10019943
ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION GRANT PROFILES

           FISCAL YEAR 1994
 U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency
            June 21, 1994

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                                                             June  21,  1994
                     ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION GRANT PROGRAM
                         PROFILES FOR FISCAL YEAR 1994
       Enclosed  are  profiles  of  the  255  Fiscal Year  1994 environmental
education  grant awards  funded by EPA Headquarters and each of the  10 EPA
Regional Offices.   EPA  Headquarters awarded  14 grants and the EPA  Regional
Offices awarded 241.


       This grant program  is  authorized  under section 6 of the National
Environmental Education Act  of  1990 (P.L. 101-619).  The statutory ceiling
under  the  Act for any one grant is  $250,000  of federal funds.  EPA's Regional
Offices award grants of up to $25,000 in federal funds.  EPA Headquarters
awards grants with  a federal share  between $25,001  and $250,000.   Under the
Act, at least 25% of the  total  amount of environmental education grant funds
must be awarded for grants of $5,000 or less.


       In Fiscal Year 1994, the  total amount  of environmental education grant
funds  was  $2,964,000.   Each  EPA Regional Office awarded up to $180,000 for
environmental education grants  for  a total of $1.8  million, and EPA
Headquarters awarded up to $1,164,000.


       The  table below identifies the number  of applications received by EPA
and the number  of grants  awarded.   These statistics show that the  smaller
grants awarded  by the Regions (e.g., especially those for $5,000 or less) have
the greatest chance of  being funded because  fewer applications are received.
The table,shows that:

       —    For grant requests  to the Regions for $5,000 or less,
            approximately 1  out of  3 applicants were successful in receiving
            awards.

            For grant requests  to the Regions between $5,001 and $25,000,
            approximately 1  out of  10 applicants were successful in receiving
            awards.

            For  grant requests  to Headquarters for more than $25,000 and up to
            $250,000 approximately  1 out of  25 applicants were successful in
            receiving awards.


      The  solicitation, evaluation, and award processes which indicate how EPA
arrives at our  final decisions  on grant awards are described each  year in
EPA's annual environmental education grants  solicitation notice.   You may
obtain a copy of the Fiscal  Year 1995 solicitation notice by reviewing the
Federal Register (located in most local public libraries).  We expect it to be
published  in the Federal Register in early June 1994.  Alternatively, you may
obtain a copy of the solicitation notice by  contacting EPA Headquarters or an
EPA Regional Office.  A list of EPA contacts is provided at the end of this
document.

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Applications and Awards
Aaount Application* Awards Percentages of
of Received Made Awards Made Compared to
Award . Applications Received
EPA Headquarters
>$25,000
and up to
$250,000
EPA Regional Offices
I. <$5,000
>$5,000*
II. <$5,000
>$5,000*
III. <$S,000
>$5,000*
IV. $5,000*
V. <$5,000
>$5,000*
VI. <$5,000
>S5,000*
VII. <$5,000
>S5,000*
VIII. <$5,000
>$5,000*
IV.. <$5,000
>S5,000*
X. <$ 5/000
>$5,000*
Region <$5,000
Totals >$5,000*

325

55
65
43
84
28
41
74
62
89
78
50
. 63
29
30
31
26
71
47
48
49
519
545

14

18
6
21
4
19
5
18
4
21
4
19
5
19
5
15
6
23
5
18
6
191
50

4%

33%
9%
49%
5%
68%
12%
24%
6%
24%
5%
38%
8%
66%
16%
48%
23%
23%
11%
38%
12%
37%
9%
* As stated above, the EPA Regions award grants of up to $25,000 and must
award 25% of the total grant funds for projects of $5,000 or less.  Thus, the
">$5,000" used in this table refers to grants greater than $5,000 and up to
$25,000.

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       EPA HEADQUARTERS  GRANTS  BETWEEN S25,001  AND S250.000

 CALIFORNIA

 Regents of the  University  of California  ($108,000)
 Neil Maxwell, Lawrence  Ball of Science,  Regents of the University  of
 California,  e/o Sponsored  Projects Office,  Sproul Hall,  roo»  336,  University
 of  California,  Berkeley, CA  94720
 The "Environmental  Education School Action  Projects" will develop  a  model
 school action and public education program  in  the Greater San Francisco  Bay
 Area.  It will  provide  teachers,  students,  and community volunteers  with an
 opportunity to  work together to develop  projects  designed to  solve local
 environmental problems.  The project  will include an environmental education
 teacher institute for primary  and secondary school teachers and  community
 volunteers and  will draw hands-on curricula from  already existing  programs
 that teach responsible  decisionmaking and action.

 COLORADO

 Food,  Land,  and People  ($35,000)
 Roxanne Brickell, National Steering Committee, Project Food,  Land, and People,
 643 Jackson Street,  Denver, CO 80206
 This project will teach K-12 students about the interdependences  between the
 environment  and agriculture.   It  will emphasize a holistic learning  of
 environmental and agricultural issues (e.g., relating to water quality,  solid
 waste  management, natural  resource management, soil conservation,  pest
 management,  food production, sustainability, biotechnology, and  land use).
 The project will use existing  materials, complete the development  of new
 materials,  and  translate key lessons  into Spanish.
Hoover Elementary School  ($30,000)
Roberta Dardyshire, Hoover School,  1002 Spring Street, Davenport,  IA  52803
The project will add several weeks  of instruction to the school year  to teach
preschool through 3rd graders about the importance of preserving the
environment and providing them with stewardship skills.  The majority of
school's students are considered to be "at-risk" (e.g., from low income and/or
minority families or testing at or  below grade level in reading and
mathematics). Teachers will use existing curricula that use an
interdisciplinary approach to learning and that emphasize student  interaction
with.the natural and social environment (e.g., Project Learning Tree, Project
Wild,  and-Project Aquatics).

MASSACHUSETTS

Manomet Observatory ($58,880)
Janis Burton, ManoMt Observatory,  81 Stage Point Rd., Plymouth MA, 02345
"Save Our Migratory Birds" will emphasize the global nature of environmental
and natural resource issues by teaching middle school students in  the U.S.,
Mexico, Canada, and Argentina how to protect local habitats used by migratory
birds.  This "think globally, act locally" project includes a partnership
between non-profit conservation and education organizations in all four
countries.

Boston Private Industry Council, Inc. ($119,956)
George Moriarty, Boston Private Industry Council, Inc., 2 Oliver St., 9th
Floor, Boston, MA 02109
"Green Tech" is an environmental career work-to-school transition  program for
South Boston High School students (73% of which are minorities) and is
designed to teach students that what they learn in the classroom as well a*
through work experience are fundamental to future employment opportunities.

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The program will increase student awareness about environmental career
opportunities through classroom instruction and on-site experiences such as
internships and summer jobs in environmental agencies, businesses, and
nonprofit organizations.

Environmental Careers Organization (ECO) ($80,000)
Lori Colombo, Environmental Careers Organization, Inc., 286 Congress Street,
Third Floor, Boston, MA 02210-1009
"Environmental Studies: 2000 Project" is a national program to assist
university environmental studies programs in preparing for environmental
workforce needs and to assist students in preparing for environmental careers.
The program will disseminate the results of an ECO study which assesses the
heeds of environmental employers vis-a-vis the interests of environmental
studies departments and students through workshop* at national conferences and
minority academic institutions.  Activities will include developing
environmental career strategies and creating lasting partnerships between
educators and employers.

MINNESOTA

Prairie Island Tribal Council ($26,260)
Lin Nelson, 118 Island Blvd., Prairie Island Tribal Council, Welch, MN 55089
This project will enhance environmental awareness and motivate area school
children, tribal members, and visitors to the reservation community to be more
environmentally conscious in making decisions that affect the environment.
The project will develop culturally sensitive curriculum that addresses a
wide-range of environmental problems on the reservation, including problems
associated with air and water pollution, woodland ecology, and solid waste
disposal.

NEW JERSEY

New Jersey Department of Education ($224,583)
Sylvia Kaplan, NJ Department of Education, 225 E State St., CN 500, Trenton,
NJ 08625
"Project CLEEN" will prepare New Jersey vocational technical students for
environmental careers.  It will identify ten occupational areas throughout the
state which have the greatest pollution problems, develop environmental
management curriculum resources to address problems at these sites, host
educator workshops, and disseminate curriculum and professional development
materials nationwide.  The focus of the project will be to prepare individuals
to prevent pollution in the workplace.

NEW YORK

Educational Broadcasting Corporation ($100,000)
Rose Tatlow, Foundation and Government Underwriting, Education Broadcasting
Corp., 356 West 58th Street, New York, NY 10019
"Nature Trail" is a 13-week half-hour television series that will educate
children about their everyday natural world.  It will demonstrate to young
people that they don't need go outside of their immediate environment to
experience nature; they can learn about the importance of protecting the
environment from suburban backyards, city streets, neighborhood streams, and
urban parks.  Educational materials will be developed along with the series to
be disseminated to schools and environmental education organizations.

NORTH CAROLINA

East Carolina University ($36,551)
Roger Rulifson, Biology Dept., Bowell Science Complex, Bast Carolina
University, Greenville, NC 27858
"Project TEACH" will provide elementary and junior high school science

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 teachers with  knowledge  and  instructional  skills  to  teach  students  about
 coastal environmental  problems  in  Eastern  North Carolina.   It  will  educate
 students about basic ecological principles and man's role  in the  balance  of
 nature as well as  develop  student  skills in analyzing data and solving  local
 environmental  problems.  Teachers  will be  acquainted with  local environmental
 problems, provided with  a  variety  of classroom field activities suitable  for
 their grade  levels, and  aided in integrating these activities  into  their
 science curriculum.

 TEXAS

 University of  Texas Health Science Center  ($69,594)
 Xrena Cech,  School of  Public Health, University of Texas Health Science
 Center, Houston, TZ 77225
 "Outreach for  Community  Health  Workers" will expand  existing environmental
 education and  field demonstration  outreach efforts to  help meet the
 environmental  health education  needs on the U.S./Texas-Mexican border.  It
 will provide environmental health  training for community nurse-practitioners,
 doctors, and other health  care  providers to enable them to recognize and
 address environmental  causes of ill health in the communities  they  serve.
 Environmental  health problems to be addressed include  those relating to
 inadequate treatment and management of sewage, industrial  effluents, and
 agricultural and mining  wastewater.

 VIRGINIA

 Virginia Institute of  Marine Sciences ($33,175)
 Ginger Smith,  Virginia Institute of Marine Science,  Gloucester Point, VA  23062
 The project will train Virginia middle and high school science educators  to
 incorporate  real environmental  monitoring  data on estuarine debris problems
 into their instructional materials.  It will disseminate educational materials
 through a computer network as well as through various  existing marine science
 programs.

 WISCONSIN

 University of  Wisconsin, Stevens Point ($100,411)
 Abby Ruskey, College of Natural  Resources,  University of Wisconsin, 1900
 Franklin, CNR  Bldg., Stevens Point, WI 54481
 The "Environmental Education Demonstrations  State Project"  will build state
 governmental capacity  to develop and deliver environmental  education programs
 in five states —  Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, New Jersey, and Illinois.  It
will assist these  states in developing and implementing comprehensive state-
 wide environmental education action plans  which may  include the development of
 state coordinating councils and/or pre-service and in-service  teacher
training.

WASHINGTON

Adopt-A-Stream Foundation  ($100,000)
Tom Murdoch, Adopt-A-Stream Foundation,  Shoshomish County Admin. Bldg. 4th
 Floor,  3000 Rockerfeller, Everett, WA 98201
The "Northwest Region  Streamkeeper Network"  will train volunteers in
Washington,  Oregon, Idaho,  and  British Columbia to become watershed stewards.
by monitoring the physical, chemical, and  biological characteristics of
 streams and developing action plans for protecting them.  The project places
emphasis on establishing and maintaining partnerships between  citizen
volunteers,  community  leaders,  and the Foundation.

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                      EPA REGIONAL GRANTS UP TO S25.000

ALABAMA

Poarch Band of Creek Indian*  ($3,500)
James T. Martin, HCR 69A Box  H5B, Atmore, AL 36502
A classroom presentation to high school students of a scientific field
demonstration project in water quality assessment including identification and
understanding of pollution sources and methods of abatement.

ALASKA

Alaska Pacific University ($3,?11)
Dr. Richard Myers, 4101 University Dr., Anchorage, AX 99508-4672
The University will construct environmental science kits, primarily for water
testing in rural Alaska villages.  Workshops will be held to train teachers on
the use of the kits.  The kits will be distributed statewide, including to
isolated village schools and will enable educators to increase residents'
awareness of their environment.

Kenai Peninsula School District ($5,000)
Diane Bergman, 150 Park Ave., Soldotna, AK 99669
The Kenai Peninsula School District will introduce environmental education to
the students by infusing it into existing curricula using thematic units at
each grade level.  To accompany the thematic units, a series of seven tubs
(materials) will be developed for kindergarten through sixth grade.  Tubs will
contain "hands-on" materials.  Facilitators will be hired to train the
teachers at a pilot school in the use of the materials.

Prince William Sound ($4,710)
Nancy Bird, P.O. Box 705, Cordova, AX 99574-0705
A team of educators will visit Prince William Sound communities and present a
series of interactive environmental education activities in each of the
elementary schools.  The activities will be tailored to meet the needs and
concerns of each community.  The educators will bring "self-contained"
education kits and provide environmental education resources and extension
activities to the community school.

