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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACTS: MICHAEL CATANIA, PRESIDENT |
Conservation Resources
Announces |
|
CHESTER, NJ November 19,
2009 – Conservation Resources Inc. (CRI) announced
its fourth annual Franklin Parker Small Grants awards to non-profit
conservation organizations. The awards totaling $100,000
were distributed to 31 organizations for conservation projects
throughout the Garden State. |
|
2009 Franklin Parker Small Grants Projects |
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click on the map to learn more about a particular project |
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| $5,000 Small Grant Award City of Trenton Project Type: Other Capital Conservation Project |
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Isles, Inc. is an environmentally-conscious,
community development non-profit organization with a mission
to foster more self-reliant families in healthy, sustainable
communities. Isles will be using the $5,000 Franklin Parker
Small Grant to expand its existing Community
and School Gardening (CSG) Project in Trenton, New Jersey.
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| Musconetcong
Watershed Association USGBC LEED Commissioning and Certification of the River Resource Center |
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| $4,000 Small Grant Award Asbury, Warren County Project Type: Other Capital Conservation Project |
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In 2009 the Musconetcong Watershed
Association (MWA) completed the renovation of the River Resource
Center, the organization's long-awaited headquarters on the
banks of the Musconetcong River in Asbury, NJ.
The River Resource Center is MWA’s first physical presence
in the watershed, and serves as an office from which to conduct
outreach to landowners and local governments, as well as education
programs for watershed residents. The building has been
designed to achieve the U.S. Green Building Council's (USGBC)
LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Platinum
Certification, and is an educational tool, model, and demonstration
site for environmentally sound building practices. The
final package of LEED project documentation was assembled
and submitted to the U.S. Green Building Council on August
26, 2009, and it is currently under review. |
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Upper
Raritan Watershed Association, Friends of Hopewell Valley
Open Space |
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| $6,000 Small Grant Award ($3,000
each) Central New Jersey Project Type: Land Stewardship |
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The Central
Jersey Invasive Species Strike Team was spearheaded in
2008 by the Upper Raritan Watershed Association (URWA) and
the Friends of Hopewell Valley Open Space (FoHVOS).
The project is New Jersey’s first comprehensive effort
toward invasive plant management through a public-private
partnership. The CJISST uses the early detection/rapid
response methodology to locate and eradicate populations of
emerging invasive plant species. The project area covers 1.3
million acres across 8 counties. |
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| Greater
Newark Conservancy Removal of invasive plants & replanting and reconfiguring of teaching garden |
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$2,000 Small Grant Award |
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The Greater Newark Conservancy’s
Urban Environmental and Ecological Center in downtown Newark
serves low-income youth and families from Newark and surrounding
urban areas. The Prudential Outdoor Learning Center
component has been built and comprises 1.5 acres of outdoor
classroom teaching gardens. Since opening in 2004 this
facility has hosted nearly 15,000 inner-city students for
environmental field trips. |
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| Heart
of Camden To continue the Waterfront South Restoration Project |
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$5,000 Small Grant Award |
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The Environmental Mitigation and
Landscape Master Plan (EMLMP) was developed by Heart of Camden
to help revitalize the South Camden Community. The effort
involved identifying specific sources of particulate matter
in the neighborhood, and using best practices in landscape
design to mitigate the effects. The effort was comprised
of three main areas of focus: 1) buffers – creating
buffers between residential and industrial users, 2) vacant
lots – vegetating denuded vacant lots, and 3) streetscapes
– increasing planting cover on walls and roofs, and
creating sinks to absorb swirling particulate matter from
poorly maintained roadways clogged with diesel-burning trucks
and scrap-metal haulers. The process was overseen by
a Scientific Advisory Board headed by NJIT and included members
from NJDEP, Tufts, UMDNJ, and USEPA. This work is being
completed in conjunction with the United States Forestry Service. |
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| Hunterdon
Land Trust Alliance Preservation of the Kuhl Property |
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| $3,500 Small Grant Award Raritan Township, Hunterdon County Project Type: Land Preservation |
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The Kuhl project is part of the
Raritan Piedmont Wildlife Habitat Partnership plan (RPWHP)
and is a Priority Parcel within the East Amwell Grassland
Region focus area. This area is particularly valuable from
the perspectives of preserving and/or protecting wildlife
habitats, protecting significant environmental resources and
preventing the degradation of water quality. The capital funding
