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With your help, SCCF's resilience is assured!
Like so many of our neighbors, SCCF has suffered significant damage to many of our buildings, vehicles, and boats. In the most crushing example, our intern housing buildings have been completely destroyed. Yet, as we move past Hurricane Ian’s devastation that will define Sept. 28 on our islands for years to come, we are still able to celebrate a great deal of solid, mission-driven work and signs of nature’s resilience in this magazine. After all we have suffered together, we proudly share this good news with our valued members and neighbors.
SCCF is immensely grateful to Uhler & Vertich Financial Planners, LLC, and Bailey’s General Store and its Island Store on Captiva for underwriting this issue of Connecting You to Nature. This publication would not have been possible without their co-sponsorship. For that and so much more, we thank them.
In addition to enjoying these articles that offer an indepth look at the work we do, we hope you will also be inspired to use the enclosed envelope to make your taxdeductible gifts to support our programmatic activities before the fiscal year ends on June 30, 2023. Your philanthropic investment is also needed to advance our substantial hurricane recovery.
www.sccf.org | info@sccf.org
P.O. Box 839, Sanibel, FL 33957
As SCCF’s supporters, you can be assured your donations will be used for our conservation initiatives in many meaningful and cost-effective ways. To that end, we truly hope you can help SCCF reach our funding goal to balance the Fiscal Year 2022-2023 operating budget and tackle our post-Ian needs.
Please call Development Director Cheryl Giattini at (239) 822-6121 with any questions you may have about SCCF’s path forward and how you can help. Thank you in advance for your consideration of this sincere request for your support.
HOWYOU CANHELP
Please become a member or renew your membership by using the enclosed envelope or donating at www.sccf.org
Dear Members and Friends of the SCCF Family,
Welcome to our Spring 2023 edition of Connecting You to Nature. We are excited to update you on the outstanding mission-driven work and community projects that SCCF, Sanibel Sea School, and Coastal Watch have been able to accomplish in the months following Hurricane Ian. The storm continues to present us with many challenges — from resuming essential services and rebuilding infrastructure to restoring wildlife habitat and protecting water quality.
The devastating winds and storm surge that battered our communities on Sept. 28, 2022, were stark reminders of the shear strength of mother nature, and how quickly priorities can shift. Like most, SCCF was severely impacted by Hurricane Ian. Over one-third of our staff was temporarily or permanently displaced by the storm and many of our buildings, vehicles, and equipment were damaged or destroyed.
As the saying goes, when the going gets tough, the tough get going. The storm necessitated an immediate shift from our conservation work to a humanitarian effort to help those most impacted — and a broken Sanibel Causeway didn’t stop us. Despite staff facing significant challenges of their own, they lined up to board the RV Norma Campbell to assist first responders, transport equipment, and support our neighbors and friends in cleaning out their homes and businesses.
Hurricane Ian brought to light that we are a community that stands together in the face of monumental challenges, with various partners working as one. It tested the conservation principles that Sanibel and Captiva were built upon and measured the fortitude of our leaders to push back on development pressure that threatens our existence. It emphasized that climate change is not a concern for the future — the future is here, and we must build back in a way that makes us more resilient to future hurricanes.
It's up to all of us to carry the torch forward and stand up for the special places in Southwest Florida that provide us with pristine beaches, bountiful waters to fish and recreate, a thriving economy, and — perhaps most importantly — essential habitat for our unique flora and fauna.
To our readers near and far, please take some time out from your own troubles and recovery efforts to read the stories of resilience in this issue. There are great examples of the work we hope you will support with a tax-deductible gift this spring.
With sincere gratitude,
James Evans Chief Executive Officer