ARIZONA

Hualapai Tribe ($5,000)
Thomas Gordon, P.O. Box 179, Peach Springs, AZ 86434
The "Hualapai Environmental Education Program" program, aimed at all community
members, will also have particular emphasis for high school youth.  Community
activities will include recycling workshops, clean-up days, poster contests,
and Earth Day Fair.  An environmental education summer camp and habitat study
will be conducted for the tribal youth.

Rough Rock School Board, Inc. ($5,000)
A. Keith Warner, P.O. Box 217 RRDS, Chinle, AZ 86503
"Reservation Environmental Science Education Training"
Staff development training in the environmental science curriculum will allow
Native American students tc get involved in hands-on projects that address
daily environmental problems of waste management and water pollution on the
Navajo Reservation.

Southwest Center for Education & Natural Environment ($5,000)
Kathryn Kyle, Arizona State Univ., Xempe, AZ 85287-2512
"Integrating Environmental Education into the Existing Curriculum Through
Teacher Training Workshops"
The effects of urban development on the Sonoran Desert ecosystem is the theme
of a teacher workshop designed to transform scientific content into classroom

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 environmental  education  activities.   The  grant will  also  identify  gaps  in  the
 database  of  existing  environmental education materials  and  offers  teachers
 training  in  accessing this  database.

 Testpe Unified  High  School District ($4,965)
 Nike Trimble,  500 W.  Ouadalupe Rd., Tempe, AZ 85283
 "Environmental Biology Field  Courses"
 This project will provide training for  24 high school students who will
 investigate  and explore  the fragile and varied desert environment.  Their
 observation  of key  wildlife species,  riparian ecosystems, and the  relationship
 of human  influence  on these species and three habitats  will  form the basis of
 a report  to  be disseminated at Arizona  teacher conferences.

 Growing Connections,  Inc. ($5,000)
 Linda Herzog,  2123  E.  Grant Rd., Tucson,  AZ 85719
 "Teacher  Training Workshops in Environmental Education"
 Organic gardening and nutrition are the themes of the two day workshop which
 will be presented twice  for 32 elementary school teachers.   Teachers will  then
 guide their  students  in  planting environmental gardens.  Parents will be
 surveyed  to  determine if students' eating habits or  other behavior has been
 effected.

 AMERICAN  SAMOA

 American  Samoa Community College ($5,000)
 Don Vargo, P.O.  Box 2609, Pago Pago, AS 96799
 "Tree Production Project"
 The community  college will  team with Manumalo Baptist School in a  forest
 conservation project.  Students will  learn about the role trees play in Samoan
 culture and  the fundamentals  of forestry  as they nurse  seedlings along until
 they are  ready for  transplanting.

 ARKANSAS

 Arkansas  Department of Pollution Control  and Ecology ($18,000)
 Gregg Patterson, 8001  National Dr., Little Rock, AR  72209
 Purchase  equipment  to  support the "Arkansas Water Education  Team" program  in
 which students will monitor a water resource near their community  and study
 the results  to better  understand the impact of surrounding land use practices
 on water  quality.

Arkansas  Recycling  Coalition  ($4,000)
Maureen Rose,  P.O.  Box 190825, Little Rock, AR 72219
Conduct workshops for  elementary and junior high school teachers from central
and southeastern Arkansas.  Focus will  be on solid waste management, recycling
and source reduction.

CALIFORNIA

Armory Center  for the  Arts  ($5,000)
David Spiro,  145 N. Raymond Ave., Pasadena, CA 91103
 "Children Investigate  the Environment"
This project brings together teaching staff from the arts as well as the
sciences to promote interactive science education through observation,
experimentation, data  gathering, classification, and problem solving.

Atascadero Unified  School District ($3,842)
Gene Blsdon,  5601 West Mall, Atascadero, CA 93422
 "Atascadero Creek Schools"
Using Atascadero Creek and  the Salinas  River as environmental education
laboratories,  high  school students will join with faculty to present "Creek
School"  workshops to elementary students  and teachers.

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Calaveras Unified School District ($5,000)
Betty White, P.O. Box 788, San Andreas, CA 95249
"A Child's Place in the Environment"
This project presents an interdisciplinary, thematic, environmental education
program to K-6 students with the goal of encouraging environmental literacy
leading to responsible lifestyles.

Daedalus Education Foundation ($4,840)
Merle O'Neil, 12702 Via Cortina *201B, Del Mar, CA 92014
"Environmental Education Teacher Training Institute"
This project provides for environmental education training for 120 teachers in
Tijuana, Mexico.  The content will focus on the environmental issues linked to
water, health, solid waste, leind and resource management, and human
interaction with the surrounding environment.

Desert Tortoise Preserve Committee ($4,850)
Jun Lee, 255 S. Grand Ave. #2203, Los Angeles, CA 90012
"Interdisciplinary Approaches to Environmental Education"
A one day conference will bring together high school teachers with
representatives of government agencies and private conservation organizations.
The task of the workshop participants is to develop a sample teaching plan
which employs endangered species themes for an interdisciplinary curriculum
for four pilot high schools.

Friends of the San Francisco Estuary ($5,000)
Marcia Brockbank, P.O. Box 2050, Oakland, CA 94604-2050
"Estuary Environmental Education Program"
The project will target two inner city classes and their teachers in a ten
week action project.  In these activities the students, working with local
resource agents, will clean up and enhance estuary habitats near their
schools.

Konocti Unified School District ($5,000)
Olga Clymire, P.O. Box 6630, Clearlake, CA 95422
"A Child's Place in the Environment"
Demonstrations on how an environmental education program can be organized
through integration of the traditional elementary school subjects will be
offered in teacher workshops in four geographical regions of California.
Teachers will participate in hands-on activities of the curriculum model and
develop in cooperative groups a plan to assist their students in selecting and
implementing environmental enhancing projects.

Napa Valley Unified School District ($5,000)
Dr. Barbara Pahre, 2425 Jefferson Street, Napa, CA 94558
"The New 3 R'a: Reduce, Re-use, Recycle"
Pollution prevention becomes an issue that students can impact on a daily
basis through their hands-on involvement in gardening and composting
components of this waste reduction curriculum.

Outward Bound Adventure, Inc. ($4,948)
Helen Mary Williams, P.O. Box 202, Pasadena, CA 91102
"Meaningful Water Conservation for Inner-City Students"
Funds will be used to prepare a curriculum of water learning concepts and
conservation and to provide six 1-day field trips for 24 middle school
students to sites that are linked to the delivery and usage of water to the
Los Angeles metropolitan area.  Selected students (12 from Markham Jr. High in
Watts and 12 from Washington Middle School in Pasadena) will also prepare for
a seven day High Sierra environmental study trip that will be funded from
other sources.  Thereby students can trace a drop of melted snow through the
delivery system to their own neighborhood.
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 Rising Sun Energy Center ($5,000)
 Michael Arenson,  P.O.  Box 2874,  Santa  Cruz,  CA 95063
 "Solar Energy  Education"
 Student intern*  from the Department  of Environmental  Studies  at  UC,  Santa Cruz
 will  be trained  in solar energy  and  conservation  to develop lessons  and
 activities that  are compatible with  Santa  Cruz school district's science
 education  goals.   The  interns will make in-class  presentations at four public
 elementary schools.

 Sacramento Science Center ($5,000)
 Patricia NcVicar,  3615 Auburn Blvd., Sacramento,  CA 95821
 "Water Education Project"
 Three workshops  for separate groups  of 20  elementary  school teachers will
 emphasize  stewardship  of water resources.  Each participant will create a
 "make it-take  it"  kit  for subsequent use in  their classrooms.

 San Bernardino County  ($5,000)
 Phyllis Hebbard,  385 M.  Arrowhead Ave.,  San  Bernardino, CA  92415-0160
 "Hazardous Waste Education Outreach"
 Health Services  will offer a video/lecture presentation to  public and  private
 schools in the county  to increase awareness  of hazardous household products,
 less  toxic alternative products, the dangers of improper hazardous waste
 disposal,  and  the  location of hazardous waste  collection centers.

 San Francisco  Bay  Delta  Aquatic  Habitat Institute ($11,259)
 Kathryn Kramer,  1301 S.  46th St. #180,  Richmond,  CA 94804
 "Kids  in Creeks: A Creek Exploration and Restoration  Program"
 This proposal  will provide educators in Contra Costa  County with two and a
 half days  of training  in creek ecology,  access to a lending library, and
 support for conducting community-based action  projects with their classes.

 San Joaquin Office of  Education  ($5,000)
 Judi Wilson, P.O.  Box  213030, Stockton,  CA 95213-9030
 "Kids  Make a Difference:  Environmental  Projects for Elementary Students"
 Fifty  teachers will  be trained to use  action projects related to an
 environmental  issue  that children at differing developmental levels can work
 on together, share perspectives, and arrive  at a  common objective  to solve the
 problem.

 San Lorenzo Valley Unified School District ($4,998)
 Jane Orbuch, 6134  Highway 9, Pelton, CA 96018
 "The River Project"
 The San Lorenzo River  and its watershed provide the unifying theme for this
 project which  will  involve students K-12 in  hands-on  monitoring, measuring,
 and classifying water  quality, riparian vegetation and wildlife,  status of
 aquatic organisms,  sedimentation and erosion,  and human uses and impacts.

 Southern Sonoma County Resource Conservation District ($14,438)
 Sheila  Adams,  1301 Redwood Way Suite 170,  Petaluma, CA 94554
 "Adopt-a-Watershed Curriculum"
 The proposal will provide  in-service training  for participating  teachers  in
 Sonoma Valley  and  Petaluma schools.  This  training will assist teachers  in
 providing  their students with increased  environmental  sensitivity  through
 outdoor  field  observation  and experimentation.

 TreePeople  ($10,000)
 Diane Hunt, 12601 Mulholland Dr., Beverly  Hills,  CA 90201
 "The Magical City Forest"
Three teacher workshops  for 150 teachers of  grades K-6 will emphasize  hands-on
 training in the curriculum which links  information about the cycles of the
earth, air, trees, wildlife,  fresh water,  and  oceans  with children's everyday
 lives in Los Angeles.  To  give students  a  sense of where they fit  in the

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ecosystem, the curriculum addresses the realities of urban living.  .

COLORADO

Bauder Elementary School ($4,970)
Mary Joyce Fink, 2345 W. Prospect Rd., Port Collins, CO 80526
Bauder proposes to develop and implement an Environmental Literacy for
Families  (ELF) program.  The overall purpose of this project is to target
environmental education at the family level, focusing on (1) air pollution,
(2) land management,  (3) water pollution, (4) energy conservation, (5) solid
waste management, and (6) co-existence with other animal species.

Bookcliff Middle School ($2,698)
Teri Lindauer, 2935 Orchard Ave., Grand Junction, CO 81504
This project is designed to motivate students to be more environmentally
conscious and to make informed decisions through hands-on involvement in
environmental situations.  The school will conduct ecology based community
service projects by converting the campus into an environmentally sensitive
recreation area and developing it as a learning environment.

Clean Air Campaign of the Pikws Peak Region ($3,450)
Linda Lewis, 219 W. Colorado Ave. Suite 210, Colorado Springs, CO 80903
This project proposes to improve environmental education teaching skills by
conducting educator workshops,, and distributing the curriculum and
accompanying kits to each participant for classroom use.  The overall purpose
is to educate the community to solve air pollution problems through pollution
prevention activities.

Colorado Alliance for Environmental Education, Inc. ($5,000)
Walt Blackford, P.O. Box 101744, Denver, CO 80250
The overall purpose of the project is to significantly improve a statewide
database and clearinghouse service of environmental education training,
curricula, materials, and other resources.  This is a project which develops
capacity for the dissemination of environmental curricula and resources to a
statewide network of environmental education organizations and individuals.

Colorado Division of Wildlife ($5,000)
Karen Hardesty, 6060 Broadway,. Denver, CO 80216
The project will improve environmental education teaching skills through a
series of advanced workshops for teachers that use inner city places and
people to enhance environmental awareness.  It will target adult teachers of
and urban student populations to develop an increased self-confidence in their
abilities to teach environmental education in any neighborhood setting.

Colorado Hospitals for a Healthy Environment (CHHE) ($5,000)
Patricia McClearn, 2140 S. Holly St., Denver, CO 80222-5607
CHHE will hold three workshops in Denver, Pueblo and Grand Junction to educate
participants about recycled paper and soy ink to promote their increased use
for hospital print materials.  This project has good potential as a model for
other industries in helping them to participate in source reduction to solve
the solid waste problem.

Colorado State Forest Service ($4,800)
Mike Way, Project Learning Tree, Fort Collins, CO 80523
The overall purpose of this project is to enhance the demonstration and
dissemination of Project Learning Tree and Project Wild (PLT/PW) environmental
education curricula materials.  This project will recruit and train a cadre of
PLT/PW workshop trainer/facilitators from the ethnic minority community in the
Denver metro area, with special attention on cultural diversity and at-risk
students.
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 Ballett Elementary. School  ($5,000)
 Cynthia Kahns,  2950 Jasmine St.,  Denver,  CO 80207
 The Eco-Urban Sensory Garden will be  an outdoor  science  lab  for teachers and
 students in an  urban neighborhood.  This  project is  part of  the school  renewal
 program,  and is designed to improve the teaching of  elementary science  to
 students and their families through a hands-on approach  in ecology,  plant
 growth,  and habitat development  in the urban environment.

