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VIPs
Recognized for Assisting Parks
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Washington,
DC � August 2016 / Newsmaker Alert / An extraordinary group of VIPs
(Volunteers-In-Parks) donated 7.9 million hours of service to the National
Park Service in 2015. These 440,000 people performed an astonishing
variety of tasks which enhanced both park operations and the visitor experience.
This week, the National Park Service and National
Park Foundation honored the recipients of the annual Hartzog
Awards for Outstanding Volunteer Service at a ceremony in Washington,
DC.
�National
Park Service volunteers are amazing,� said National Park Service Director
Jonathan B. Jarvis. �They are willing to do anything and everything for
parks and ask for nothing in return.Among many other things, they welcome
visitors, lead tours, maintain trails, conduct research, plant gardens,
monitor wildlife, demonstrate arts and crafts, and perform historical reenactments,
and they do it all with unwavering enthusiasm. They are an inspiration
to us all.�
The
award is named in honor of former National Park Service Director George
B. Hartzog, Jr. and his wife Nancy. Hartzog created the Volunteers-In-Parks
(VIP) Program in 1970 with 300 volunteers. Since then, more than 4.3 million
people have volunteered more than 1.4 billion hours of service.
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Following
are the recipients of the 2015 Hartzog Awards:
The
Hartzog Award for Outstanding Individual Volunteer was presented to Vinh
Le-Si from the Chesapeake &Ohio Canal National Historical Park.
Le-Si
contributed more than 1,000 hours to the park last year and was a driving
force behind many projects that directly benefit park visitors. He staffed
the visitor center, was a Billy Goat Trail steward, a member of the bike
patrol, a part of the park�s Bike Loaner Program, and a crew member on
the reproduction mule-pulled canal boat. He was also the chief organizer
of the volunteer boat maintenance team which identified and addressed the
maintenance needs of the boat.
The
Hartzog Award for Outstanding Youth Volunteer was given to Mark Murillo
from Chamizal National Memorial.
In
2015, Murillo volunteered almost 300 hours. He also served as a mentor
for three other high school students who contributed another combined 600
hours. Murillo and the other high school volunteers routinely worked in
the park�s visitor center on weekends and assisted with numerous interpretive
programs and special events.
Murillo�s
most meaningful contribution last year was the creation of a four-minute,
bilingual (English and Spanish) children�s video about the park. He wrote
the script, cast, acted in, and directed the video. The video creatively
recounts the internationally significant history of the Chamizal border
dispute between the United States and Mexico and its ultimate peaceful
resolution. In a story format appropriate for children, the video provides
the opportunity for the park�s young visitors to grasp a complex history
of dispute and diplomacy.
The
Hartzog Award for Outstanding Enduring Service went to Saburo and Anne
Sasaki from Manzanar National Historic Site.
In
April 1942, when Saburo Sasaki was just seven-years old, he and his family
were uprooted from their farm in the San Fernando Valley and incarcerated
at the Manzanar Internment Camp. For three years and seven months, the
Sasakis�Family #3831�were among more than 11,000 Japanese Americans imprisoned
by their own government during World War II. Based solely on their Japanese
ancestry, and without Due Process, they were exiled to Manzanar and lived
in a camp encircled by barbed wire and guard towers.
For
each of the past 12 years, Saburo and his wife Ann have travelled more
than 2,200 miles to return to Mazanar and share his story with park visitors.
Together they have donated more than 3,000 hours of service to the park.
From April to June, they present interpretive and educational programs
for park visitors. As a former incarceree, Saburo is able to connect visitors
to the site and its stories in deeply personal ways. He displays exceptional
generosity of spirit and his candor, humor, and honesty touch even the
most detached or defensive visitor.
The
Hartzog Award for Outstanding Youth Volunteer Group was given to the School-to-Work
Building Trades Program from Denali National Park and Preserve.
