The
Rockfall Foundation has awarded its 2012 grants for environmental projects in Middlesex County , marking the 40th
anniversary of its granting program.
The foundation has given grants to organizations and towns
throughout the county since 1972, when it first awarded funds to support civic
beautification projects. Since then, Rockfall grants have provided critical
seed money and support for innovative grassroots environmental education,
conservation and planning initiatives.
This spring $20,000 is being distributed to schools, municipalities,
land trusts and other nonprofit organizations. The majority of the grants will
support programs involving children and youth, in pre-K and elementary grades
through college.
“This year we continue to expand our funding to include children and families
that have not been engaged in Rockfall grant projects before,” according to
foundation Executive Director, Claire Rusowicz. “In several cases, the
communities we are reaching are generally underrepresented in environmental
grant-making, according to national funding reports.” These communities include
children with special needs and in lower income settings and schools that
have very limited access to environmental enrichment programs and hands-on
science learning opportunities.
A 2012 grant will support Middletown ’s North End Action Team’s
(N.E.A.T.) Kids Market, a program that brings local youth to the N.E.A.T.’s
downtown Farmers Market to shop and learn about nutrition, budgeting,
agriculture, environmental issues and sustainability.
“Our goal is to increase the number of kids participating in
our market, but more importantly, to create a more curriculum-based program
that includes visits by guest speakers and hands-on experiments,” describes
Izzi Greenberg, Executive Director of N.E.A.T. “We intend to not only help our
kids make healthy and sustainable food choices, but also to give them a chance for
education that will last their entire lives.”
Another grant is for a program engaging students at
Franklin Academy
in East Haddam . The private, college
preparatory school, accredited by the New England Association of Schools and
Colleges, is the only high school in the country founded to serve students with
Nonverbal Learning Differences (NLD or NVLD) and Asperger’s Syndrome (AS).
“Our Rockfall project will encourage our students to be
stewards of the natural world by educating them about the science and history
of the Chapman Pond Nature Preserve, located near Franklin,” according to
Dr. Mary L. Murphy, Franklin Residential Director. “Students will take
leadership, within the school and in the wider community, to improve
accessibility to the Preserve and increase awareness of all that it offers.”
The Academy project will work in partnership with the
Middlesex County-based Everyone Outside
program, which is also receiving 2012 grants to expand its classroom-based and
outdoor educational programs. Everyone
Outside stresses hands-on learning and exploration, through guided nature
walks, field work and in-classroom science enrichment experiences.
A complete list of grant recipients and project descriptions is available on
Rockfall’s website www.rockfallfoundation.org.
Grants are awarded by the foundation annually. Application information and
schedules are available by calling the office at (860) 347-0340 or visiting the
website.
Founded in 1935 by Middletown philanthropist
Clarence S. Wadsworth, Rockfall is named after the large waterfall in Wadsworth Falls State Park .
In addition to its grants, the foundation sponsors educational programs,
continues to preserve and help sustain open space land holdings in the county
and supports the 100-year-old Wadsworth/Kerste deBoer Arboretum, a Wadsworth legacy property on Long Lane in Middletown .
Rockfall is headquartered in Middletown in the
historic deKoven House
Community Center , which
it maintains and operates as a community center with meeting rooms and office
space for locally-based environmental groups.
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