Garden Ribbon Cutting
Date: October 13, 2017
Time: 10:00 am – 11:30 am
Location: Woodend Sanctuary, 8940 Jones Mill Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815

Funding for the tree-safe rain garden was provided through the Montgomery County Water Quality Protection Fund, EPA Region 3 and the Chesapeake Bay Trust. Other funders include the Wallace Genetic Foundation and the Cornell Douglas Foundation. The rain garden was designed by the Center for Watershed Protection and installed by Environmental Quality Resources, LLC.

# # #

About ANS: ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV. Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Learn more about ANS here: www.anshome.org, www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety, and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

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NEWS RELEASE

Don Messersmith To Speak at Crowder-Messersmith Conservation Fund Event

News Alert: Lions, Rogue Elephant & Oversexed Antechinus (A What!?), Oh My!
Join Audubon Naturalist Society (ANS) on October 12, for DMV-renowned world-wide traveler Don Messersmith’s exciting animal encounters.

For more information contact caroline.brewer@anshome.org or call 301-652-9188 x 23

Chevy Chase, MD — Entomologist and professor emeritus Don Messersmith, known for his legendary bird and insect classes at the University of Maryland and ANS, has come face-to-face with many unusual mammals, like the antechinus, Australia’s small marsupial mouse, which dies after just a few weeks of mating nearly around the clock.

You’ll get a taste of Messersmith’s exciting encounters at this year’s annual Crowder-Messersmith Conservation Fund lecture.  He will share photos of his globe-trotting animal adventures, and he’ll talk about hair-raising mammal meetings that led to harrowing experiences, like when he and his team eluded a charging rogue elephant, chased away a herd of zebras, disturbed two lounging lions and a sleeping elephant seal.

What: Crowder-Messersmith Conservation Fund Annual Talk

Date: October 12, 2017

Time: 7 pm – 9 pm

Location:
Woodend Sanctuary
8940 Jones Mill Road
Chevy Chase, MD 20815

About the Crowder-Messersmith Fund

Crowder-Messersmith Fund honors Orville Crowder and Don and Sherry Messersmith, leaders in nature tourism, as a means to further global nature conservation.  The Crowder-Messersmith Conservation Fund, together with the Audubon Naturalist Society, helps fund small, local conservation and education projects in developing countries by providing seed money to communities and individuals whose projects have not attracted major support from other sources.

# # #

About ANS:  ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV.  Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

 

Learn more about ANS here: www.anshome.orgwww.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety, and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

Categories
NEWS RELEASE

Secrets and Joys Rain Gardens Can Teach Us to Fight Pollution and Flooding: Unveiling October 13!

Join Audubon Naturalist Society (ANS) to see and learn about its new and innovative tree-safe rain garden that reduces flooding and is a model for good environmental living

For Immediate Release – October 4, 2017
For more information contact caroline.brewer@anshome.org or call 301-652-9188 x 23


Chevy Chase, MD – How do you help prevent stormwater pollution and flooding that can lead to home damage?  You build a lot of rain gardens, like the innovative “tree-safe” one ANS will unveil on October 13, 2017.

How rain gardens help
After a hard rain, many areas flood because they’re covered with pavement that can’t absorb the excess water.  That standing water collects debris, oil, fertilizer, and other dirty, often toxic, stuff and “whooshes” down streets, causing problems like pollution and erosion to our roads, homes, businesses, rivers and streams.  Rain gardens capture the rain shortly after it falls, before it wreaks havoc, and recycle it in a way that doesn’t harm the human and natural community.

How homeowners can get money to install rain gardens
Most of the counties and cities in our region also provide financial incentives – rebates worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars– to homeowners and institutions who install certain types of rain gardens and other projects to manage polluted runoff.

Aren’t trees already safe in rain gardens?
Unlike traditional rain gardens, which capture rain runoff in deep pits filled with gravel, our innovative tree-safe rain garden holds the water above ground in temporary ponds.  By using this technology, we didn’t have to dig underground and disturb mature tree roots.

