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| Retired
Navy Vice Admiral Conrad Lautenbacher, Ph.D., undersecretary
of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator,
with the recipients of the NOAA 2007 Environmental Hero Award. |
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IN
MANY PLACES AND IN MANY WAYS NOAA’S ENVIRONMENTAL HEROES HELP
PROTECT THE PLANET
A
lighthouse keeper in Iceland who records atmospheric
measurements, a cartoonist who educates millions of readers and
an amateur radio operator who organized a weather warning system
are among the 10 recipients of the 2007 NOAA Environmental Heroes
award.
The annual awards commemorate Earth Day by recognizing individuals
and organizations that volunteer their time to help NOAA carry out
its mission. A new category was introduced this year, the Long-Time
Achievement Award, to periodically honor long-time NOAA-related
achievement. NOAA established the Environmental Hero awards in 1995,
and nominations are submitted by agency employees.
“There are thousands of volunteers who give their time to
help NOAA do its work, and the NOAA Environmental Hero award is
our way of saying ‘thank you’ to some individuals and
organizations each year,” said retired Navy Vice Admiral Conrad
Lautenbacher, Ph.D., undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere
and NOAA administrator. “Each year, I am impressed by the
efforts of the Environmental Heroes, who serve as inspirations to
us all. On behalf of the 12,500 men and woman working for NOAA,
I congratulate the 2007 winners.”
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Long-Time Achievement Award
Jack H. Elrod, Jr., Atlanta, Ga. — For more
than a decade, Elrod has entertained and educated millions of readers
through his Mark Trail cartoon strip. In more than 60 Sunday feature
strips, Elrod has shown his readers the dangers of tsunamis, the
treasures of the ocean and mysteries still to be solved about our
planet.
NOAA
Environmental Heroes 2007
| The
NOAA 2007 Environmental Hero Awards were presented by retired
Navy Vice Admiral Conrad Lautenbacher, Ph.D., undersecretary
of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator,
at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., on April 20,
2007. (Click on the images for high resolution versions.
Please credit “NOAA.”) |
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Charlie
Campbell, San Angelo, Texas: Campbell organized a network
of “repeaters,” electronic devices that receive
a weak or low-level amateur radio signal and retransmit it at
a higher level or higher power. This allows the signal transmitting
timely severe weather reports from the NOAA National Weather
Service SKYWARN-trained storm spotters to cover longer distances
without degradation. |
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Nolan
Doesken, Fort Collins, Colo.: Doesken organized a network
of citizen volunteers to measure and report precipitation from
their homes following a flash flood that killed five people
in Fort Collins, Colo., in 1997. Starting with a few volunteers
in 1998, the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow (CoCoRaHS)
network involves thousands of volunteers in 17 states, and enhances
the forecasting and warning capabilities of the NOAA National
Weather Service. |
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Stephen
Doty, Arden, N.C.: Doty created the Centers for Environmental
and Climatic Interaction (CECI) in Asheville, N.C. His devotion
to weather led him to document the history of weather observing
in the community and to spearhead the celebration in his community
this summer of the 150th anniversary of weather observing. |
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David
Gould, Plymouth, Mass.: Gould’s efforts have
resulted in many protection, restoration and stewardship projects,
including the removal of dams to benefit upstream-swimming fish.
He incorporates the full watershed restoration into his planning
process, rather than focus on a single aspect or project. |
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Daryl
Herzmann, Ames, Iowa: Herzmann combined a love of science
with a dedication to helping others when he created the Iowa
Environmental Mesonet, a “one-stop-shopping” Web
site for current atmospheric and hydrological observations,
weather, roadway pavement data, agricultural soil information
and climatology. |
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Bruce
Popham, Marathon, Fla.: A champion of the Key West
marine environment, Popham leads volunteer efforts to protect
the waters around the Keys, such as Florida’s Clean Marina
Program. |
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Josephine
Kozic, Tuckerton, N.J.: Kozic led a fledgling volunteer
effort into a robust program at the Jacques Cousteau National
Estuarine Research Reserve in New Jersey. Her efforts ensure
that the reserve’s long-term ecosystem observatory is
operational with 24-hour volunteer staffing during critical
research periods. |
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Charles
M. Quinn, New Bedford, Mass.: Quinn, his crew and his
vessel, the F/V Celtic, has assisted in several key biological
surveys and marine conservation projects. |
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Oskar
J. Sigurdsson, Vestmannaeyjar, Iceland — A third-generation
lighthouse keeper in Iceland, Sigurdsoon has enabled the NOAA’s
Global Monitoring Division in Boulder, Colo., to produce a 15-year
time series of carbon dioxide and other trace-gas measurements
at the Storhofdi Lighthouse. |
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Jill
Wright, Charlottesville, Va. — Combining educational
opportunities with scientific research, Wright has channeled
her dedication, enthusiasm and collaboration to support the
NOAA Ocean Observing System for climate and weather forecasts. |
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