Sunday, March 22, 2009

Community Winners

One award was given to Jasper County, SC, to help in the restoration of their farmer's market in Ridgeland. You'll enjoy the video on their website, about how an old bean shed became Jasper County Farmer's Market and Auction Center. This season, the retail market will be open on Fridays, beginning April 24.

At Riverview Charter School in Beaufort, volunteers from the Ward Edwards Company will help start a school-community program. Students will be able to learn about the region's local history, culture, and natural environment. In Hardeeville, they will work with the Jasper County School District in curriculum development. The High School and the Middle School Math/Science and Engineering Academy will be involved.

Lowcountry Local First, of North Charleston, SC, received a grant. The dollars will go toward LLF's development of Farm Fresh Food Guide, a local food directory to go online this spring. Another innovation of LLF, in partnership with the SC Department of Agriculture, is already in place: A few dozen restaurants have agreed to buy at least 25% of their menu from the State's sources. They display the Fresh on the Menu logo, shown at left.

And one of the stewardship awards went to the City of Savannah, GA, to make the city more bicycle friendly. This supports their Thrive Initiative; it began when the Mayor and City Council members signed a pledge to do everything they could to promote a healthy, sustainable environment in Savannah.

These five projects will receive a total of $9,000 in grants or in-kind contributions in this year's Healthy Community Grant Program. The competition, sponsored by the Ward Edwards Company, encourages non-profit organizations that want to improve the environment in coastal South Carolina and Georgia.

“New ideas, like the projects promoted by our grants, are the best economic development, and we need that more than ever in these difficult financial times,” said Allen Ward, President of Ward Edwards. Congratulations to the winners; and also to the company, for their vision and important contributions to the area.

Labels: , ,

Monday, June 30, 2008

Creative Stewardship

You have a great idea for improving the environment in your community, and just the group to get it going. How could you get it funded? Healthy Community Grants up to $10,000 are available to community-based groups that offer solutions for local environmental problems -- the more creative and out-of-the-box, the better. The awards are intended to inspire people in selected counties in coastal South Carolina and Georgia to get involved.

Ward Edwards, an engineering company with offices in Bluffton and Port Royal, SC, is offering the grants for the second year. The company wants to encourage innovation and has doubled the target area. "We want to make as many people as possible aware that these funds are available," according to Kimberly Seipel-Parks, Project Director. "We are looking for projects that promote environmental sustainability."

St. Peter’s Catholic School of Beaufort was a 2007 winner, with a water quality study in a high salinity estuary. As a result of the rapid growth in their county, the Beaufort River had high surges of fresh water from storm water runoff. Their Environmental Science Program wanted to investigate the impact of the fresh water on organisms, including anemones, sea squirts, and sponges.

Another winner was the Marshview Organic Community Farm in St. Helena. Their goal was to educate youth in the community about how they could become change agents for improving their environment. The students were to receive hands-on training in the operation of an organic farm. The Town of Bluffton used its award to build a demonstration rain garden, as shown in the photo at left, for collecting and filtering rain that falls on impervious surfaces.

What if your local school could be more energy efficient with a 'green roof,' used to grow vegetables for the students?

The list of eligible counties, application forms, and further information about the grants are available on their website. Interested groups must submit an initial one-page Project Summary by September 10, 2008. Grant recipients will be announced in February, 2009. Check it out; your idea may be a winner!

Labels:

CurrClick