for the Kuhl project will come from Raritan Township and Hunterdon
County with an anticipated closing date of August 1, 2010. |
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| New
Jersey Audubon Society Implementation of the SAVE birdseed project |
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| $3,500 Small Grant Award Project Type: Land Stewardship |
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New Jersey Audubon’s (NJAS)
S.A.V.E
(Support Agricultural Viability and the Environment) birdseed
project is offering one innovative solution to agricultural/conservation
conflicts through a close collaboration between the conservation
and agricultural communities. In its first year, the S.A.V.E. birdseed was highly successful
and generated a lot of interest from consumers. It sold out
quickly and demand exceeded supply. However, NJAS was
unable to expand the production beyond the original group
of farmers. Expanding acreage and bringing in new farmers
requires a small capital investment. |
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| Branch
Brook Park Alliance Water Quality Improvements in Branch Brook Park |
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$2,500 Small Grant |
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The Branch Brook Park Alliance
(BBPA), in partnership with Essex County, has identified the
planting of the Kio Sakaguchi Memorial Grove and the restoration
of the Prudential Lions and Lake Edge in the Southern Division
of Branch Brook Park as the priority water
qualaity improvement project for 2010. In the Branch
Brook Park Waterway Rehabilitation Feasibility Study, two
areas were identified for stormwater improvements that fall
within this project area. These stormwater improvements
will improve water quality in the waterway, which is part
of the Lower Passaic River watershed. |
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Great
Egg Harbor Watershed Association |
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| $3,500 Small Grant Hamilton Township, Atlantic County Project Type: Land Stewardship |
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Adams Branch, a first order tributary
to the federal Wild & Scenic Babcock Creek, is a degraded
stream that adversely affects water quality in both the Pinelands
and the Great Egg Harbor National Wild & Scenic River
System. The Adams Branch was degraded by ditching and
dredging that occurred in 1978. Great Egg Harbor Watershed
Association (GEHWA) has conducted 4 years of characterization
and assessment studies in partnership with Richard Stockton
College, NJDEP, Atlantic County, and the Great Egg Harbor
River Council. GEHWA would now like to create and then
implement a stream
restoration plan for the Adams Branch. |
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Passaic
River Coalition |
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$4,000 Small Grant |
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Passaic River Coalition is working
to preserve the Standford Tract, also known as the Belcher
Creek Property, a 220-acre property located adjacent to
Bearfort Mountain State Park in the Highlands of New Jersey.
It is identified as a high conservation priority by the New
Jersey Highlands Council. |
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Rahway
River Association |
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$3,500 Small Grant |
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The Rahway River Association (RRA)
has a mission to preserve open space, protect natural resources,
and improve water quality in the Rahway River. RRA is
working with Millburn Township to restore a stream bank on
the east branch of the Rahway River. The restoration
will create a riparian buffer of native plants and reduce
erosion, thereby reducing sedimentation in the river and improving
water quality. Project partners include the United States
Fish and Wildlife Service, USDA Natural Resources Conservation
Service, and the Township of Millburn. |
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Delaware
Riverkeeper Network |
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| $3,500 Small Grant Delaware Bay Project Type: Other |
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The Delaware Bay is home to the
largest concentration of horseshoe crabs in the world. As
a result, each year the Bay is also host to the second largest
population of migrating shorebirds in North America, and eco-tourists
from around the globe flock to its shores to witness this
ancient phenomenon. However, scientific studies indicate
horseshoe crabs and shorebirds are in trouble with some species
of birds steadily declining from over 100,000 in the 1980s
to less than 15,000 in 2007. Declines have been linked
to the lower number of horseshoe crab eggs on the beaches.
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Great
Swamp Watershed Association |
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| $4,000 Small Grant Harding Township, Morris County Project Type: Ecological Restoration |
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The Great
Swamp Watershed Association’s Conservation Management
Area (CMA) includes 50 acres of riparian and stream corridor
upstream from Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge.
The site contains vernal pools, threatened and endangered
plants and animals, and valuable forested wetlands.
Stewardship efforts to date include deer exclosure fencing
of 23 acres, boardwalk construction to facilitate public access,
and stream bank revegetation. Aggressive invasive
species removal has been underway for 8 years. Native
species plantings of over 2,000 shrubs and 4,500 live stakes
have also been accomplished entirely with volunteer efforts.