In
2015, the Building Trades class consisted of 24 Tri-Valley High School
students. They volunteered a total of 3,552 hours and built two seasonal
housing cabins for Denali. Since its inception in 1998, the Building Trades
classes from Tri-Valley School have built multiple park structures and
replaced more than 20 old seasonal housing cabins.
The
Building Trades class is a partnership between the park and the local school
district. In addition to providing students with job skills, Building Trades
teaches practical applications for geometry, math, physics, and language
arts. The park supplies building materials, tools, and a maintenance supervisor
and funds one-half of a teacher�s salary.
Although
the work is performed outdoors, two hours a day in temperatures that can
sink as low as 45 degrees below zero, the Building Trades class is the
most popular class in school and inspired a similar program another high
school in Alaska.
The
Hartzog Award for Outstanding Volunteer Group was presented to the Cades
Cove Bike Patrol from Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
The
Bike Patrol has led to an increase in both visitor ridership and safety
during the 41 times each year that the Cades Cove Loop Road is closed to
motor vehicles. Every Wednesday and Saturday from May through September,
the popular road is open only to bicyclists and walkers from sunrise to
10:00 AM, providing an opportunity to enjoy the scenic road at a slower
pace.
Patrol
members are a strong presence on the 11-mile road. They take turns roving
by bike and manning designated stations in an effort to assist with traffic
management issues, advise of hazards, respond to accidents, serve as first
responders, administer first aid, make bike repairs, and manage wildlife
encounters.
The
Hartzog Award for Outstanding Park Volunteer Program went to Mississippi
National River and Recreation Area.
The
park�s volunteer program plays an integral role helping the park connect
with urban youth, restore habitat, facilitate community engagement, and
work with partners. In 2015, the park increased the number of volunteers
from the previous year by 34-percent to 8,629 VIPs. Those VIPs contributed
32,060 hours, which was a 9-perent increase over 2014.
Last
year, the park�s volunteer program initiated a gathering of more than two
dozen land managers and volunteer coordinators to coordinate efforts to
improve river habitat. The meeting resulted in new partnerships and a growing
network of support. One successful result came from an increased effort
to engage youth. More than 300 volunteers devoted 3,000 hours to education
programs for 11,000 urban youth on riverboats, canoes, and along the shore
about the history, science, and recreational opportunities of the Mississippi
River. In turn, 3,300 of those youth became volunteers and collected native
seeds, started plant nurseries, made seed bombs for hard to reach places
along the river, and labeled storm drains for public awareness as part
of the river rehab program.
Other
park volunteers conducted citizen science projects, collecting data about
birds, dragonflies, otters, Monarch butterflies, cottonwoods, and water
quality. VIPs also engaged tens of thousands of visitors at the park visitor
center, though the Amtrak Trails and Rails Program, at the Minnesota State
Fair, and during biking, fishing, and canoeing programs.
About
The National Park Service
More
than 20,000 National Park Service employees care for America�s 413 national
parks and work with communities across the nation to help preserve local
history and create close-to-home recreational opportunities. Visit us at
www.NPS.gov,
on Facebook Facebook.com/nationalparkservice,
Twitter Twitter.com/natlparkservice,
and YouTube YouTube.com/nationalparkservice.
About
The National Park Foundation
The
National Park Foundation is the official charity of America�s national
parks and nonprofit partner to the National Park Service. Chartered by
Congress in 1967, the National Park Foundation raises private funds to
help PROTECT more than 84 million acres of national parks through critical
conservation and preservation efforts, CONNECT all Americans with their
incomparable natural landscapes, vibrant culture and rich history, and
INSPIRE the next generation of park stewards. In 2016, commemorating the
National Park Service�s 100th anniversary, the Foundation launched The
Centennial Campaign for America�s National Parks, a $350 million comprehensive
fundraising campaign to strengthen and enhance the future of these national
treasures for the next hundred years. Find out more and become a part of
the national park community at www.NationalParks.org.
Contact:
Kathy
Kupper, National Park Service, 202-208-6843
Contact:
Alanna
Sobel, National Park Foundation, 202-796-2538 |