A Selection of Community Action Plans from the Team - What can YOU do in Your Community?
Here is a selection of the Community Action Plans that each individual HSBC/Earthwatch Climate Change Fellow was encouraged to create and implement upon their return from the week. We all agreed that one of the most important things we can take away from our experience together as a team is to continue our communication with each other, sharing resources and best practices that will help strengthen our individual endeavors. Ultimately, we are much stronger as a team than we could possibly be standing alone.
What can YOU do to help mitigate the effects of climate change in your community?
Climate Change Partners – Community Action Plans
Ryan’s Community Action Plan:

I will assess the carbon footprint of the Alice Ferguson Foundation's Hard Bargain Farm Environmental Center and then look for ways we can reduce it.
I will promote a climate change in-service during our 5-day advanced Teacher Institute this summer and suggest that it be integrated into the 10-day introductory course as well.
Ryan is the Outreach Coordinator at the Alice Ferguson Foundation (AFF).
For more information on the Alice Ferguson Foundation: http://www.potomaccleanup.org/
Jennifer’s Community Action Plan:

My husband and I are fortunate that our two sons are enrolled in an elementary school that has invested in developing an Outdoor Classroom. Last year, a master plan was designed and one of its most exciting features is to lay an interpretive trail for the children along a 1.25-acre tract of buffer forest adjacent to the school playground.
My husband and I plan to help create a fun, visual way for children to understand the role that trees play in capturing carbon dioxide through educational “call outs” along the trail. Our goal is to replicate certain aspects of the North American Regional Climate Center forest research, where children can measure trees and see how their ability to capture carbon is connected to their size (i.e., "How big is this tree's carbon dioxide ‘straw’?"). We'll also help the children make links between the trees and their habitat and the children's use of paper in school and at home, helping to bring alive the concept that reducing paper use is directly connected to sustaining important habitat for other critters and keeping the air clean.
In order to accomplish this goal, we will partner with parent volunteers, the City of Falls Church and its Environmental Services division, as well as naturalists. We also hope to involve SERC and Earthwatch to help us design a very small-scale climate change/forestry study on our own little tract of land.
Finally, I will serve as a citizen volunteer with our local Climate Protection Task Force to help create a carbon emissions inventory that will provide the baseline data necessary to use climate change as a context for strategies that encourage and incentivize energy conservation and efficiency within our community.
Jennifer works with nonprofit and socially responsible organizations to identify the resources and strategies needed to address critical public sector issues.
For more information on the City of Falls Church Climate Protection Task Force: http://www.fallschurchva.gov/Content/Agendas/ICLEIResolution090208.pdf
V.K.’s Community Action Plan:

Over the winter (late 2008/early 2009), I will develop a seminar/education exchange program for South County community members and organizations focused on the issues of climate change and how it affects our watershed and community. I will create a program of practical actions, resources and tools that offer solutions for individuals and households to reduce their CO2 footprint. I will set an attainable goal for increased recycling participation and CO2 reduction by South County residents, schools and small businesses, and I will challenge other communities in Anne Arundel County to also implement plans for their communities.
V.K. recently retired after 22 years with Hewlett Packard (HP), as Director of Advanced Research for Life Sciences and Technical & Scientific Computing. She is now the founder and owner of West River Cruises, which offers charter and tour boat services on a classic Chesapeake-built, 110-passenger vessel.
For more information on South County, Maryland: http://southcountymaryland.com/
For more information on West River Cruises: http://www.westrivercruises.com
Sandra’s Community Action Plan:

My short-term individual goal is to work with my church, Woods Memorial Presbyterian Church, to improve their environmental impact to the community. I am doing this first through the task group I am involved with through the Baltimore Presbytery and second through an Environmental Committee I am developing within our congregation. We had our first meeting last Sunday, November 9th, and discussed how we can begin this effort.
Our first goal is to develop a plan to surround our new paved parking lot with rain gardens and/or plant buffers. This parking lot will be a large impervious surface that will have significant storm water runoff and we would like to mitigate that runoff through effective landscaping. We are also researching what the church is currently doing to lower our environmental impact and what new measures can be instituted. Another committee member and I will meet with the Executive Director of Church Administration to discuss this.
My long-term individual community project is to develop a program to introduce underprivileged children from the Brooklyn Park community in Northern Anne Arundel County to the outdoors. I envision hiking at Maryland State Parks and organizing visits to Nature Centers such as the Irvine Nature Center and Jug Bay Nature Center. I plan to work on this through my contacts with Arundel Habitat for Humanity.
Finally, my individual community goal for my company, SALULE, is to donate 1% of gross sales of environmentally friendly promotional/marketing products to local environmental advocacy groups such as the Severn River Association and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. SALULE is an advertising specialties dealership, which focuses on providing branded products to identify your company or organization as sustainably responsible. SALULE’s mission is based on environmental sustainably, integrity and fair and transparent business ethics.
Sandra has lived in Anne Arundel County, MD for most of her life and has been in the printing/promotional product/apparel industry for 17 years. She is also an avid organic gardener and dog fancier.
For more information on the Irvine Nature Center: http://www.explorenature.org/employment-at-irvine/
For more information on the Jug Bay Wetlands Sactuary: http://www.dnr.state.md.us/bay/cbnerr/jugbay.asp
For more information on SALULE: http://salule.com
Kurt’s Community Action Plan:

By 2009, I will put the Severn River Association and the Anne Arundel County Watershed Coalition on record in support of legislation that would mandate "no further net loss of forests in Anne Arundel County.”
Kurt in in his second term as president of the Severn River Association (SRA), a federation of 57 community associations plus many individuals and other organizations working to preserve and restore the Severn River watershed. He has worn many hats during his career, including appointments in science/engineering/policy positions in the Department of the Navy, National Science Foundation (NSF), Environmental Protection Agency, and Department of Energy.
For more information on the Severn River Association: http://www.severnriver.org/
Danielle W’s Community Action Plan:

My husband and I moved to our condominium community in February of 2008. It’s located in Falls Church, right across the street from a Metrorail station, so it’s aptly placed to potentially be a model of sustainable behavior and investment to the rest of our community. I have had several months to observe the behaviors of my neighbors and I believe I can make a difference in creating better awareness of the benefits of recycling, amongst other more sustainable actions. So my plan is that by early 2009, I will become more involved in communicating with the condo board to help “green” my condo community and create better awareness of how our actions as a community contribute to climate change, thus how our actions can also help mitigate its effects.
I will first speak with a member of the condo board separately to determine what measures have been taken or proposed in the past to increase our energy efficiency as a community, reduce runoff, consider space for bike racks (we live within walking distance of a walk/bike trail) and community compost bins, install rain barrels, develop a more robust recycling plan and consider a long-term transition to solar power, amongst other things. I want to create a year-long, step-by-step plan that brings one action item to the table for consideration at each monthly condo board meeting – with realistic and achievable results. I will argue that developing and implementing additional, more sustainable projects into our community management plan is a solid investment for the future.
As part of my efforts, I would like to present a modified version of the PowerPoint presentations we were given at the HSBC/Earthwatch Climate Partnership so that the board gains insight, like I did, as to how important – and fun – taking action on climate change really is. I will propose that the board support me in organizing a weekend recycling day/event for the community, with hands-on activities for kids and their families and attended by recycling representatives from Falls Church to help provide information about recycling and other related programs in our area.
By December of 2009, my goal is to increase our community’s rate of recycling by 50%. In addition, I hope that another half of my list of community action items (i.e. rain barrels, compost bins, bike racks, etc.) are at least under consideration and continuing to be discussed by the board.
Danielle W. works in the Research, Conservation & Exploration Division of The National Geographic Society and serves on the Employee Practices subcommittee of their Green Initiative.