Ongoing goals include improving biodiversity degraded by past
land use practices and deer overabundance, continued stream
bank improvements, vernal pool enhancements and expansion
of deer exclosure fencing in upland areas, as well as additional
boardwalk construction and habitat improvements. This program benefits from over 1600 hours of volunteer habitat
management labor annually. This volunteer labor force
enables an ambitious restoration program that would otherwise
not occur. GSWA is successful in securing the labor
and materials through corporate donations; however, staff
time to manage this restoration program is specifically excluded.
The site has benefited from two previous WHIP grants and GSNWR
Watershed Natural Resource Restoration Assistance Project
funding. These funds have been fully utilized. GSWA will be using the $4,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant to continue the model restoration and stewardship efforts at the Conservation Management Area. |
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| North
Jersey Resource Conservation and Development Council Open Space Stewardship Program |
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$3,000 Small Grant |
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Since the 1960’s, New Jersey
counties and municipalities have been focused on preserving
open space. With the emphasis on acquisition, too often
municipalities throughout New Jersey are unable to properly
manage acquired open space within their communities. Most
municipal and county governments lack the time, expertise,
and priority to manage preserved lands. In most cases
goals have not been set for what the intended conservation
and/or community development purposes are for particular parcels.
Many local governments and organizations have expressed an
imperative need for open space stewardship. North Jersey RC&D
will implement a Stewardship
of Open Space program to address this need. North Jersey RC&D will use the $3,000 from the Franklin Parker Small Grants Program to develop and test the program with three to four municipalities in Morris County. |
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| NY/NJ
Baykeeper Preservation of Harbor Estuary Sites |
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$4,000 Small Grant |
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For nearly a decade Baykeeper
has been the lead New Jersey organization in purchasing and
preserving land designated as “priority acquisition
sites” by the EPA administered bi-site harbor Estuary
Program. Through this process they have added properties
to Cheesequake State Park, enlarged Hudson County’s
Laurel Hill Park, helped acquire land targeted for preservation
by the New Jersey Meadowlands Commission’s Open Space
Master Plan, acquired parcels along the stream corridors of
Monmouth County’s Raritan Bay and most recently added
critical habitat to the Dismal Swamp Complex in Middlesex
County. Baykeeper is working on several new land preservation projects. The $4,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will help cover costs associated with land preservation projects including appraisals and legal services. |
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| Saddler's
Woods Conservation Association Restoration of Native Habitat in an Urban Old Growth Forest |
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| $2,000 Small Grant Haddon Township, Camden County Project Type: Ecological Restoration |
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Saddler’s Woods Conservation
Association (SWCA) is dedicated to preserving and restoring
a 15-acre old growth forest in Haddon Township, Camden
County. SWCA is managed by six volunteer directors and
has over 100 members. Their core initiatives are restoration,
education, research, and land acquisition. Saddler’s Woods surrounds the headwater spring of the
main branch of the Newton Creek, a tributary of the Delaware
River and contains a unique stand of old growth trees with
many trees between 100 and 400 years old. Their habitat restoration objectives are to: remove debris,
control stream erosion, enhance trails, eradicate invasive
plants, and plant native vegetation. The restoration project
will provide hands-on learning opportunities through volunteer
stewardship days. SWCA regularly logs over 1,000 volunteer
hours for restoration each year. The $2,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will help Saddler’s Woods Conservation Association continue with its restoration efforts. |
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| Unexpected
Wildlife Refuge, Inc. Restoration of the D'Alessandro Property |
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| $4,000 Small Grant Buena Vista Township, Atlantic County Project Type: Capital Conservation Project and Ecological Restoration |
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Unexpected Wildlife Refuge
purchased the D’Alessandro Farm in 2008. There
are several uninhabitable buildings on the property that need
to be demolished. Unexpected Wildlife Refuge will be
razing these buildings and then planting native grasses and
wildflowers. Unexpected Wildlife Refuge has estimated
that demolition will cost approximately $25,000. A portion
of this expense will be covered by the NJDEP Green Acres Program. |
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| Bergen
SWAN Rain Garden and Rain Barrel Workshops, Rain Garden Incentive Contest |
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| $4,000 Small Grant Bergen County Project Type: Ecological Restoration |
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Native plant rain gardens are
an effective tool for achieving sound watershed stewardship.
