Thursday, September 27, 2012

Crown Award Bestowed Upon Virginia Tech Professor Emeritus


Dr. Jeffrey Kirwan, professor emeritus at Virginia Tech and resident of Blacksburg, has been awarded the Virginia Department of Forestry’s highest civilian honor – the Crown Award.Dr. Jeffrey Kirwan, professor emeritus at Virginia Tech and resident of Blacksburg, has been awarded the Virginia Department of Forestry’s highest civilian honor – the Crown Award. The award was presented by VDOF’s Lisa Deaton at a meeting of the faculty of Virginia Tech’s College of Natural Resources.

VDOF established the Crown Award to recognize an individual or entity that has not only gone beyond the call of duty but has set a standard of excellence others can only admire. It is the highest honor the State Forester of Virginia can bestow, and Kirwan is only the fourth recipient of this award.

State Forester Carl Garrison said, “Jeff is no stranger to high praise for significant achievement. He has a sustained and long-term track record of success, and I’m proud to add to his legacy of excellence and unparalleled achievement.”

Kirwan pioneered the use of information technology to involve citizens of all ages in the care and appreciation of trees. He led a natural resources and environmental education program that reached more than 360,000 young people during a 12-year period. And he incorporated service learning into Virginia Tech courses long before the practice became commonplace.

“In addition to being an excellent teacher, Jeff served the public with distinction as a 4-H agent in Loudoun and Albemarle counties,” Garrison said. “We are proud to be able to recognize and thank Jeff for all he has done in service to the citizens of the Commonwealth.”

Thursday, September 6, 2012

2300-Acre Conservation Easement Established in Isle of Wight County


VDOF, DCR and TNC Partner to Conserve Forestland and Protect Water Resource

Isle of Wight County has created a conservation easement on 2,348 acres of forestland that fronts the Blackwater River. This will conserve a large block of forestland, protect a vital source of drinking water for residents in South Hampton Roads and enhance the public’s recreational activities in the county.

The Virginia Department of Forestry, the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation and The Nature Conservancy worked together to make this conservation easement a reality. Funds to secure the easement were provided by the USDA Forest Service Forest Legacy Program and by TNC through a grant from the Virginia Land Conservation Fund.

The easement will be jointly held by VDOF and DCR. Approximately 1/3 of the property will become the Blackwater Sandhills Natural Area Preserve – DCR’s 61st such preserve in Virginia – and will include 500 acres of Tupelo-Gum-Baldcypress bottomland that helps protect more than five miles of the Blackwater River. This river is an important source of drinking water for residents of Norfolk. The other 2/3 of the forested property will be the responsibility of the VDOF, which will oversee the management of the resource for timber, wildlife and recreational use. The entire tract will remain the property of Isle of Wight County.

“Isle of Wight County is honored and very pleased to have other agencies join us in our efforts to preserve and maintain such unique natural resources,” said Al Casteen, chairman of the IOW Board of Supervisors. “We in a rural county are particularly aware that we in the present have an obligation to those in the future to be responsible stewards of our natural beauty and bounty. We greatly appreciate the work and help from all concerned to make that goal a reality for this particular property.”

State Forester of Virginia Carl Garrison said, “This easement will forever protect from development a key forested property that fronts a critical source of clean water while increasing recreational opportunities and enhancing wildlife habitat in the area. It’s a big win for residents of Isle of Wight County and all the citizens of the Commonwealth.”

Michael Lipford, executive director for The Nature Conservancy in Virginia, said, “The property’s old-growth cypress forest offers a rare and inspiring glimpse of the majestic forests that once graced Virginia’s coastal region. Thanks to the state and Isle of Wight County, this treasured link to our past will be preserved for future generations to enjoy and will contribute to conservation of the Blackwater River’s water quality, flood storage and wildlife values.”

DCR Director David A. Johnson said, “DCR is proud that a portion of this property will be dedicated as the state’s 61st natural area preserve. With the addition of Blackwater Sandhills, the state’s natural area preserve system now totals 51,394 acres. In addition to protecting old-growth forest, we are preserving sandhills habitat that is suitable for re-establishment of native longleaf pine.”

Including this conservation easement, VDOF’s total easement holdings stand at 22,972 acres conserved – more than half of which (13,660 acres) have been protected during the McDonnell administration.