 Woodland Park School District RE-2 ($2,191)
 Fred Wall,  P.O. Box 1808,  Woodland Park,  CO 80866
 The purpose of  this project is to provide a wetlands learning  environment for
 students and to innovatively control  the  flow velocity of the  water  downstream
 from the school property.   This  will  provide a hands-on  stuJy  experience for
 science students who will  help create a wetlands environment.

 Biological  Sciences Curriculum Study  ($25,000)
 James Ellis,  830 N.  Tejon  Suite  405,  Colorado Springs, CO 80903
 This program is part of a  five year project  that will improve  the background
 in  science  content and teaching  skills of teacher  in grades  four through six
 and to  support  the implementation of  effective instruction in  science,  with  an
 emphasis  in environmental  education.

 Colorado  Bird Observatory  ($24,910)
 Michael Carter,  13401 Piccadilly  Rd.,  Brighton,  CO 80601
 This  program will  develop  Birds  Beyond Borders,  an international education
 program designed to link teachers and students from  different  countries and
 cultures  through shared environmental issues and natural resources,  using
 migratory birds as the bond.   Workshops will be  offered  in Colorado  and in
 Jalisco,  Mexico,  that will  equip  teachers with information they need to
 encourage government support  of environmental education.

 The  Keystone  Center ($18,031)
 Dr.  Jon Thompson,  P.O. Box  8606,  Keystone,  CO
 The  Institute will provide  a  six-day,  intensive  training program to  educators
 from  rural  communities covering terms involved in  environmental issues,
 providing a scientific framework  for  use  in  diverse  issues investigations,
 offering  specific  hands-on  activities, teaching  educators how  to develop and
 implement their own classroom plans,   and  conducting  a mediation role-play to
 demonstrate the pubic policy  process.

 Thorne Ecological  Institute  ($18,750)
 Susan Poster, 5398 Manhattan  Circle Suite 120, Boulder,  CO 80303
 This program  will  improve efficiency  in educational  outreach and increase
 participation by educators  and children through  trained  volunteers.  A
 guidebook will  be  developed to provide background  on Chatfield  State Park's
 ecological  setting,  human history and critical environmental issues  for use  in
 participating in hands-on workshops that  can serve as a  model  for replication
 elsewhere.

 CONNECTICUT

 Parmington River Watershed Association ($4,975)
Maryon Attwood,   749  Hopmeadow Street,  ~imsbury,  CT  06070
The  "Phase  I  Adopt-A  Stream"  portion  of the  Farmington River Green Way  Project
will identify and  create a plan to focus  on  the unprotected lower portion of
the Farmington River.  The project will facilitate the partnership of diverse
groups through environmental  education and community stewardship activities.
The groups to be targeted include community  civic groups, town  officials,  and
businesses  in seven  area communities.  Eventually an area of over 600,000
people may be impacted.  The  collection of natural resource data and the
subsequent adoption of sections of the river by  these different groups  will
lead to a multi-town  river corridor conservation plan.


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The Nature Conservancy  ($4,586)
Stephen R. Patton, Box  1162, Weston, CT  06883
The "Interactive Interpretive Trail Guide" will provide visitors to the Lucius
Pond Ordway - Devil's Den Preserve - education in watershed protection,
ecosystem function, and conservation of biological diversity.  Through these
interactive, outdoor education and walking tours, visitors of varying
backgrounds, will  learn about watersheds, habitats, and wildlife migratory
routes on their own while walking a 2-mile loop within the 1,660-acre
preserve.

Science Center of  CT/Roaring Brook Nature Center, Inc. ($7,790)
Beth Dal Negro, 70 Oracey Rd., Canton, CT  06019
The Roaring Brook  Nature Center project will establish a partnership with 17
developmental pre-schools, composed of 680 four-year-old children, over 70% of
them African .American or Hispanic, in the Hartford Public School system.
These "developmentally  at-risk" pre-school children will be exposed to, and
build an understanding  of, the interconnectedness of the natural world of
people, plants, and animals.  The project consisting of an initial teacher
workshop, in-class program, and field trip to the Nature Center, will lead to
an increase in the children's familiarity with the natural world and greater
environmental consciousness by children and teachers alike.

University of Connecticut ($24,494)
Dr. Richard Cooper, 1084 Shennctcossett Rd., Groton, CT  06340
The National Undersea Research Center at the University of Connecticut through
its "Aguanaut Program"  will facilitate environmental/research partnerships
between high schools and research scientists.  All high schools in Rhode
Island will be provided with a brochure promoting the program highlights,
including the use of scientific method and its application  utilizing modern,
in situ technology.  Teachers and students will gain experience in hands-on
research through the Narragansett Bay summer research cruise which will
provide access to  and promote regional geographic relevancy of environmental
issues.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments ($25,000)
Stuart Preudberg, 777 North Capitol St., NE, Washington, DC 20002
Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments will establish a public
education campaign to teach minority communities about reducing non-point
source pollution generated from vehicles.  The result is to increase used oil
recycling and antifreeze, battesry, and tire returns in minority communities by
10 percent.  The environmental objective is to increase awareness of non-point
source pollution in such communities.

FLORIDA

Broward County School Board ($5,000)
Frank Mandley, 600 Southeast 3rd Avenue, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
The Plantation High School EGO-LAB will provide high school students an on-
site opportunity to investigate, observe, and experiment with a small scale
southern Florida ecosystem.

Broward County Audubon  Society, Inc. ($5,000)
Karen Mauck, 616 NW 22  Court, Wilton Manors, FL 33311
The Broward Outdoor Natural Urban Studies project will train 150 teen and
adult volunteers to conduct hands-on, outdoor, nature/science activities for
1200 fourth grade  students in a series of investigations of the living things
found in the elementary schoolyard.
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 Charlotte Harbor Environmental Center,  Inc.  ($4,675)
 Joy Duperault,  10941 Burnt Store Road,  Punta Oorda, FL 33955
 Will adapt an existing estuarine curriculum  to  the Charlotte  Harbor watershed
 region and conduct middle school teacher  workshops in  the  use of  the
 curriculum.

 Northwest Florida Water Management  District  ($5,000)
 Carol Pugh,  Route 1, Box 3100, Havana,  FL 32333
 Field trips and hands-on environmental  science  activities  for middle school
 students  and teachers that focus on environmental actions  to  reduce storm
 water run-off pollutants and  surface water degradation.  Approximately  30,000
 K-12 grade teachers and students will be  involved in the project.

 Tampa Palms Elementary School ($5,000)
 Charmaine Jones,  6100 Tampa Palms Blvd.,  Tampa, FL 33647
 Will provide all  elementary teachers hands-on curriculum materials  and
 workshops to heighten their awareness of  the Hillsborough  River as  an
 important resource needing environmental  protection.

 GEORGIA

 Bleckley  County School System ($4,990)
 Donald M.  Turknett,  P.O.  Box  516, Cochran, GA 31014
 Will  develop a  K  - 12th grade environmental  education  center,  which includes
 an  outdoor classroom and natural resource study stations to emphasize hands-on
 learning  activities.

 City  of Atlanta ($4,735)
 Commissioner Remedies K.  del  Rosairo, Department of Water, 68 Mitchell  St.,
 Suite 5700,  Atlanta,  OA 30335
 A partnership with the Atlanta Water Department, Georgia-Pacific  Corporation,
 Georgia Water Wise Council, and the Atlanta  Public Schools will introduce  the
 Water Sourcebook  to 36,000 students in  grades 3-5 and  1400 teachers.

 Friends of Oeospbere ($5,000)
 Deron Davis,  8615  Barnwell Road,  Alpharetta,  OA 30202
 Working in the  Magic Garden will provide  a training program for 30  K-5  grade
 teachers  to  establish Wildlife Sanctuary  Outdoor Learning  Centers at  5
 economically depressed,  urban elementary  schools.

 Georgia State University  ($24,906)
 Jack  Hassard, University  Plaza,  Atlanta,  GA  30303
 Will  conduct a  summer teacher preparation institute based  on  the Global
 Thinking.Project,  a computer-mediated distance  learning curriculum,  and
 convene a  Global  Summit  consisting  of 2 days  of workshops  and  seminars  on
 global  thinking and environmental science for 8 elementary school teachers, 2
 high  school  teachers,  and  800  ethnic minority and low-income  students in
 grades  5-7.

 Golden  Triangle Resource Conservation and Development Area ($4,450)
 Jerome  Brown, 1016 Lowe Road,  Albany, GA  31701
 "Operation Clean" will develop a solid waste  collection and composting
 demonstration site  and conduct a high school  teacher workshop  to  increase
 county  residents awareness  of  environmental,  issues and encourage them to take
 an active  role  in  addressing  environmental problems.

Griffin-Spalding County School System ($5,000)
Ann Hunan, P.O.  Drawer N, Griffin,  GA 30224
The "Outdoor Environmental  Laboratory Urban Model" will emphasize ecology  and
biodiversity to demonstrate how  elementary environmental education  can be
 implemented  in  a limited natural resource  environment.
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Medlock Bridge Elementary School ($4,995)
Virginia C. Smiley, 10215 Medlock Bridge Parkway, Alpharetta, OA 30202
The "Living Classroom XI" will develop an outdoor classroom area and utilize
the site as a teaching laboratory to train K-5th grade teachers in Project
Learning Tree and Project Wild workshops.

Scitrek, Science and Technology Museum ($24,000)
Bernadette N. Peiffer, 395 Piedmont Ave. HE, Atlanta, OA 30308
Will disseminate to grades 3-5 the "Water Sourcebook," using a teacher
training model and community partners.  The project will create 200 teacher
trainers across Georgia and establish 12 partner site learning communities.

HAWAII

American Lung Association of Hawaii ($4,860)
Shirley Robinson, 245 M. Kukui Street, Honolulu, HI 96817
"Partnership in Health Education"
The American Lung Association is joining with Girl Scouts of Hawaii, Hawaii
Children's Museum, and the State Department of Education in an outreach
project expected to extend to 10,000 students, promoting awareness of
potential health hazards associated with indoor air pollution.  At the end of
the education unit, students and their parents will be able to recognize
indoor air pollution hazards and know how to minimize and control them in
their home and school environments.

County of Maui ($5,000)
Steve Parabicoli, 200 S. High St., Wailuku, HI 96793
"Wastewater Education"
An educational partnership between the Wastewater Reclamation District and the
county's schools will be established by combining classroom presentations with
tours of the wastewater reclamation facilities.

Hawaii Nature Center ($20,000)
Tamar Chotzen, 2131 Makiki Heights Dr., Honolulu, HI 96822
"Wetlands Endangered Species Environmental Education Field Program for
Elementary School Students and Teachers"
This project will provide teacher training and produce resource guides for
field study of wetland endangered species.  This training effecting up to
11,000 elementary school students focuses on preservation of wetland
endangered species and conservation of their habitat.

IDAHO

Better Living ($5,000)
Loreca Stauber, Route 1 Box 54, Genessee, ID 83832
Workshops for youth leaders, teachers, and high school students will be
designed to enhance their skills in "hands-on"environmental education and to
give them a good understanding of ecological concepts and factual background.
The workshops will take place at an environmental park site in Moscow, with an
emphasis on ecological implications of Moscow's land use practices.

Boise State University ($5,000)
Dr. Richard McCloskey, 1910 University Dr., Boise, ID 83725
The University will hold an elementary and secondary teacher workshop on how
parks, zoos, botanical gardens and natural areas can be used to teach science,
and the use of journaling and children's literature to teach environmental
education.  The workshop will include investigations of river ecology and will
demonstrate riparian "hands-on" activities.
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 ILLINOIS                                •

 Native  American  Educational  Services  College  (NAES)  ($24,995)~
 Faith Smith,  2838  West  Peterson,  Chicago,  IL  60659
 To  develop a  comprehensive environmental education program at  the  NAES  campus
 located on the Menominee  Reservation  in northeastern Wisconsin.  With the
 grant,  NAES College  will  develop  a  bachelor's degree program in  natural
 resources;  formalize a  community  service training program  with the Tribe;
 integrate  environmental instruction into K-12 Native American  study; and,
 create  a local library  resource for Menominee community members  related to the
 environment.  The  project will reach  more  than  2,000 Menominees.

 Boys &  Girls  Clubs of Chicago  ($5,000)
 Ellen Olantz, 625  W.  Jackson,  Suite 300, Chicago, XL 60661
 To  develop a  community  network for  solid waste  management  education.  With the
 funds,  the organization will offer  bilingual  workshops that will result in
 improved recycling practices and  reduction of waste in the Lathrop Homes
 Community.  Lathrop  Homes' is  comprised of 1,000 families, predominately
 African American and  Hispanic. The  workshops, which will be presented in
 partnership with other  Chicago non-profit  organizations and local  government
 offices, will be targeted toward  parents and  emphasize family  recycling.

 OeWitt  County Soil and  Water Conservation  District ($5,000)
 Carol Thompson,  804 W.  VanBuren,  PO Box 617,  Clinton, XL 61727
 To  collaborate on  an  environmental  education  program with  Weldon Springs
 Foundation  and State  Recreational Area that will offer some 2,087  K-12
 Clinton, Illinois  students the opportunity to learn about  habitat  enhancement
 and the local ecosystem.  Funds will  be used  to develop a  teacher  workshop and
 lesson plans that  present the park  as a living  classroom.