In addition to adding a colorful, softening visual break to
edges of hardscapes or a welcome departure from conventional,
chemically-dependent suburban lawns, they dramatically
slow sheet flow, improve retention and recharge, reduce flooding,
curtail erosion, and provide habitat for insects, birds, and
animals. Bergen SWAN will be partnering with R&S
Landscaping and Pascack Valley Sustainability Group to launch
a year-long, four-part plan to heighten local interest in
water-conserving rain gardens and rain barrels. Their
plan includes developing an easy-to-follow, illustrated, step-by-step
rain garden construction manual that explains calculating
dimensions and evaluating sites, garden layouts, quantities
and types of soil amendments and native plants, and where
to find local suppliers. As part of their project, Bergen SWAN will conduct a rain
garden competition by soliciting applications from private
and/or public property owners who would win full funding for
the materials, technical assistance and labor to create a
rain garden. Judges will select two winning applications,
by evaluating the project’s potential positive impact
on a visible stormwater control problem, likelihood to serve
as a model, and proximity to a stream, river, or reservoir
. Bergen SWAN will also conduct a rain garden building
workshop, incorporating instructions and plans developed in
our rain garden manual, featuring hands-on activity via construction
of the competition-winning rain gardens projects. Finally,
Bergen SWAN will facilitate a rain barrel building workshop
based on an affordable, easy to construct kit assembled by
R&S Landscaping. The $4,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will assist Bergen SWAN with implementation of their rain garden and rain barrel workshops as well as provide some funding for the rain garden incentive contest. |
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| Camden
Greenways, Inc. Acquisition of the PSEG Tract |
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| $3,000 Small Grant Camden Project Type: Land Acquisition |
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Although small in acreage (0.64
acres), the PSEG
land preservation project represents two integral links
in the Camden GreenWay. One is a strip of utility right-of-way
that divides the heavily wooded former “St. George’s”
parcel from Pine Street to the Cooper River, adjacent to New
Camden Park. The other is a small property on the opposite
bank of Cooper River, on Admiral Wilson Boulevard, between
the Hess service station property and Gateway Park (the latter
owned by the Delaware River Port Authority). The Camden GreenWay
traverses all of these properties, and completing the continuous
linkages is essential to completing the GreenWay. The project
is currently under negotiation between PSE&G and the New
Jersey Conservation Foundation, with title to be assigned
to the City of Camden at closing. Due diligence costs are
expected to be incurred in the next few months, at which time
grant funds will be needed. The $3,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will assist Camden Greenways Inc. by helping pay for technical costs associated with the purchase of the PSEG tract including legal, survey, phase I, and title work. |
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| Grow
It Green Morristown Urban Farm at Lafayette |
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| $5,000 Small Grant Morristown, Morris County Project Type: Capital Conservation Project |
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Building on its 2009 success with
the Early Street Community Garden, Grow it Green Morristown
will create an agricultural teaching garden on land adjacent
to the Lafayette Learning Center, which serves as the Morristown
School District Headquarters. The Urban Farm will showcase the transformation of an underutilized
property into a highly productive green space, located in
the heart of one of Morris County’s most economically
challenged areas. Likewise, the Urban Farm will serve
as a model for creating “victory gardens” across
the community. Grow It Green Morristown hopes to work
with people from across Morris County to share in the experience
of learning the art and science of growing food, while building
a new community dynamic. Produce from the Urban Farm
will be donated to the Morris School District for use in their
kitchens, as well as to area food banks. The $5,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will help fund construction of the Urban Farm at Lafayette in Morristown. |
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| Monmouth
Conservation Foundation Keris Farm Acquisition |
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| $2,500 Small Grant Upper Freehold Township, Monmouth County Project Type: Land Acquisition |
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Upper Freehold Township, the Monmouth
County Farmland Program, and MCF have been aggressive in preserving
farms in this community and have collectively preserved over
7,000 farmland acres. Continued preservation of farms
in Upper Freehold Township will guarantee a viable and rich
farming community for generations. The 23-acre Keris
Christmas Tree Farm is a key parcel, as it is contiguous
to several preserved farms. MCF and their partners have
been able to raise all of the funding to acquire the development
rights on the Keris Farm, however they are incurring substantial
technical costs. The $2,500 Franklin Parker Small Grant will help MCF to defray the technical costs associated with this acquisition and allow them to continue to preserve additional properties in Monmouth County. |
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| Pinelands
Preservation Alliance Pinelands Rare Plant Management Program |
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| $3,500 Small Grant Pinelands Region Project Type: Ecological Restoration |
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The Pinelands Preservation Alliance
(PPA) initiated a partnership with the Department of Environmental
Protection (DEP) to create an informal statewide committee
of experts to focus on plant conservation, called the Partnerships
for Plant Conservation. PPA co-chairs these meetings
with the DEP's Natural Land Management Program. Members
on the committee include representatives from DEP's Division
of Parks & Forestry, Fish & Wildlife, and the Natural
Heritage Program as well as PPA, the New Jersey Conservation
Foundation, The Nature Conservancy, botanists and consultants.
