Newsroom
All News Releases By Date
PR PROJECT DESCRIPTIONS OF THE PRESIDENT'S ENVIRONMENTAL YOUTH AWARDS 1997
Release Date: 03/26/98
Contact Information:
PROJECT DESCRIPTIONS OF THE PRESIDENT'S ENVIRONMENTAL YOUTH AWARDS 1997
Region 1 Michael J. Shafer New Haven, Vermont
Sponsor: Roderick Burritt
The Monkton Vermont Recycling Center Joe Shafer, a 13-year-old Boy Scout spent his Saturday mornings volunteering at the Monkton Recycling Center. When the Center manager resigned, Joe convinced community selectmen to allow him to serve as the recycling coordinator. In four years, Joe has improved and expanded the recycling center and the annual operating budget has increased from $800 to $5,000. The Center has been updated to accommodate new products manufactured using recyclable materials brought in by the community.
Region 2 Union Catholic Environmental Club Union Catholic Regional High School Scotch Plains, New Jersey
Sponsor: Sister Mary Raymond
Earth Care Through Earth Care, high school students create and manage hands-on environmental activities to learn leadership skills and enhance their understanding of the local environment. Hands-on experiences encourage students and their families to recycle, control litter and care for the earth.
Region 3 Lala Qadir La Plata High School La Plata, Maryland
Sponsor: Elizabeth A. Atkinson
Incineration in a Bubble II Lala Qadir, an 11th grader, used ultrasound energy to treat waste water contaminated by Nitroglycerine and Cyclonite through the manufacture of explosives. Contaminated ground and process water on or near recently closed military facilities pose a significant health threat to surrounding communities. The results of the preliminary investigation showed the successful breakdown of both chemical compounds. Results were confirmed using high-performance liquid chromatography and a UV-VIS spectrometer.
Region 4 Sarah Nagy Suncoast Girl Scout Council Clearwater, Florida
Sponsor: Heather Nagy
Lou Henry Hoover Memorial Sanctuary Sarah Nagy, a Senior Girl Scout succeeded in getting Camp Wai Lani, a 46-acre tract of land on the Gulf of Mexico certified a memorial sanctuary. Now owned by the Girl Scout Council, this camp is one of the few remaining intact ecosystems (coastal scrub) in the area. Sarah performed a complete site survey to determine which species and habitats exist on the property and is educating other scouts about invasive exotic plants. Her efforts have been instrumental in persuading the county commission to budget $16 million for the purchase and protection of the site and the adjacent 100-acre property.
Region 5 Adriana Gutierrez Hodges Middle School Chicago, Illinois
Sponsor: Guillemina Rodriguez
What Goes Down Comes Up Adriana Gutierrez, of Hodges Middle School, researched motor oil disposal in her local community. Adriana sent out one thousand surveys to citizens and local businesses. She learned that many residents in her community change their own motor oil, but do not properly dispose of used oil. Most people simply poured used oil into garbage cans; only 25% knew of a recycling center near their homes. Adriana's findings raised awareness in her community.
Region 6 7th Grade Science Class Gadsden Middle School Anthony, New Mexico
Sponsor: Gloria Basden
Cottonwood Covey Project Seventh-Grade Science Class students reforested a riparian habitat area with cottonwood trees donated by AmeriCorps. Because of heavy human impacts, one-time woodland areas at Rainbow Lake, near the Rio Grande River lost their ability to propagate naturally. Cottonwood trees were replaced by saltcedars, invasive trees that consume three times as much water and support little wildlife. The reforested riparian cottonwoods support 90% of the native and migratory wildlife.
Region 7 Science Club West Branch Middle School West Branch, Iowa
Sponsor: Hector Ibarra
Partners in Environmental Science: Towards a Sustainable Energy Future Science Club members made energy-saving recommendations to the school board based on a comprehensive review of energy usage in school facilities. Using a $14,000 bank loan, the club upgraded the schools' lighting systems to increase energy efficiency. The schools' 70% energy use reduction encouraged the local bank to upgrade its lighting system and to work with other businesses in the community to do the same.
Region 8 South Cache Freshman Center Hyrum, Utah
Sponsor: Ron Hellstern
Hawks, Monarchs, Songbirds, and Habitat Students researched the life cycle of the Swainson's hawk, captured and banded adult and young hawks, and attached satellite telemetry to track a female hawk's migratory route to Argentina. Students also developed an Outdoor Classroom with 4,700 trees, shrubs, and wildflowers, and a trail a mile and a half long, with interpretive signs. They organized more than 70 sites in eight states to join in a songbird monitoring program. The students also tagged Monarch butterflies to learn their migration routes from Utah, planted butterfly gardens and made soil erosion demonstration plots.
Region 9 Tanapag Elementary School Sixth Grade Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands
Sponsor: Ron Snyder
Coral Reef Project Sixth-grade students celebrated the "Year of the Coral Reef" by learning about the importance of coral reefs and sharing their findings with the rest of their island community. Students constructed a life-sized model of a reef and stocked it with paper-mach‚ sea life. They invited guest speakers to their classrooms, took field trips, participated in beach cleanups, sponsored a community coral reef day, and painted a wall mural. The students also created a web page to spread the word to other schools all over the world.
Region 10 Patrick Bennett Soldotna, Alaska
Sponsor: Denise L. Newbould
Caring for the Kenai River: A Computer Program Pat Bennett, a high-school junior, was motivated by a school assignment to enter an environmental contest called Caring for the Kenai. The Kenai Peninsula, home to a vast array of ecosystems and animal species, draws thousands of people to the Peninsula yearly to vacation and fish for Sockeye Salmon. Pat developed an interactive computer program to help anglers learn how to fish the Kenai River without disturbing salmon habitat. Pat's webpage notes that damage to the Kenai River is one of the single biggest threats to king salmon and other fish that support an estimated $41 million sport and commercial fishing industry.
Search this collection of releases | or search all news releases
View selected historical press releases from 1970 to 1998 in the EPA History website.