5 minute read
Eco Briefs
▼Tickets are available for Atlanta Bicycle Coalition’s annual Blinkie Awards on May 19, 6 p.m., at the Trolley Barn, 963 Edgewood Ave. in Inman Park. It’s the first in-person event since early 2020 for this non-profit dedicated to reclaiming Atlanta’s streets as safe places to ride, walk and roll. The 2022 Blinkie Awards will celebrate some
of Atlanta’s most dedicated sustainable transportation advocates – and will see the release of the organization’s new name and brand. Heavy hors d’oeuvres and beverages will be served. Get tickets and find out more at atlantabike.org.
Advertisement
The PATH Foundation, a local non-profit that plans and builds multi-use trails across Georgia, has opened the West Wieuca PATH. The .6-mile-long trail segment marks the completion of the final trail segment in the 5-mile-long Chastain Park trail network that connects residents with PATH’s 300+ miles of trails in the surrounding communities. PATH collaborated with the City of Atlanta and partnered with the Chastain Park Conservancy to actualize the ambitious trail network. For more info, visit pathfoundation.org.
The community is invited to purchase plants in support of the DeKalb Master Gardener Project Site at their Spring Plant Sale on Mothers’ Day Weekend, May 7-8, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at Callanwolde Fine Arts Center, 980 Briarcliff Road. Guests also will have the opportunity to explore the formal gardens and hike the woodland trail. Reach out to CallanwoldeMasterGardeners@gmail.com with questions and comments.
CHaRM collects 1 million pounds of recyclables in four months
Live Thrive’s Center for Hard to Recycle Materials (CHaRM) celebrated its Million Pound Pledge to Earth on Earth Day.
The challenge kicked off in January with the goal of collecting 1 million pounds of materials to be reused/recycled/reengineered in time for the annual celebration of Earth Day. By April 15 the center had exceeded its goal by more than 300,000 pounds.
To collect the equivalent of 500 tons in just less than four months, CHaRM recruited help from the Atlanta business community. The center challenged businesses of any size and their employees to participate by bringing their recycling to CHaRM, where materials were weighed and logged to determine the total pounds collected from the challenge. The Corporate Challenge alone collected 117,380 pounds of materials.
This year’s Corporate Challenge partners included Alston & Bird, Chick-fil-A, Inc., Community & Council Realty Group, Cox Enterprises, Delta Air Lines, EY, HartsfieldJackson Atlanta International Airport, Highland Mortgage, Interface, Monarch Private Capital, Novelis, Printpack, The Home Depot Foundation, UPS and Waste Management.
Social media manager, Trout Unlimited
Laura Buckmaster believes people need to get outdoors to feel inspired to protect the environment.
“I’m super passionate about making big environmental issues fun and approachable for people,” said Buckmaster, an outdoor enthusiast who enjoys canoeing and fly fishing. “If you don’t have a connection to some of these places, it’s hard to stand up when they are threatened.”
Buckmaster spent a lot of time on the Chattahoochee River as a kid.
“My parents put me in a canoe when I was six months old,” she said with a laugh. “It’s so funny, before I was even born, they had one little life jacket from REI hanging in the closet.”
Buckmaster studied environmental issues and psychology at the University of Oregon, learning how to rally people around advocacy issues.
After college, she worked as the stewardship trips and outreach director with the Georgia Conservancy, where she would take 2,000 people annually on nature trips around the state.
Another career highlight was working as a trail restoration fellow on Georgia’s Cumberland Island, leading a volunteer program to restore 50 miles of trail on the barrier island.
“We made the first GIS map of the island,” she said. “We wanted to break down those barriers of accessibility … We just wanted to get people out exploring.”
Now, Buckmaster is the first-ever social media manager for Trout Unlimited, a national nonprofit dedicated to conserving, protecting and restoring North America’s coldwater fisheries and their watersheds. Her job is telling great stories to engage people and support the organization’s work.
“This is my absolute dream career,” she said.
Buckmaster also recently joined the board of the Southeastern Trust for Parks & Land, an organization that works to preserve land for conservation, research, education and recreation.
“Their mission really resonated with me to protect these places, but to protect them for recreation access as well, because recreation is such an important component of cultivating stewardship and advocacy,” she said.
Jennifer Duenas, 24
Clean water associate, Environment Georgia
At Environment Georgia, Jennifer Duenas is advocating for safe drinking water at schools across Georgia.
“Lead is still an issue in the United States today,” said Duenas, who was born in Dunwoody and raised in Lawrenceville. “It leaches into our drinking water through lead pipes and corroded faucets. Lead is a neurotoxin that affects the development of a young child’s brain … It is very, very bad for our children’s brains and their success in school.”
She added that about 20% of lead exposure comes from drinking water. Most schools have at least some lead in their pipes, plumbing or fixtures, according to Environment Georgia, which creates a risk of contamination. So, Duenas is working to educate school systems across Georgia on the dangers of lead and the state and federal funding available for testing, removing lead pipes and installing filtered hydration stations.
“We have been advocating for all of these resources, because the solution is right in our hands,” Duenas said. “We are trying to get the word out about how dangerous lead is. It’s a crisis and our children matter.”
Duenas said she had an early love for nature, inspired by summer trips to Asientos, a small town in the Mexican state of Aguascalientes, where her family is from.
An AP environmental science class in high school really piqued her interest, leading her to study geosciences at Georgia State University.
During college, she interned for the Georgia State Office of Sustainability. She was also on the executive board for the student environmental team, which secured funding to start an urban garden at Center Parc Stadium.
Duenas said her long-term career ambitions include continuing to advocate for clean water and educating Hispanics on environmental issues.
“I’m really proud of being a Hispanic, young woman rising up within this community,” Duenas said. “I feel proud that I can be a part of really trying to uplift different voices within the environmental movement.”