 Environmental Education Association of Illinois ($5,000)
 Dr. John Beaver, 47 Horrabin Hall,  WIU, Macomb, IL 61455
 To  assist the Environmental Education Association of Illinois  in its
 sponsorship of the 1994 Midwest Environmental Education Conference.  Funds
 will support educational  programming  at the conference which will  be held
 October 27-29, 1994,  at the Eagle Ridge Resort  and Conference  Center in
 Galena,  Illinois.  Sponsorship of the Midwest conference rotates between
 Illinois,  Iowa,  Minnesota, and Wisconsin.  The  theme of this year's conference
 in  Illinois is "Environmental Education: Making the Right  Connection."  The
 conference, which  will  offer workshops, interact sessions, presentations, and
 networking opportunities,  is open to  all Midwest environmental educators.

Mark Sheridan Magnet  ($5,000)
 Susan O'Neill, 533 W. 27th Street,  Chicago, IL  60616
To add a strong  environmental education component to the school's  math,
 science and art  curriculum.  Funds  will be used to teach ten classroom
teachers and five  artists to integrate environmental issues into their
classroom curricula and focus on  the  ecosystems of Southeast Chicago and
Northwest Indiana.  Workshops will  foster  higher order thinking and learning
by teaching environmental education through the arts.  The project at Mark
Sheridan will serve as  a model for  teacher training at 43  other schools
throughout Chicago's  sixth school district.

Madison County Soil and Water Conservation District ($4,913)
Larry Firkus,  P.O. Box  482, Edwardsville,  XL  62025
To facilitate in the  delivery of  environmental  education programs  to the
community.   Funds will  be used to hire an environmental education  coordinator
to work in cooperation with several local organizations.  The Madison County
SWCD environmental education coordinator will work to integrate environmental '
education in 14  school districts  throughout the county; make presentations to
city officials on erosion control and storm water management;  and, assist
rural landowners with sustainable agriculture research.


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INDIANA

Indian* Recycling Coalition ($16,000)
Jan* St. John, 1040 W. 17th St., Blooaington, ZN 47404
To establish the "Environmental Education Master Teacher Network" and sponsor
environmental education workshops for master teachers in sixteen counties of
southern Indiana.  Master teachers will in turn educate other teachers so that
the program could potentially reach 24,000 K-12 students.  The workshops will
revolve around an interdisciplinary environmental curriculum developed by the
Heritage Education Foundation of Indianapolis called, "Partners with the
Earth."

Clarksville Riverfront Foundation ($5,000)
Kenny Karea, 430 Marriott Dr., Clarksville, IN 47130
To develop a hands-on ecosystem education program for the nearby Falls
Interpretive Center.  The center will serve more than 800,000 people in
southern Indiana and northern Kentucky.  The project will enable the Falls
Interpretive Center, which will be established in 1994, to offer teacher
education workshops and student programs that focus on the diverse habitat
found on its 1,400-acre wilderness area.

IOWA

Grant Wood-Area Education Agency ($24,974)
Dean Hartaan, 4401 6th St. SW, Cedar Rapids, IA 52404-4499
The "Save Our Water Project" is designed to improve the quality and quantity
of environmental education teaching skills in the upper elementary grade
levels.  Teacher workshops will use new, interactive hands-on tools and
techniques. A locally relevant water quality resource guide will be developed.
An increased partnership between educators, students and parents and their
community soil and water conservation personnel is expected to evolve.

University of Iowa ($24,862)
Susan N. Blunck, Van Allen Hall, University of IA, Iowa City, IA 52242
"The Iowa Floods Follow-up Project" will be a means of improving environmental
teaching skills.  The project will build on a nationally recognized teacher
in-service program known as the Iowa Chautauqua Program, which is a model
science in-service program.  The focus will be the effects in Iowa of the
floods of the summer of 1993.  Teachers will use information from their
investigations during visits throughout the state to create modules that can
be used in the classroom.  The university will coordinate teacher planning and
design of resource modules for summer workshops.

Betterdorf High School ($5,000)
Barb Jacobsen, 33333 18th St., Bettendorf, IA 52722
The project is a four stage environmental source reduction education project
using a new methodology called Search, Solve, Create and Share developed by
teaching researchers at the University of Iowa.  The goal is to involve others
in environmental education in an active role.  Along with workshops for
teachers and students, an activity booklet related to solid waste issues will
be developed.

Iowa Department of Education ($5,000)
Duane Tooasen, Oriaes State Office Bldg., Des Moines, IA 50319
The goals of the "Volunteer Wilderness" project are to enhance teaching skills
through a wilderness awareness and ecological restoration workshop for
educators, to enable the educator to communicate this experience with a
participant presentation, and to expand the knowledge base within the
community to enable community members to make more positive environmental
choices.  The program will affect more than 1,500 people.  It is done in
cooperation with the Iowa Department of Education, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, the U.S. Forest Service, Idaho Fish and Game, The


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 University  of  Northern  Iowa,  Iowa  State  University  Extension Youth  and  the  4H
 Program.

 Iowa  4-H  Foundation  ($4,989)
 Beverly Berna,  Iowa  State Univ., Ames, IA  50011
 The project will  improve environmental education teaching skills by providing
 curriculum  integration  and modeling of classroom in-service to educators.
 Classroom educators  or  learning center teachers will be empowered to teach
 their students with  an  age specific, integrated, sequential curriculum.
 Students  will  have the  opportunity to participate in community projects such
 as paint  recycling and  household hazardous waste reduction.

 Kir:.wood  Community College ($5,000)
 Douglas Feil,  P.O. Box  2068,  Cedar Rapids, XA 52406
 The project is to develop a curriculum package that will motivate marginally
 literate  adults and  their families to be environmentally conscious, informed,
 and responsible.  It does so  by coupling environmental issues with  the Adult
 Basic Education curricular emphasis on family literacy and life skills.  This
 curriculum  will teach basic environmental responsibility to marginally
 literate  adults via  "hands-on" activities adapted from the pre-reader program
 funded last year  and successfully  administered.

 Eastern Iowa Community  College District  ($4,250)      .
 Ed Stoessel, 306  W.  River Dr., Davenport, IA 52801-1221
 Eastern Iowa Community  College will provide high school teachers with the
 opportunity to  discover environmental resources and experience environmental
 education through a  five-day  workshop. Participants will receive an
 environmental  science resource instructor guide and a sampler of an
 environmentally centered English composition anthology comprising classical,
 journalistic,  and technical selections.

 KANSAS

 Johnson County  Parks &  Recreation  District ($3,705)
 Bill McOowan,  909 N. Highway  7, Olathe, KS 66061
 The purpose of  the project is to improve the aquatic education program Ecology
 Encounters, which is a  fourth through sixth grade field trip with hands-on
 activities.  This project will reach five school districts in Johnson County,
 Kansas; schools in Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Missouri;  and
 numerous private  schools. Based on figures from past years, the expected goal
 is to reach 700 to 800  students with the Ecology Encounters program.

 Emporia State University ($3,735)
William P. Lanier, Emporia State Univ., Emporia, KS 66801
 The purpose of  the project is to publish one issue of the Kansas School
 Naturalist dealing with the 1993 flood of the upper Mississippi region, which
 continues to affect  the populations of Iowa,  Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska.
The proposed issue of the Kansas School Naturalist will address certain
 aspects of flood  science and will  provide problem-solving activities along
with basic science behind common flood phenomena.  The issue will be
maintained and  referenced over the years by a loyal audience among  school
 libraries.

Geary County Pish & Game Association ($5,000)
Kathy Brown George,  P.O. Box 631,  Junction City, KS 66441
The project is  for a teacher workshop that will blend discussion sessions with
 hands-on activities designed to supply information through the full range of
education from  elementary to secondary and special education classes. The
workshop will reach beyond the science curricula instructors to the classroom
teachers in emphasizing the blending of science, mathematics, social studies
and language arts into  a connected pattern of learning that includes
environmental education.


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Olathe East High School  ($5,000)
Brad Williamson, 14545 W. 127th, Olathe, KS 66062
The project is to expand the monarch butterfly tagging effort and to implement
new student-based research projects related to the migration phenomenon.  A
workshop will give teachers necessary skills and materials to culture the
monarchs under different light regimens.  Protocols for investigation will be
developed in a collaborative manner and piloted by the core schools.  The
tagging aspect of the monarch project will involve teachers and students from
the Midwest.  It provides the opportunity for students to learn science by
doing science in collaboration with a professional researcher.

Emporia State University ($3,735)
Dr. Thomas Eddy, Box 4050, Emporia State, Emporia, KS 66801
The purpose of the project is to publish one issue of the Kansas School
Naturalist that deals with the newly understood role of animals in succession.
The Kansas School Naturalist integrates .birds, insects, and other animals as
co-determiners of succession through seed dispersal and soil development.  The
issue will be maintained and referenced over the years by a loyal library
audience in Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska.

Kansas State University  ($6,676)
Carol Shanklin, KSU, 2 Fairchild Hall, Manhattan, KS 66506-1103
Train-the-trainer workshops for food service managers and personnel will deal
with environmental problems and alternative approaches for managing solid
waste and preventing air and water pollution by food service operations.
Participants will use the knowledge learned to present training sessions to
their employees or other food service managers.

KENTUCKY

Jessamine County Middle School ($750)
Grant Felice, 851 Wilmore Road, Nicholasville, KY 40356
"Water Analysis in Jessamine County" will integrate life, earth, and physical
science into the 6-8 grade curriculum, using water quality testing as an
environmental education medium.

Kentucky School For The Deaf ($5,000)
Angela K. Wilson, P.O. Box 27, South Second St., Danville, KY 40422
A series of workshops will provide teachers with the tools to give pre-school
through high school hearing-impaired students a wide range of non-sheltered
environmental education experiences, such as trips to nature centers and tele-
communication projects with Kentucky Educational Television.

LOUISIANA

Imperial Calcasieu Resource Conservation and Development ($5,000)
Council, Jim Neveu, 2422 Port Dr., Jennings, LA 70546
The "Forestry Awareness Project" will target sixth grade students in Allen and
Northers Evangeline Parishes.  Will use hands-on activities to address issues
of multiple use of the forest and the many varying concepts of multiple use.

Sam Houston High School  ($5,000)
Linda Wygoda, 880 Sam Houston Jones Pkwy., Lake Charles, LA 70611
A week-long workshop will train teachers to use hands-on water monitoring
activities for the intensive study of the Calcasieu River.

Southern University and A&M College ($18,000)
Dr. Chukwu Onu, Southern Branch Post Office, Baton Rouge, LA 70813
The "Environmental Awareness and Career Training" program will use a variety
of environmental education activities and hands-on experiences to improve
decision-making skills of non-technical minority college students and
community leaders.


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MAINE

Cumberland County  Soil & Water Conservation District  ($4,900)
Forrest Ball,  381  Main Straat, Suita 3, Gorham, Maine  04038
"The Campers'  Lake Ecology Book* will provide campers and camp  staff within
the Sebago Lake Watershed with information on soil and water resources.
Specifically,  it will explain to younger  "lake users" (ages 6-10) how  lakes
function, how  they are threatened, and how they can be protected via a variety
of activities  including puzzles and illustrations.  The goal of the "Camper's
Book"  is to teach  about lake ecology and  stressing the importance of the water
quality of their lakes to young campers.

Department of  Environmental Protection ($3,600)
Mick Archer, 1235  Central Drive, Presque  Zsle, Maine  04769-2053
The. St. John River "Mr. and Mrs. Fish" water quality education program will
market its project focusing on enhancing  the understanding of water ecosystems
among  students living on the American, as well as Canadian side of the river.
The program, directed at third grade students and their teachers, consists of
a teacher workshop, performance for students, and a training package.  This
will provide teachers with the resources  to introduce water quality lessons  in
the classroom  curriculum.  Furthermore, the project will enhance partnerships
between local  school systems, municipalities, and regional natural resource
agencies, all  on behalf of the water quality of the .area's St. John River.

Maine Audubon  Society ($4,998)
Maureen K. Dates,  118 U.S. Route One, P.O. Box 6009, Palmouth, ME 04105
"The Casco Bay Water Quality/Watershed Education Project" will provide middle
and high school teachers with hands-on experience in water quality and
watershed issues.  Teachers will participate in interactive workshops, and use
watershed models and  topographic and watershed maps for wetland education in
classroom practice.   The Casco Bay Watershed program is the vehicle which
will establish a student/community water  quality monitoring project on Casco
Bay and foster ongoing "mentoring" relationships between citizens and  the
classrooms.

MARYLAND

Alliance for Community Education ($5,000)
Anne Pearson,  5103 North Grain Hwy., Bowie, MD 20715
The Alliance for Community Education will start an adult education program,
primarily for minority students, about non-toxic lawn and garden care.  The
goal is to provide jobs and to launch "green gardens," which will treat lawns
and gardens "as an-ecosystem."  The environmental objective is to reduce non-
point source pollution into the Chesapeake Bay.

Baltimore Metropolitan Council ($24,954)
Jack Anderson,  601 N. Howard St., Baltimore, MD 21201
The Baltimore Metropolitan Council will launch a Reservoir Watershed
Protection project that will result in staff training and curriculum
development.

Baltimore School District (Sussex Elementary) ($4,955)
Kathy Brauer, 515 S.  Woodward Dr., Baltimore, MD 21221
Baltimore County Public School (Sussex Elementary) will fund a water quality
project using the ChesNet forum on the Metnet bulletin board system.   This
project will create a network of teachers and students who have been trained
in both environmental and telecommunications technologies.  The environmental
objective is to encourage environmental education.
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The Loading Dock, Inc. ($15,900)
Hop* Cueina, 2523 Owynns Palis Pkwy., Baltimore, MD 21216
The Loading Dock, Inc., a non-profit building materials recycler, will publish
A Guide to Successful Building Recycling and provide technical assistance,
one-on-one, to improve methods of materials reuse, as well as alternative
means to supporting the creation of low-income housing.