The committee recently established a process facilitating
cooperation between NGO's and the DEP on habitat management
and plant restoration projects, an issue of uncertainty and
controversy in the past. The Partnership for Plant
Conservation determined that in situ management of rare plant
populations is the most important form of assistance that
can be provided for rare plant species on state lands. The $3,500 Franklin Parker Small Grant will help PPA develop and implement specific monitoring and management plans for four rare plant sites in the Pinelands as part of the Partnership for Plant Conservation. |
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| Schiff
Natural Lands Trust Construction of the Franklin Parker Trail; Invasive Species Removal |
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| $4,000 Small Grant Mendham Township, Morris County Project Type: Ecological Restoration; Capital Construction Project |
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The Franklin Parker Trail, named
in honor of Schiff's first President, is located on Schiff
Nature Preserve and the McVickers Preserve. This
project, which will run several miles, will feature two trailheads
and parking areas, as well as 3 rustic stream crossings and
boardwalk areas through a scenic wetlands complex. Schiff
will also be implementing the recommendations of the Central
Jersey Invasive Species Strike Team on Schiff Nature Preserve
and the McVickers Brook Preserve. Schiff has already received a $25,000 National Trails grant from NJDEP, but additional funds are needed to complete the trail. The $4,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will help Schiff complete the Franklin Parker Trail and implement the Central New Jersey Invasive Species Strike Team recommendations on approximately 460 acres. |
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| $2,500 Small Grant Tewksbury Township, Hunterdon County Project Type: Land Acquisition |
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The Tewksbury Land Trust, in partnership
with Upper Raritan Watershed Association and Lamington Conservancy,
is purchasing a 6-acre parcel of land to add it to the Fox
Hill Preserve. Preservation of this property will enhance
water quality protection efforts, as it is adjacent to many
streams. Currently, this critical open space is vulnerable
to development since it is an approved building lot.
The parcel will greatly enhance the Upper Raritan Watershed
Association’s Fox Hill Preserve, and build upon current
preservation efforts to create a significant greenbelt of
preserved natural lands in the Cold Brook Watershed.
The site provides a variety of suitable outdoor recreation
uses and activities including hiking, biking, and nature study.
Tewksbury Land Trust anticipates closing on the property by
November 2009. |
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Edison
Wetlands Association |
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$3,500 Small Grant |
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As the largest natural area remaining
in densely populated northern Middlesex County, the Dismal
Swamp boasts incredible habitat and a unique range of biodiversity,
with nearly 200 species. Unfortunately, there is no
easy way for the public to access this natural oasis.
The $3,500 Franklin Parker Small Grant will provide critical funding to Edison Wetlands Association to help ensure a new trail network in the Dismal Swamp is a success. |
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| Bowman's
Hill Wildflower Preserve Association, Inc. PSI Surveys for Bull's Island and Fireman's Eddy Natural Areas |
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$2,000 Small Grant |
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The proposed plan for Bull’s
Island aims to restore approximately 5 acres of upland and
palustrine forested and scrub/shrub habitat by controlling
non-native invasive Japanese knotweed and planting native
trees and shrubs. The plan for Fireman’s Eddy aims to
restore an old 75-acre field within the Delaware and Raritan
Canal State Park, currently dominated by old field vegetation
and scrub/shrub habitat, to native warm-season grasses. This
site is appropriately located to provide important resting,
foraging, and nesting habitat for migratory grassland dependent
birds. The Natural Heritage Database revealed four possible
records of rare plant species that may be found within the
proposed project area. PSI
surveys on both sites will provide project partners with
plant data needed to protect existing native species prior
to implementing the proposed removal and restoration plans.