Washington, D.C. and other major cities have used rain gardens for years to help manage polluted storm water runoff, which is the only growing source of pollution to the Chesapeake Bay. ANS opted for a tree-safe rain garden because its design is cutting-edge and tree-friendly and allows us to showcase this innovative technology at our Woodend Sanctuary and share the value of tree-safe rain gardens to the wider community.

During the unveiling, you’ll see firsthand how the tree-safe rain garden works, and how homeowners and institutions can use elements of its design in their own yards to manage runoff.  You’ll also hear how Audubon Naturalist Society is embarking on our 50-year Master Plan to restore native habitat and biodiversity to our Woodend Sanctuary.

What: Woodend Tree-Safe Rain Garden Ribbon Cutting
Date: October 13, 2017
Time: 10:00 am – 11:30 am

Location:
Woodend Sanctuary
8940 Jones Mill Road
Chevy Chase, MD 20815

Funding for the tree-safe rain garden was provided through the Montgomery County Water Quality Protection Fund, EPA Region 3 and the Chesapeake Bay Trust.  Other funders include the Wallace Genetic Foundation and the Cornell Douglas Foundation.  The rain garden was designed by the Center for Watershed Protection and installed by Environmental Quality Resources, LLC.

# # #

 About ANS:  ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV.  Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Learn more about ANS here: www.anshome.orgwww.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety, and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets

Categories
NEWS RELEASE

Climate & Its Effect On DC Latino Communities

Climate & Its Effect On DC Latino Communities

In Aftermath of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma
Topic at first-ever Naturally Latinos Conference in DMV this Wednesday!

For Immediate Release - Monday, September 11, 2017

For more information, contact caroline.brewer@anshome.org or call 301-652-9188 x 23

Chevy Chase, MD - The Audubon Naturalist Society will hold its first Naturally Latinos Conference Wednesday, September 13, 2017. The all-day event will introduce and share the insights of Latino nature-lovers, experts, and advocates in the DC region, while creating and strengthening partnerships in behalf of environmental protection, which, in the aftermath of Hurricanes Harvey & Irma, and other natural disasters, is as important as ever.

Isha M. Renta, a meteorologist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) National Weather Service (NWS) in the Baltimore/Washington Forecast Office, located in Sterling, Va., will lead a breakout session on how Latino communities are dealing with the effects of climate change. Through her work at NWS, she helps increase outreach to the Hispanic community. She’s also established a networking and mentoring group that helps increase the awareness of opportunities to Latinos in the atmospheric sciences (previously known as PR-Atmos, now called “Puerto Ricans in the Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology”). Renta has a Bachelor's degree in Mathematics from the University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez, a Master’s in Atmospheric Sciences from Howard University, and is currently pursuing her Ph.D. in the same field.

Another conference presenter will be Ramón Palencia-Calvo, Director of Chispa Maryland (the Latino Outreach Program of the Maryland League of Conservation Voters Education Fund). Chispa’s Environmental Justice and Action Promotores provide training for how to do grassroots organizing within Latino communities to fight climate change, move pro-environment policies and practices, while building relationships of respect and dignity with members of the community. Since the graduation of the most recent class, leaders have worked to bring environmental issues, education and activism to fellow Latinos and people of color in schools, churches, community centers, and parks. They can be found around Prince George’s County educating the public about improving water quality within our watershed through proper management of waste and recycling practices. Most recently, they've campaigned for “CleanRide4kids” which seeks to improve the air quality of our region by providing schools with zero-emission buses.

Renta and Palencia-Calvo will join other conference speakers from government, community, non-profit, and educational organizations. There will also be a nature tour of the Woodend Sanctuary, a job fair and panel discussions.

The event is now filled to capacity with participants, so only media outlets are able to register.

Date: Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Time: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Location:
Audubon Naturalist Society
Woodend Sanctuary
8940 Jones Mill Road
Chevy Chase, MD 20815

# # #

About ANS: ANS is the oldest, independent environmental organization in the DMV. Throughout its history, ANS has played 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.

Learn more about ANS here: www.anshome.org, www.Facebook.com/AudubonNaturalistSociety, and www.Twitter.com/ANStweets