Clean Islands International, Inc. ($5,000)
8219 Elvaton Drive, Pasadena, MD 21122
"Environmental Lessons on Video" is a U.S. Virgin Islands Education Project
consisting of teacher workshops for Virgin Islands educators and a video for
those unable to participate in the workshops.  Goals of the project include
development of methods to promote environmental awareness, conservation
practices relevant to the resources and restrictions of island communities and
•effective decision making for solid waste disposal alternatives.

MASSACHUSETTS

Lloyd Center for Environmental Studies ($5,000)
Alan Harris, 430 Potomska Road, P.O. Box 87037, South Dartmouth, MA 02748
The "Docent Program" will train volunteers to lead school children in
explorations of their local environments.  There will be ten workshop
sessions, including coastal field studies,, wildlife in the school yard, and
marine organisms.  The workshops will provide volunteers with the ability and
access to materials necessary to lead students in hands-on investigation.  The
program will reach a diverse audience, both adult volunteers and children from
across New Bedford, promoting and enhancing environmental education in the
area.

Massachusetts Audubon Society/Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary  ($5,000)
Anthony Symasko, III, 127 Combs Rd., Easthampton, MA 01027
The Arcadia Nature Center and Wildlife Sanctuary, a local arm of the Audubon
Society, will expand its six-week summer environmental field trip program to
eight weeks and continue serving 350 Holyoke Hispanic children, ages five to
eleven in their increasing awareness of their natural environments through
hands-on discovery.  The expansion will emphasize adult workshops, hire an
additional part-time professional educator, prepare assistants in the use of
observation and sampling equipment, and provide additional contacts hours for
children at the sites and at community meeting halls after the field trips.

MA Audubon Society/Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary ($5,000)
Christine Brothers, P.O. Box 236, South Wellfleet, MA 02663
Through classroom sessions, field trips, and summer interpretation, "Project
Pond"  will educate 240 tenth grade biology students in the natural history and
management of the Outer Cape's kettle ponds.  The program will expose the
students to scientific research, natural resource management and work
experience in environmental management and education. They in turn will use
these skills and knowledge to educate town residents and visitors who use the
ponds.

Patriots' Trail Oirl Scout Council ($7,965)
Brenda Rich, 95 Berkeley St., Boston, MA 02116
"Trails to Action," a weekend workshop, will provide approximately 150 Girl
Scout troop leaders with environmental materials and curricula which will
enable them to bring environmental education to the girls, volunteer staff,
board members, and committee members.  It is expected that the leaders as well
as the girls will display environmental awareness in all aspects of their
lives and take appropriate action.
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 Reading Public School ($4,990)
 Leo  P.  Kenney,  62  Oakland Rd.,  Reading,  MA 01867
 Through its  "Vernal  Pool  Education  Project,"  the  Reading  Public  Schools  seek
 to improve environmental  education  in  MasaachuaettB  by  involving high  school
 students and their teachers  in  the  identification, study,  and  certification  of
 vernal  pools in their communities.  Via  a  series  of  workshops, students  and
 teachers from approximately  60  high schools in Middlesex  county  will get
 involved in  data gathering,  study and  certification  of  vernal  pools.   The
 workshops will  use an investigative hands  on  approach using  color infrared
 aerial  photographs to identify  and  plot  vernal pools on USGS maps, eventually
 leading to applications for  vernal  pool  certification.  The  project will also
 promote partnerships with .agencies  such  as the Department  of .Environmental
 Protection Wetland Conservancy  Program and the Essex County  3reenbelt
 Association.

 Silvio  O. Conte Institute for Environmental Health ($24,976)
 Charles Weinstein, Berkshire Cosuon, Suite 370, 2 South Street,  Pittsfield,  MA
 01201
 The  establishment  of the  "Summer Institute in Environmental  Health" will
 provide a week-long,  residential, credit-bearing  program  for middle high
 school  teachers.   The Institute will train teachers  to  incorporate
 environmental health into the science  curriculum  of  public schools in
 Massachusetts,  with  particular  emphasis  being placed in the  recruitment  of
 schools  serving minority  populations.  Through workshops  and lecture/
 discussions  by  key scientists,  participants will  attain the  analytical and
 evaluative skills  essential  to  teaching  environmental health.  The program
 ultimately seeks to  encourage students to  become  active citizens aware of the
 health  effects  of  the varied sources of  pollution.

 Westport  River  Watershed  Alliance ($5,000)
 Oay Oillespie,  1151  Main  Rd., P.O.  Box 3427,  Westport,  MA  02790
 The Westport River Watershed Alliance's  "Watershed Education Project (WEP),"
 will expand  its environmental program  by using hands-on, grade-specific
 curriculum kits, expanding teacher  workshops, and developing Family Nights
 wherein  students will  share  with parents and  friends the activities resulting
 from the WEP kits.   This  program will  now  incorporate communities within the
 Westport River's watershed,  like Fall  River and Freetown,  MA and Tiverton and
 Little Compton,  RI,  which were  previously  not covered.  The  expansion  of "WEP"
 will increase the  students'  and public's awareness of the  environmental  health
 of the watershed.

MICHIGAN

Washtenaw County ($23,241)
Dr. Rebecca Head,  220 N. Main St.,  P.O.  Box 8645, Ann Arbor, MI  48107-8645
To develop a new program entitled "Environmental Equity Community Outreach,"
which aims to form partnerships between  Washtenaw county government agencies
 and low  income, diverse communities in the  county.  The goal of  the program  is
to increase citizen  awareness of the county's environmental  programs and
 services and to gain  input from citizens to ensure that county programs  meet
the expressed needs  of underrepresented  communities of color.  Citizens  will
participate in  community workshops,  presentations, and environmental projects.
The project builds on a 1992 EPA environmental education grant awarded to
Washtenaw County to  run an Environmental Career Internship Program for
 students of color.   The former  interns will assist in cultivating community
contacts for this program.

Muskegon Area Intermediate School District  ($23,239)
Tom Green, 630 Harvey St., Muskegon, MI  49442
To expand the school district's river/groundwater project, which involves
students in cooperative study of the history,  geography, hydrology, biology,
chemistry and politics of the Muskegon River and White River watersheds. EPA


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funds will enable the Muskegon Area Intermediate School District to reach
1,000 additional middle and high school students in four additional districts.
Muskegon School District ultimately aims to establish the program in 10-20
regional sites in Michigan. Students will share data they gain from the
watersheds through the Global Rivers Environmental Education computer network.

Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians ($5,000)
Robert Kewaygoshkua, 2605 NW Bay Shore Or., Suttons Bay, MI 49682
To build tribal capacity to develop and deliver an environmental education
program to the Ottawa and Chippewa Indian communities.  EPA funds will enable
the Grand Traverse Band.to develop a first-ever tribal plan for environmental
education by convening a task force and identifying existing resources and
•gaps.  In addition to' earmarking goals and objectives for a holistic
environmental education program, the Tribal Plan will develop demonstration
projects that combine Native American cultural practices with local natural..
resources.

Michigan State University (55,000)
Clarence Suelter, 302 Admin. Bldg., East Lansing, MI 48824
To offer a three-week interdisciplinary workshop in physical environmental
science for 30 high school chemistry, physics, and earth science teachers.
The workshop will incorporate the use of science, technology and society to
demonstrate the complexity of environmental issues involved with water usage
and reclamation.  The workshop will stress the need for multi-disciplinary
approaches to solving problems by challenging teachers to work through
different environmental scenarios.  Teachers who participate in the workshop
will be required to either share their experience with their peers, or give a
presentation on the program at the Michigan Science Teachers Association
conference.                                                      i

Urban Options, Inc. ($5,000)
Marisa McGlue, 405 Grove St., East Lansing, MI 48823
To deliver a series of workshops to elementary teachers on energy efficiency
and conservation.  EPA funds will be used to support the first year of a four
year plan to in-service 200 teachers.  Urban Options will survey existing
energy curricula in order to use hands-on energy activities with the teachers
that complement Michigan's educational science objectives.

West Michigan Environmental Action Council ($4,996)
Elaine Pelc, 1432 Wealthy SB, Grand Rapids, MI 49506
To support a statewide conference on citizen volunteer water quality
monitoring.  The conference, which is tentatively scheduled for August 1994,
aims to strengthen existing partnerships between state and local regulatory
agencies, educational institutions, non-profit organizations and private
citizens who monitor local water quality throughout Michigan.  One goal of the
conference is to validate the important role citizen volunteers play in
providing necessary, valid, and cost-effective information to governmental
agencies about the health and vitality of surface water in Michigan;  The
conference also aims to further educate volunteers on the biological, chemical
and physical characteristics of monitoring.

Inghajt Soil Conservation District ($4,747)
Ann Nebe, 521 N. Okemos Rd., PO Box 236, Mason, MI 48854
To educate students and adults, residents and businesses in the Sycamore Creek
Watershed about their local watershed and about the environmental importance
of small streams.  Further education will focus on how individual actions can
eventually impact the Great Lakes.  Funds will be used to support forums to
reach residents and businesses and to involve students in actual water quality
sampling.
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 MINNESOTA

 Bell  Museua of Natural  History ($5,000)
 Don Luce,  1100 Washington Ave. South,  Suit*  201,  Minneapolis,  MN 55415
 To  develop and conduct  a  series of  focus  groups to  assess  public understanding
 of  issues surrounding endangered species  in  the north  central  region  of  the
 United  States.   Bell  Museum will use data collected from these focus  groups  to
 shape a series of  exhibitions  the museum  is  now developing in  collaboration
 with  the U.S.  Fish and  Wildlife Service.   The exhibit's goal will be  to
 challenge visitors to think about the  extended consequences of their  actions
 on  the  natural world  and  to further develop  their conservation ethic.  Some  of
 the exhibitions will  be able to travel to classrooms and will  actively engage
 viewers by including  dioramas,  graphics,  interactive objects and videos,
 learning kits,  and games.                    .   .

 Red Lake County Soil  and  Water Conservation  District (SWCD) ($5,000)
 Irene Hill,  Route  1,  Box  31B,  Red Lake Falls, MN  56750
 To  offer outdoor education on  the value and  benefits of wetlands to local
 educators.   Funds  will  enable  Red Lake County SWCD  to reach at least  20
 educators  who  will in turn teach more  than 400 local students  about wetland
 biology,  plant  identification,  water quality, adjacent land use,  and  other
 related subjects.

 MISSISSIPPI

 University of Mississippi  ($5,000)
 Bonnie  J. Krause,  Graduate School/Office  of  Research, University,  MS  38677
 Will  develop a  "Traveling  Trunk Environmental Education Program" on soil
 conservation and conduct  3 workshops to train teachers and volunteers in a 20-
 county  area  in  northern Mississippi in the use of the materials.   The program
 is  designed to  serve  about 1750 elementary students and 20 teachers.

 MISSOURI

 Metropolitan Energy Center ($24,910)
 Peter Dreyfuss,  3808  Paseo,  Kansas  City,  MO  64109
 The purpose of  the project is  to educate  school staff and  students about the
 management and  control  of  lighting  and the environmental impact  of improving
 lighting efficiency.  It  involves students in conducting a lighting audit as
 an  educational  tool and provides workshops for educators to learn  basic
 principles of energy  efficient  lighting.

 Francis Howe11  School District  ($10,000)
 Gerry BOeha, 7001  Hwy 94 South,  St. Charles, MO 63304
 Ttte Francis Howell School  District  implemented the  River Project and  will
 introduce other  local high schools  to  the  project.  The River Project  has
 focused on teachers training teachers  and  will improve on  that model  by having
 teachers instruct  students, who in  turn will train  students from other high
 schools.  The project will  create an environmental  education partnership and
deliver environmental education training to  St. Charles County high schools.

Meraaec Regional Planning  Coaaission ($4,728)
Bonnie Prigge,  101 W. 10th  St.,  Roll*,  MO  65401
The goal of this project is to  educate the public on backyard composting and
generate interest  and participation in waste reduction and  reuse through
composting.  The project will consist  of six hours of classroom  instruction
and three hours of hands-on field work.  Participants will  be  selected from
each community  in  the district  and will serve on  the environmental speakers
bureau,  reaching a broad spectrum of the Ozark Rivers Solid Waste Management
District.
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Meadow Heights R-IZ School ($5,000)
Cheri Fuemmeler, Hwy 72E, Box 210D, Patton, MO 63662
The Meadow Heights teachers in grades K-4 and science specialists in grades 5-
12 will create an outdoor classroom to provide real-life contact with nature.
Summer workshops will enable teachers to improve instructional skills,
incorporate environmental studies into existing curriculum and incorporate the
outdoor classroom as a laboratory for regular science instruction.

River Bluffs Audubon Society ($4,972)
Celeste Koon, 1017 Holly, Jefferson City, NO 65109
This project would facilitate an environmental education partnership among
local government, the local school district and the River Bluffs Audubon
Society.  Money will be used to prepare a traveling display, fliers, and
public service announcements to promote recycling and an overall awareness of
how individual actions create or reduce pollution.

Heranee Regional Planning Commission ($4,038)
Bonnie Prigge, 101 W. 10th St., Rolla, MO 65401
The project is designed to provide education about household hazardous waste
and includes a workshop for representatives from a six-county area. 'The
training will include issues relating to proper disposal methods and use of
alternative products.  This project will provide education for many elected
officials, educators and students, who will be able .to share their experiences
and knowledge in their own communities, schools and local governments.