Bowman’s Hill Wildflower Preserve Association, Inc.
will use the Plant Stewardship Index (PSI), a standardized
assessment tool that calculates a numerical index reflecting
the quality of native plant communities, to monitor vegetation
at these areas. The PSI will identify rare and endangered
plants prior to initiating proposed invasive species removal
and native restoration plans by the Delaware and Raritan Canal
State Park, Delaware River Greenway Partnership, and the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service. |
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| D&R
Greenway Land Trust Stewardship Plan for the Plum Brook Preserve |
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| $2,000 Small Grant Delaware Township, Hunterdon County Project Type: Ecological Restoration |
|
This project will create a holistic
management plan based on the habitat needs of rare and threatened
species present at the exceptionally diverse Plum Brook Preserve.
The 160.9-acre Preserve, consisting of the Jones and Howery
properties, hosts a high concentration of rare plants and
animals across taxa. The habitats include upland cedar
glades, mature mesic forest, a Category One stream, wetland
and upland meadows, and adjacent scrub-shrub habitats. To guide stewardship of this newly-acquired preserve, D&R
Greenway will be seeking to develop a thorough understanding
of the habitat dynamics which successfully maintain an abundance
of rare species. By locating, GPS mapping, and investigating
the landscape context of these species, they will develop
an adaptive management plan for the Preserve and target priorities
accordingly. Preliminary surveys have established the presence of numerous
species listed by the NJ Natural Heritage Program. In
partnership with Bowman’s Hill Wildflower Preserve,
Plant Stewardship Indices were compiled for ten plots and
transects at Plum Brook Preserve. Exceptionally high
PSI values were determined and six state-listed plant species
were discovered. The $2,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will assist D&R Greenway Land Trust with creation of a comprehensive stewardship plan for the Plum Brook Preserve. |
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Rancocas
Conservancy |
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$3,000 Small Grant |
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This Masso-Christaldi tract was
identified by the Pinelands Commission in the Medford Evesham
sub-regional plan as a critical connector between the Rancocas
Conservancy’s Wurst Preserve, Cedar Run Wildlife Refuge
and other protected lands in the area. It is dominated
by a hardwood/cedar swamp along the Little Cedar Run. The
property is rich in endemic Pine Barrens species and the forested
wetlands on the property provide a migratory corridor for
state endangered species. The $3,000 Franklin Parker Small Grant will help cover technical costs associated with acquisition and preservation of this property. |
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| Friends
of Holmdel Open Space Stewardship of the Lady Slipper Preserve |
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| $1,000 Small Grant Holmdel Township, Monmouth County Project Type: Ecological Restoration |
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Friends of Holmdel Open Space
(FOHOS) is dedicated to the acquisition, preservation, protection,
and stewardship of open land in Holmdel, New Jersey.
In 2009, FOHOS volunteers began the restoration of the Lady
Slipper Preserve. FOHOS organized volunteer labor plus
contributed machinery with operators from a local contractor
to clear the 11-acre site of building and construction debris,
invasive plants, an asphalt driveway and dumped rubbish. FOHOS will install a split-rail fence to prevent unauthorized
access and construct wood-chip walking trails throughout the
wooded portion of the property. FOHOS will also retain
a surveyor to erect permanent monuments on the property’s
irregular borders. This will assure that the intended trail
system does not encroach on private property and will serve
the added function of informing the public about the property’s
limits. The $1,000 Franklin Parker Small grant with assist Friends of Holmdel Open Space with their continued stewardship efforts at the Lady Slipper Preserve. |
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| Rahway
River Association Riparian Restoration for Rahway River Corridor |
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| $1,000 Small Grant Rahway, Union County Project Type: Ecological Restoration |
|
The Rahway River Association (RRA),
with a mission of preserving open space, protecting natural
resources and improving water quality of the Rahway River
watershed, will be using funding from the Franklin Parker
Small Grant to help naturalize land along the riparian corridor
of the main stem of the Rahway River surrounding the RRA Headquarters
at 337 East Milton Ave. The RRA Headquarters and this project
are strategically located within the Rahway River Greenway
Plan ratified as part of the City of Rahway’s Master
Plan in 2005. Special emphasis will be made to restore plant species that
have become extirpated in the Rahway River Watershed.
The design to be developed is intended to create a series
of compact of microhabitats that will have discreet trails
for passive recreational use and educational purposes. The Franklin Parker Small Grant will fund design of this riparian restoration project. Additional funding will need to be secured by Rahway River Association to implement the restoration design and signage and educational literature. |
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