Niangua R-V School ($4,000)
Dr. Roy W. Manion, P.O. Box 77, Niangua, MO 65713
The grant will provide additional environmental education for teachers K-12 to
incorporate into their general curriculum.  The training will include an
emphasis on water sampling for students.  Information will be shared with the
community in hopes that the community will become more aware of problems,
possible solutions and the need for clean rivers, creeks and water.

Waynesville R-VZ Schools ($3,750)
Herbert Turner, 403 School St., Waynesville, MO 65583
The project is a continuation and expansion of hands-on laboratory activities
and a stewardship program involving the Roubidoux Creek.  The project
encompasses a yearlong study of creek conditions.  Eighth-grade students act
as mentors for the elementary grades.  The project leads to a simple
environmental curriculum that can be used or modified by other educators.  The
water quality monitoring program has identified, and will continue to monitor
for,  minor problems early so that the community can react and make corrections
as needed.

MONTANA

Butte-Silver Bow Health Department ($5,000)
Barbara Popovich, 25 West Front St., Butte, NT 59701
The purpose is to encourage students grades 4-8 and educators to take an
investigative/scientific approach into understanding the influence of lead as
an environmental substance by having staff   go into the classroom to explain
about lead in our environment,  suggest projects and offer assistance to
develop these projects.  The grant funds will be used for awards given through
a regional science fair.

Montana Environmental Education Association ($4,500)
Carol Soth, P.O. Box 928, Dillon, MT 59725
The purpose of this project ia to extend a pilot outreach program to rural
school districts to further the integration of environmental education into
the K-12th grade curriculum by expanding the Resource Lending Library,
installing an 800 telephone line, conduct 5-8 additional residencies in rural
schools and conduct 5-8 additional inservices for teachers around the state.


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 NEBRASKA

 Nebraska Qroundwater Foundation ($9,480)
 Susan Seacrest,  P.O. Box 22558, Lincoln,  NE 68542-2558
 The foundation will match secondary students,  with an interest  in groundwater,
 with a diverse group of  groundwater-related professionals  as  mentors.  Student
 and mentor recruitment,  training and recognition  will be built  on established
 Groundwater Festival partnerships with  state agencies,  higher education  and
 natural resource districts.   Specific objectives  will be to create a
 groundwater project that includes a visual  product suitable for public
 demonstration while promoting communication and cooperation between students
 and groundwater  professionals.

 University of Nebraska  ($5,000)
 Shirley Nieaeyer,  University  of Nebraska, Lincoln,  NE 68588
 The project goal is to transfer existing  pollution prevention technology to
 consumers and householders through the  use  of  a touch-screen  interactive
 multimedia computer program.   The intermedia program  has the  potential to
 improve environmental education teaching  through  use  in educators'  workshops,
 conventions or displays,   it  builds on  state and  local  government capacity to
 develop and deliver environmental pollution prevention  educational programs.

 University of Nebraska  ($4,000)
 Joel  Gaboon,  South Central Research £ Extension Center, P.O.  Box 66, Clay
 Center,  NE 68933
 The primary goals  of this project are to  demonstrate  and evaluate techniques
 that  reduce deep percolation  of irrigation  water  below  the active root zone in
 furrow-irrigated fields  and to  narrow the gap  between irrigation application
 amounts and the  actual amounts  of water extracted by  the crop.   The results of
 the project will be presented at an irrigation workshop in Clay County and at
 the Central Plains Irrigation Short Course  and Equipment Expo,  which annually
 attracts more than 300 irrigators from  three states.

 NEVADA

 University of Nevada-Las  Vegas  ($11,000)
 Roberta Williams,  4505 Maryland Pkwy, Las Vegas,  NV 89154-4004
 "Science and Society"
 This  environmental education  course,  targeting teachers from  rural  Nevada as
 well  as  residents  of Clark County,  will provide insights into national and
 local environmental  issues.   Participating  teachers will be encouraged to
 conduct  workshops  at their home schools to  extend to  their peers  the hands-on
 experiments,  instructional materials, and critical  thinking about
 environmental  issues.

 Washoe  Tribe  of  California and  Nevada ($5,000)
 Sherry  Smokey, 919 Hwy 395 South,  Gardnerville, NV 89410
 "Willow  Project  Expansion"
 This proposal  will provide teacher training and curriculum activity kits for
 fourth  grade  teachers in  Alpine County  of California  and Carson City,  Nevada.
 The model,  currently in use in  the schools  of  Douglas County, Nevada,  offers a
 cross-cultural environmental  curriculum and presents  Native American
 traditions  in  a  science context.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

 Connecticut River  Joint Commissions  ($12,350)
 Sharon  Francis,  P.O. Box  1182,  Charlestown,  NH 03603
The Joint Commissions, CT  River Watershed Council,  and the VT Department of
Environmental  Conservation will promote environmental literacy  by  developing,
publishing, and  distributing  an illustrated guide which will  serve  as  an
educational tool for teachers,  students, and citizens of the  Connecticut River


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watershed.  The guide will focus on combatting non-point source pollution, by
suggesting actions that can be taken to prevent and control pollution, and
serving as a reference guide on where to obtain information on best management
practices.  Besides the guide,, workshops like "The River that Connects Us",
and publications like "Environmental Management" will provide the teaching
tools necessary for numerous interest groups, especially teachers and students
in four states (CT, MA, NH, and VT).

Harris Center for Conservation Education ($5,000)
Marian X. Baker, 341 Kings Highway, Rte. 1, Hancock, MB  03449
AIRNET, and air quality monitoring project will create partnerships between
the Harris Center, town and state officials, and ten local, private and public
high schools in New Hampshire. This grant will be used to expand the existing.
AIRNET monitoring project which promotes environmental education through
interdisciplinary learning including workshops, team teaching, computer
networking, multidisciplinary research and analysis of data.  Teachers,
students  (and indirectly other citizens) will increase their interest and
knowledge of air quality issues through this unique program.

Raymond Parks and Recreation Department ($5,000)
Richard C. Bates, Raymond NH  03077
The Raymond Parks and Recreation Department in conjunction with the Raymond
School District will manage environmental education programs which enlighten
and empower the citizens of Raymond to actively monitor Raymond's
environmental health.  Specific projects include evaluating wetlands,
monitoring water quality, and finding alternatives to landfills.  Raymond high
school students will be trained as Environmental Docents — providing
environmental lectures, demonstrations, tours to elementary and middles school
classrooms and community organizations.  Also, in the summer, environmental
education will be incorporated into the summer youth program wherein the
docents or other students will work as Junior Conservation Counselors.  A
part-time Environmental Education Coordinator will be hired to schedule
workshops and other relevant community events to complement the students'
efforts.

University of New Hampshire ($4,999)
Ihab Karaq/Linda Kahan Meier, Office of Sponsored Research, 107 Service Bldg.,
UNH, Durham, NH 03824-3585
In conjunction with the Pollution Prevention Consortium of New England
Universities, the University of New Hampshire plans to sponsor a regional
conference facilitating the transfer of pollution prevention technology to
undergraduate and graduate students and faculty.  The "P2 Consortium," the
first of its type, will encourage demonstrations, discussions, and
dissemination of pollution prevention activities and information.  Students
will get an opportunity to present pollution prevention projects and foster
greater awareness and understanding of pollution prevention.

NEW JERSEY

American Littoral Society ($13,500)
D.W. Bennett, Highlands, NJ 07732
The American Littoral Sc-riety will sponsor teacher workshops in the New York
Harbor area using an existing curriculum, ESTUARIES.  This program is designed
to motivate teachers to introduce estuarine-related studies to students,
introduce interdisciplinary curricula related to estuaries, complement efforts
in the public and private sectors in environmental education related to harbor
and estuary programs and demonstrate how individuals can protect estuaries.

Genesis Farm, Inc. ($5,000)
Sister Patricia Daly OP, 41a Silver Lake Road, Blairatown, NJ 07825
Genesis farm embodies the ideal of "living lightly on the earth."  This
program will consist of teacher workshops for elementary school educators


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 providing them with materials for classro'om implementation and current
 scientific understanding of ecosystems.   The workshops  will enable teachers to
 collaborate on the development of environmental  education programs and learn
 about  effective models from each other.

 Greater Newark Conservancy ($5,000)
 Deborah Hadley,  303-9  Washington Street,  Sth Floor Room 2,  Newark, NJ 07102
 The Weather-watch Pilot Program will  continue and expand a pilot project to
 measure the impact of  meteorological phenomena and pollution on the
 environment by creating partnerships between Newark schools and non-profit
 environmental  organizations.   The expansion of a 1993 program,  this phase will
 reach  ten schools enabling educators to use the  hands-on weather curriculum
 with ^n estimated 400  students.

 New Jersey Audubon Society ($24,000)
 Peter  Bacinski,  790 Ewing Avenue,  P.O. Box  125,  Franklin Lakes,  NJ 07417
 The New Jersey Audubon Society's "Bridges to the Natural World",  the first
 natural history guide  providing  educators with New Jersey-specific
 information, will be the basis for teacher  and facilitator  workshops.   These
 workshops will reach educators throughout New Jersey empowering them to make
 environmental  education relevant,  exciting  and accessible in urban,  suburban
 and rural settings.

 Warren  County  4-B Leaders Association ($5,000)
 Carol Knowlton Ward, 165 County  Road, Route 519  South,  Belvidere,  NJ 07823
 The  New Jersey 4-H Conservation  School will be a hands-on program for teens
 introducing them to environmental  issues  including waste management and water
 quality.   State,  county and private  sector  partners also fund this program
 that will draw youth from throughout New  Jersey.   Participants  learn about the
 environment  and  how to relate  their  concern about  environmental  issues  to
 policy  makers.

 Washington Township Board of Education ($4,000)
 Belen E.  DiPascale,  234 Sharon Road,  Robbinsville,  NJ 08691
 This grant will  fund "Family Learning for Environmental Education."  The
 project  will involve students  in grades four through six and their parents.
 It provides  them with  the opportunity to  learn about the environment and
 prepares  them  to make  informed decisions.   The family learning  sessions will
 be conducted in  evening and Saturday morning sessions.

 NEW MEXICO

 Carlsbad  Caverns-Otiadalupe  Mountains Association ($5,000)
Teresa M.  Jaskiewicx,  P.O.  Box 1417,  Carlsbad, NM  88221
 "Partnerships  with  Carlsbad Caverns  Teacher Workshops"  will  train  teachers to
prepare  students  for visits to the national  park and to  lead tours through the
park.

Gadsden  Independent  School  District  ($5,000)
Pamela Donaldson,  2500  W. Washington Ave.,  Anthony,  NM  88021
Materials  and  curricula will be  developed and equipment  purchased.  Teachers
will be trained  to use  high school students  to teach Sth graders  about  water
 juality  issues in the Gadsden  area.

Santa Fe  Community College  ($5,000)
Mary Ann Walx,  P.O.  Box  4187,  Santa  Fe, NM  87502
The "Teacher and Counselor  Environmental  Workshop"  will  focus on  how to
 incorporate 50 minute environmental  lessons  into existing curricula.  Workshop
content also includes environmental  career  counseling and promoting awareness
of environmental concerns  in the Santa Fe,  New Mexico area.
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Youth Development, Inc. ($18,000)
Augustine C. Baca, 6301 Central NW, Albuquerque, MM 87105
Children will develop multi-cultural, bilingual educational tools, including a
coloring book, to raise awareness of groundwater contamination and other
environmental issues.

NEW YORK

American Lung Association of Nassau-Suffolk ($13,200)
Mad*Ion Goldberg Oivant, Program Department, 214 Marcus Blvd., Hauppauge, MY
11788
The project will provide educator workshops for school personnel working with
students in occupational education classes in public and private educational
institutions in Nassau and Suffolk Counties.  The Future Workers' Education
Project provides young people and adults entering the work place with the
knowledge, skill and understanding enabling them to prevent and minimize
exposure to lung hazards.

The Bronx High School of Science Foundation, Inc. ($20,500)
75 West 205th Street, Bronx, NY 10468
The summer Ecology Training Institute will use the Inwood Hill Park apartina
marsh and Van Cortlandt Park freshwater wetlands as urban habitat themes.  New
York City teachers will receive training on how to design and disseminate NYC-
based aquatic ecology lessons and use the parks as outdoor laboratories.  This
project will establish an Ecology Resource Center for middle school teachers
at the Bronx High School of Science.

Brooklyn Botanic Garden ($5,000)
Ann T. Schwartz, 1000 Washington Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 1122
Funding will support the pilot phase of a community environmental education
program, "Brooklyn GreenBridge."  Using gardens as an educational vehicle to
create stronger communities also enhances the quality of the local
environment.  Brooklyn GreenBridge targets school groups in underserved urban
neighborhoods bringing them together with Garden and community educators to
create teaching gardens in vacant lots.

City of New York Department of Parks and Recreation ($5,000)
Alexander R. Brash, Urban Park Rangers, 1234 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10029
A teacher's guide for the Urban Forest Ecology Center and surrounding Van
Cortlandt Park will be developed enabling educators to use the park to teach
urban forestry and restoration, ecology.  The guide will support teacher
efforts to continue their involvement with restoration of urban natural areas.
This model program seeks to draw a more diverse population to conservation-
related careers.

Cornell Cooperative Extension ($5,000)
Ann Harriott, Environmental Issue Team, East Kirkbride Road, PO Box 1000,
Thiells, NY 10984
This project will educate the community about the environment and encourage
citizens, through hands-on learning, to take responsibility for processing
most of their yard and food waste through home composting.  The project
promises to be a model for Rockland County \nd seeks to demonstrate the
economic and horticultural benefits of home composting in a community venture.
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 Cornell University,  Institute on  Science  and  Environment  for  Teachers  ($4,873)
 Arlene Hansen, Office of  Sponsored  Programs,  120  Day Hall,  Cornell  University,
 Ithaca, NY  14853
 This  funding will  extend  the resources of ISET by focusing  on experimental
 aquatic research projects and offering regional training  workshops,  equipment
 loans and ongoing  support on a  computer network.   The project supports  the
 teaching of aquatic  environmental science via open-ended, student-generated,
 original empirical research and will train inservice and  preservice teachers.

 Friends of  the Anderson Program,  Inc. ($4,974)
 Helen Krasnow, The Anderson Program at P.S. 9, 100 West 84th  Street, New York,
 NY  10024
 The Anderson Program serves inner city, culturally diverse, gifted  students.
 The funded  project focuses on wetlands and wetland preservation  in  and  around
 the Metropolitan New York area. Students  do field work including research,
 observation and comparison at various estuarine sites.  A major  aspect  of this
 project involves fourth graders working with  Kindergarten students
 cooperatively and  as mentors.

 Hudson River Sloop Clearwater,  Inc. ($5,000)
 Kate  Mitchell, 112 Market Street, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
 The overall purpose  of Clearwater's Teacher Training Workshops project  is to
 promote a sense of stewardship  of the Hudson  River and other  waterways. Using
 A Hudson River Primer, created  for  workshop use,  in partnership  with Scenic
 Hudson, the project  will  reach  educators  in the Hudson Valley improving their
 understanding of and access to  riverfront ecology.

 Niagara Palls City School District  ($5,000)
 Cynthia A. Bianco, 607 Walnut Avenue, Niagara Palls, NY 14301
 "Paddle to the Sea:  A Great Lakes Journey"  is designed to stimulate
 interdisciplinary  environmental education regarding pollution in the Great
 Lakes using technology and the  Internet system.   Specific objectives include
 development of interdisciplinary  units for grades 6-8, developing projects for
 each  grade  involving assessment,  training educators in telecommunications and
 improving student  problem solving strategies  and  thinking skills.

 NYC Board of Education, Community School  District 19 ($4,892)
 Anthony DeLucia, 557 Pennsylvania Avenue,  Brooklyn, NY 11207
 "Project ECOLE Plus" expands an environmental education apprenticeship  for
 teams of regular and special education classroom  teachers.  This aspect of the
 program will develop skills and knowledge teachers need to  apply process
 skills developed from ECOLE field experiences.  Workshops will combine
 classroom instruction with field  experiences .for  teachers in  the East New York
 section of Brooklyn.

NYC Board of Education, Community School  District 75 ($5,000)
Dr.  Susan Erber, P.S. 233, Blue Mini Building, 204 Street and 109 Avenue,
Hollis,  NY 11412
 "Environmental Recycling  for Multiple Handicapped Students" is an educational
 program promoting  reutilization of waste  materials from school meals at this
 school serving 260 severely handicapped students  ages 5 to  21 years.
Objectives include development of students' environmental and recycling
 awareness and skills including packaging  materials that are taken to recyclers
 and composting organic waste in the school  garden.

Okeanos Ocean Research Foundation,  Inc. ($4,800)
 Samuel S. Sadove,  278 East Montauk Highway, Hampton Bays, NY  11946
This project will  provide  multi-media, multi-subject programming using  current
teaching techniques.  Concentrating on marine mammal and  turtle  populations
 and their ecology  in the  New York region,  materials and activities  will be
combined with visuals to  educate  students  in  grades 4-12.   The project  will
 investigate how human activities  have impacted the marine ecosystem.


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Orleans-Niagara Board of Cooperative Educational Services ($5,000)
Jean K. O'Connell, 4232 Shelby Basin Road, Medina, NY 14103
Four school districts, Lewiston Porter Central, Niagara Falls City, Niagara
Wheatfield Central and Wilson Central, will participate in "The Many Fa(u)cets
of Water."  This program will educate students about the area's water
resources including nearby Lake Ontario and the Niagara River.  In-service
workshops and field trips will enable teams of teachers to develop a course of
study for use in area classrooms.

Public Policy and Education Fund of NY ($5,000)
John Stouffer, 94 Central Avenue, Albany, NY 12206
This project will result in development and publishing of a waste prevention.
and recycling curriculum for public housing projects.  Employing participatory
educational techniques, the project will identify attitudes towards solid
waste issues, test existing materials for suitability and develop workshops to
enable peer educators to work with residents of public housing units.

Rome Teacher Resource Center ($4,950)
Louis V. Campola, Marine Midland Bank Building, 199 Liberty Plaza, Rome, NY
13440
"Open Space, Defining-Assessing-Deciding" stresses the profound impact current
decisions on open space have on the future.  The project involves designing a
course to teach open.space use principles, presenting the course to key
representatives of the community and disseminating programs and activities to
interested groups.  Community representatives will include those from
education, business, industry,  local government and special interest groups.

Wave Hill, Inc. ($5,000)
Marilyn Oser, 675 West 252 Street, Bronx, NY 10471
Wave Hill will develop a kit for use by visiting elementary school teachers.
Wave Hill educators will work with teachers from NYC School District 11, the
Bronx,  to develop kits containing materials and instructions. By enabling
teachers to bring their own classes through this outdoor learning facility,
and not requiring a Wave Hill leader, this outdoor facility becomes more
accessible to more students who can benefit from the outdoor educational
experiences.

Earth Day New York ($5,000)
Pamela Lippe, 10 East 39th St., Suite 601, New York, NY 10016
"The Earth Day Education Program" proposes to build a distribution network to
disseminate already-existing curricula and teaching guides and make them
available directly to schools at every grade level, in every school, in every
state,  impacting students across all social and ethnic lines.  The program
will establish partnerships between schools through a network of Earth Day
coordinators, non-profit organizations and the private sector.  By motivating,
informing and instilling an environmental ethic in children, the general
public will reap the rewards of their enlightened environmental consciousness
in the years ahead.

NORTH CAROLINA

Wake County Public School System ($5,000)
Geraldine Ritter, 3600 Wake Forest Road, Raleigh, NC 27611
will provide training and educational materials for K-5th grade teachers of
the Underwood Elementary School to fully utilize the school's planned on-site
pond habitat and butterfly garden.
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 NORTH DAKOTA

 The International Coalition for Land/Water Stewardship in the Red River Valla;
 ($4,120)
 Karla Parkinson,  P.O.  Box 127,  Moorehead,  MM 56561-0127
 The "Smart  Shopper's"  program is currently disseminating environmental
 education materials through grocery stores,  and  this  project  will expand this
 program to  include new waste reducing tips and also add "WaterWiae"  tips
 promoting more  efficient  use of water.   The goal is to education,  to inform,
 and to help the grass  roots population address these  important issues.   (Note:
 The mailing address for this project is in Minnesota,  although the project  is
 taking place in North  Dakota with funding  from EPA Region VIII).
 Rural  Action  ($5,000)
 Heather Cantino,  36  S.  Congress  St.,  Athens, OB 45701
 To  carry out  an educators'  training project  in integrated  pest  management
 entitled "Pest or Guest?"   Funds will enable at least  75 K-12 teachers  to
 participate in workshops that  prepare them to teach  integrated  pest management
 curricula to  students  in five  local school districts.  Workshops  will teach
 teachers to engage students in interdisciplinary,  community-based problem-
 solving related to pollution prevention.

 Environmental Health Watch  ($5,000)
 Stuart Oreenberg,  4115  Bridge  Ave., Cleveland, OH  44113
 To  raise the general public's  awareness of indoor  air  issues and  help citizens
 make informed and responsible  decisions that affect  their  home  environment.
 Funds  will be used to develop  a  decision-makers guide  for  families and  to
 support presentations on household pollutants to a wide variety of civic
 organizations.  The  decision guide will walk homeowners through the risk
 assessment and management process in  order to enable them  to determine  whether
 there  is a need for  action  in  their homes and if so, which course of action to
 take to minimize  risk from  indoor air pollutants.

 Clintonville Academy ($4,600)
 Christine Sellers, 3916 Xndianola Ave., Columbus,  OH 43214
 To  afford elementary students  the opportunity to participate in a
 comprehensive educational experience  through stream  and watershed assessment
 of  the  Adena Brook.  The project will initially serve  40 fifth  and eighth
 grade  students and will include  delineation of drainage boundaries, biological
 assessment, chemical sampling, and an environmental  exchange program with
 another school.    .               .

 OKLAHOMA

 Gushing Public Schools  ($4986)
 Denise  Parish, 123 K. Broadway,  Gushing, OK 74023
 "Studying About Vitalizing  Ecology" will provide children  with  awareness and
 appreciation of nature and  wildlife and teach the  consequences  of human
 activity in relation to wildlife resources.

 East Central University ($16,545)
 Nancy Heitland, Center of Continuing  Education, Ada, OK 7482O
 Conduct  a two-week graduate  level seminar for ten  teachers to
 develop a water conservation and/or water quality  program  for their
 classrooms.

 University of Oklahoma ($4963)
 Cheryl M. Patton,   1000 Asp Ave.,   Room 314, Norman, OK  73019
Graduate level students will develop  a data and resource book concerning
 integrated solid waste management in  small communities in  Oklahoma.


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OREGON

Central Oregon Environmental Center ($5,000)
Peter Geiser, 16 HW Kansas St., Bend, OR 97701
The "Central Oregon Household Ecoteam Program" will consist of households
forming community-based "EcoTeams" to work on specific environmental projects.
The purpose of this project is to educate the public about environmentally
sustainable lifestyles, to help team members achieve measurable reductions and
efficiencies, to promote partnerships with community and public organizations,
and to empower the community to make informed and responsible environmental
decisions.

Chintimini Wildlife Rehabilitation ($5,000)
Kathleen Kanury, P.O. Box 1433, Corvallis, OR 97339
This project will use wildlife rehabilitation resources to bring environmental
education to the public.  Students from the Corvallia School District will
apply problem-solving techniques to local environmental problems contained in
wildlife rehabilitation records.  The students will produce and publicly
display information about living with wildlife in a shared environment.

City of Billsboro ($15,651)
Patrick Willis, 123 W. Main Street, Hillsboro, OR 97123
The City of Hillsboro will design and implement a wetland education program
for broadcast via the Oregon Ed-Net satellite video-telecommunications system.
The program will consist of a 10 week educator training with classroom student
discussions, demonstrations, and "hands-on" laboratory experiences.

Columbia Education Center ($21,941)
Dr. Ralph Nelsen, 11325, SE Lexington, Portland, OR 97266-5927
The project, "Learning About Biodiversity," will involve students in
environmental issues, investigations, evaluation, and resolution.  A two-week
summer training will be held for 20 teachers from public and private school*
in Oregon and Idaho.  These teachers will set their schools up as
demonstration sites.

Jacksonville Woodlands ($5,000)
Larry Smith, P.O. Box 252, Jacksonville, OR 97530
To prepare students and teachers before their visit to the Jacksonville
Woodlands, this project will produce a woodlands educational video tape and
supporting teachers' materials (including "hands-on" activities).

Monument High School ($5,000)
Ron Gaither, North Street, Monument, OR 97864
In coordination with state and local organizations, the Student Watershed
Enhancement Team from Monument High School will assist in the collection and
processing of John Day watershed data.  The team will establish a water
quality monitoring network.  This grant will allow the team to acquire the
computing power to analyze the data and communicate results in a professional.

PENNSYLVANIA

Heritage Conservancy ($10,000)
Carol Quay, 85 Old Dublin Pike, Doylestown, PA 18901  .
The Heritage Conservancy's two year educational program will lead to informed
landowner decisions regarding native plants; heighten awareness in the
community at large; encourage permanent native plant protection strategies and
create a better understanding of the value of native plants among school
children.
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 Keystone  Tall  Tree Oirl  Scout Council  ($5,000)
 Carol  Sheets,  Rd.  #7  Box 368,  Kittanning,  PA 16201
 The  Keystone Tall  Tree Girl  Scout  Council  will  feature  water  monitoring
 workshops to include  hands-on awareness  activities  for  scouts,  and teaching
 methods for adults leaders.   The Council will work  with the Pennsylvania
 Bureau of State  Parks and a  non-profit organization,  Alliance for  Acid  Rain
 Monitoring.  The natural resource  objective  of  this project is  water
 conservation.

 Laurel Mountain  Environmental  Education  and  Research  Institute  ($5,000)
 Lawrence  Bonino, 244  Pine Court, Pittsburgh, PA 15237
 The  Laurel Mountain Institute  will develop £nvir.onmental  Issues Guidebooks.
 These  Issues Guidebooks  will be used to  conduct Teacher Training Workshops  in
 Western Pennsylvania  and at  the Pennsylvania Alliance for Environmental
 Education Annual Conference.

 North  Museum of  Natural  History t  Science  ($5,000)
 Robert Gingerich,  P.O. Box 3003, Lancaster,  PA  17604
 The  North Museum of Natural  History and  Science will design an  interactive
 exhibit on complex aspects of  environmental  issues.  This bilingual exhibit
 will compliment  the Museum's activities  to reach out  to the  Latino community
 in Lancaster City,  PA.

 Penns  Valley School District ($4,369)
 Or.  Stephen Boston, R.D.  2 Box 116, Spring Mills, PA  16875
 The  Penns  Valley Area School District will hold Educator Workshops that  will
 train  teachers from kindergarten through high school.   With this training,
 educators  will be  able to utilize  the newly  designed curriculum material and
 their  Environmental Center.

 School District of Philadelphia ($2,500)
 Ethel  Goldberg,  21st  St.  & the Pkwy, Philadelphia,  PA 19103
 The  School District of Philadelphia's Pels High School  is a hands-on project
 for  Black, White,  Asian,  Indian, Hispanic  inner city school students.  With
 the  help of local  experts, Pels students will begin to  understand  more about
 habitats and habitat  preservation  as they  create a  butterfly  habitat in  their
 school yard.

 South  Western School  District  ($5,000)
 Philip Hempfing, 225  Bowman  Rd., Hanover,  PA 19173
 The South  Western  School  District  will hold  a teacher workshop  that will
 result in  greater  environmental awareness  for both  students and teachers in
 York County and surrounding  counties.

Wyoming County Conservation  District ($5,000)
Denise Coleman, RR/3  Box  178-B, Tunkhannock, PA 18657
The Wyoming County Conservation District will conduct a series of  water
 quality workshops  designed to  train teachers from all grade levels.  The
 District hopes to  reach teachers from five school districts.

PUERTO RICO

Mayaguezanos pox la Salud  y el Ambiente,  Inc. ($5,000)
Henry L.  Beauchamp, Claudio Carrero #293,  El Mani, Mayaguez, PR 00680
This program will  specifically target western Puerto Rico and meet a need to
orient environmental education to take into account the cultural and social
reality of this community.  Teacher resources and materials will be developed
and used in workshops to enable educators  to develop classroom presentations
on recycling,  a critical  issue in western  Puerto Rico.
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RHODE ISLAND

Childhood Lead Action Project ($5,000)
Eleanor Freda, 421 Elmwood Ave., Providence, RX 02907
"The Childhood Lead Action Project" will train a myriad of outreach workers
providing services to families of young children by making lead poisoning
prevention a basic component of their work.  Through workshops, partnerships
will be established among diverse agencies like Visiting Nurses Associations,
Early Start Programs, and Parents as Teachers.  In this way, knowledge of lead
poisoning and of the ways to prevent it will lead to a lead-safe environment
throughout Rhode Island.

Save The Bay ($5,000)
Fred Massie, 434 Smith Street, Providence, RI 02908
The "Narragansett BayWork" project is designed to increase environmental
awareness and pollution prevention via a specially-designed poster and
brochure program.  The program will target adults in the workplace, including
fifteen (15) businesses, blue and white-collar, located throughout
southeastern New England.  Through the posters' and brochures'
graphic/narrative format, the program will increase the environmental literacy
of employees from low-income minority communities, as well as create
partnerships between area businesses and Save The Bay.

Southern Rhode Island Conservation District ($5,000)
Carl Sawyer, 5 Mechanic St., P.O. Box 1145, Hope Valley, RI 02832
The "Pawcatuck Watershed Education Program Curriculum Guide" will serve as the
basis for teacher training workshops which will be provided to seven
elementary and middle schools in the Pawcatuck Watershed area.  A part-time
person will promote, organize and conduct the workshops, the goal of which is
to have the teacher incorporate environmental awareness and heightened
appreciation for the watershed in their school year curricula.  The project
will also foster partnerships among the District and the educational
institutions as well as, government and non-profit organizations.  The
"Curriculum Guide's" effectiveness will be evaluated via pre and post tests to
be administered by the teachers.

SOUTH CAROLINA

South Carolina Wildlife Federation '($3,000)
Patricia L. Jerman, PO Box 61159, Columbia, SC 29260
Schoolyard Habitat Teacher Workshops will enhance the ability of SO elementary
and middle school teachers to develop outdoor nature study areas and school
yard habitats at their schools.

SOUTH DAKOTA

Sinte Gleska University (SGU) ($5,000)
Georgia Hackett, P.O. Box 490, Rosebud, SO 57570
SGU proposes to sponsor two  (2) environmental workshops designed for the
Rosebud Sioux Reservation, targeting (1) the general public, (2) tribal and
agency officials, and (3) local education districts' teachers responsible for
tribal educational matters.  The objective is for participants to learn terms
and facts regarding solid wastes, water and air quality, and radon detection,
and design a work plan for recycling and reuse on the reservation.
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 TENNESSEE

 Tennessee Conservation League ($25,000)
 L.  Kay  Linder,  300  Orlando  Avenue,  Nashville,  TN 37209
 Will  develop a  multi-media  education  component for middle  and  high  school
 classrooms,  which includes  a  video  program,  teaching guide,  and  other written
 materials to encourage critical  thinking,  problem solving, and decision-making
 about biodiversity  issues.

 Tennessee Technological University  ($4,999)
 Dr. Edwin Lamberth,  Box 5034,  Cookeville,  TN 38505
 The Environmental Agriscience Workshop  is  an 8-day in-service  workshop in
 environmental agriscience for 20 high school agriculture teachers.  Workshop
 sessions  will focus  on teaching  techniques and development of
 instructional/resource units  on  conservation.

 Williamson County Schools ($25,000)
 Judy  Butler,  1320 West Main Street, Franklin,  TN 37064
 The Harpeth  River Environmental  and Educational Project will use the river as
 an outdoor classroom providing "hands-on"  experience in the theory  and
 practice  of  historical, chemical, biological,  and sociological research.  The
 project will  include a student field  trip, two for-credit  one-week  summer
 workshops  for middle and high school  teachers,  and partnerships  to  train
 teachers  to  replicate  the project across Tennessee.

 TEXAS

 Austin Nature Center ($2,300)
 Louise Morell,  301 Nature Center Dr., Austin,  TZ 78746
 Print 4,000 copies of  "Your Back Yard Ecoguide"   to hand out at  the Nature
 Center's exhibit, "for Birds,  Bats  and Butterflies and More."  The guide will
 explain how to  reproduce native  plant and  animal habitats  seen at the exhibit.

 Bryan Independent School District ($4,275)
 Laura North,  101 North Texas  Ave.,  Bryan,  TZ 77803
 Teach students  at Sul  Ross  Elementary School earth stewardship and
 environmental sciences through gardening.  Purchase gardening  tools, equipment
 and materials for 2  martin  houses and a pond.

 Clean Pearland, Inc. ($2,900)
 Delores Penwick, P.O.  Box 3041,  Pearland,  TZ 77588
 A teacher  training workshop utilizing "Waste:   A Hidden Resource"   curriculum
 This project  will fill  an existing  gap between  the environmental education
 program in the  elementary schools and Clean  Pearland'a education and
 information for adults  in the  community.

 Fort Worth Clean City,  Inc.  ($3,744)
 Carolyn Bellah, 4100 Columbus  Trail,  Fort  Worth,  TZ 76133
 Project "Earth  Kids" involves  youth in the Summer Day Camp at  Fort  Worth's
 Handley-Meadowbrook  Center.   Activities will include recycling,  litter
 reduction  and beautification projects.

Galveston Bay Foundation ($5,000)
Linda R. Shead, 17324-A Highway  3, Webster,  TZ  77598
Train volunteers (Galveston Bay  Ambassadors) to  give educational programs
 about Gavelston Bay  issues  to  grades  K-12  students.  Also to develop
 scientific study sheets.
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Houston Clean City Cosnission, Inc.  ($4,816)
Robin Blut, 2700 Post Oak Blvd., #1728, Houston, TZ 77056
Present workshops for secondary school teachers in the Houston area,  will
include hands-on training in use of  "Waste: A Hidden Resource" curriculum.

Lower Clear Pork of the Brazos Soil  and Hater Conservation District  ($4,949)
Tommy X.. Bailey, Rt. 1, Box 146 B, Albany, TZ 76430
Will develop "Bobwhite Brigade" program utilizing trained volunteers to
deliver programs centered around quail conservation practices to youth and
adults in their communities.

Pedernales Palls State Park ($5,OOC)
Rod Rylander, Rt. 1, Box 450, Johnson City, TZ 78636
Provide environmental education training for bi-lingual teachers from Mexico
in methods for teaching youth about  the regional flora and fauna and to create
an understanding about the ecological relationships of Texas and southern
Mexico.

Sam Houston State University ($5,000)
Dr. Joel Bass, P.O. 2119, Huntsville, TZ 77341
Conduct workshop with Gulf Coast Utilities for elementary and junior high
teachers in the East Texas/Gulf Coast region.  Important issues include water
quality, pollution prevention, and recycling.

Texas A&M Research Foundation ($5,000)
Lori Wilkinson, Box 3578, College Station, TZ 77843
Develop geography curriculum for teaching environmental education and design
model teacher workshops for K--12 Texas social studies and science teachers.

Texas Department of Transportation ($5,000)
Karen LaPevre, 125 E. llth Street, Austin, TZ 78701-2483
Produce curriculum and outreach materials and create a volunteer
program to educate Texans about the  value and importance of
appropriate vegetation management on approximately 800,000 acres of highway
right-of-way.

Texas Marine Education Association ($3,000)
Pamela Stryker, 3112 Ammunition Dr., Austin, TZ 78748
Conduct two teacher aquatic environmental workshops to include  labs, hands-on
activities, and field trips.  Topics will include organism and habitat
protection and effects of pollution  on entire ecosystem.

University of Texas at El Paso ($18,000)
Randy Neeb, 500 W. University Dr. El Paso, TZ 79968
Adapt water quality and other environmental curriculum for teachers  in the
U.S.  and Mexico.  Also, design and coordinate binational water quality
monitoring program, and conduct teacher training.

UTAH

Greater Ogden Community Nature Center ($5,000)
Mary Cox, 966 W. 12th street, Ogden, UT 84404
By publishing a Nature Education Program Guide, this program hopes to (1)
significantly enhance the quality of the experience for groups who attend
naturalist-led programs, (2) make nature education programs available to new
groups not previously able to utilize the program, and (3) facilitate
effective planning and use by making the Program Guide available to teachers
for their ongoing research needs.
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 Utah  Society  for Environmental  Education  ($17,500)
 Vern  Fridley,  230 South 500  East  Suite  280,  Salt  Lake  City,  UT 84102
 The proposed  Environmental Education  Teacher Network  (EETN)  will  develop
 capacity  to improve  teaching skills by  providing  resource materials,
 consultation  with experts, and  workshops,  as well as integrate environmental
 education into the school curriculum  statewide.   The EETN will serve as a
 model of  how  to  develop communication between formal and non-formal educators
 and state and federal  agency specialists.

 Wasatch Pish  and Gardens Project  (S11,030)
 Cara  Gaboon,  P.O.  Box  2924,  Salt  Lake City,  UT 84110-2924
 The aim of the "Urban  Garden Ecology  Project"  is  to provide  city  residents
 with  hands-on training in biointenaive  gardening  and landscaping  techniques
 and to encourage resource conservation  and source reduction  of chemical
 pesticides and herbicides at the  household and neighborhood  level.  It will
 demonstrate gardening  techniques  that reduce water and resource waste and
 consumption and  decrease the use  of hazardous  materials.

 VERMONT

 Montshire Museum of  Science  ($13,589)
 David Goudy,  P.O.  Box  770, Norwich, VT  05055
 In conjunction with  the Antioch New England  Graduate School  in Keene, NH, the
 Montshire Museum of  Science  expects to  establish  a model program  to
 disseminate information on solid  waste  source  reduction to eight  communities
 in rural  Vermont  and New Hampshire.   The training program will use curricular
 and logistical materials to  train middle school students via training sessions
 and workshops  at  the museum.  Ultimately, the  intent is for  these students to
 initiate  and  formalize the information  transfer by creating  partnerships with
 their own local  communities,  business,  public  works operations and personnel
 and other citizens.

 River Watch Network  ($4,896)
 Sharon Behar,  153  State St.,  Montpelier, VT  05602
 River Watch Network  will host its "Clean Water Institute," a week-long
 conference at  the  University of Massachusetts, Amherst, for  a  team of twenty
 teachers  and community members  from throughout the Commonwealth of
 Massachusetts.  The  training program  will teach pollution prevention and
 encourage the  use  of hands-on science in the classroom setting.   The Institute
 will build partnerships with existing environmental groups and  schools, design
 river monitoring projects, and  create teams  of teachers and  community
 representatives which  will in turn affect over 900 people.

 VIRGINIA

 Center for Watershed Protection,  Inc. ($5,000)
 Or. Harvey Olem,   1020  Elden  St. Suite 205, Berndon, VA 22070
 The Center for Watershed Protection,  Inc. will develop a Watershed Puzzle and
 a companion Teacher's  Guide  to  be used  for teacher training.   The
 environmental  goal of  this project is non-point source pollution  prevention.

 Charlotte County School Board ($4,998)
George Jones,  Randolph Henry  HS Agriculture  Dept., P.O. Box  790,  Charlotte, VA
 23923
The Charlotte County School  Board's Randolph-Henry High School  Agriculture
Department will teach  vocational  students and  area farmers about  the
environmental  impacts  of traditional  irrigation systems compared  to new
 irrigation systems.  The natural  resource objective of this  project is water
 conservation.
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Chesapeake Volunteers  In Youth Services, Inc.  ($5,000)
Donald Marx/ Jr., 301  Alberaarle Dr., Chesapeake, VA 23220
The Chesapeake Volunteers In Youth Services, Inc. project will result in a
visible outcome to the public,  Using native plants, "at risk" youth, will
develop and maintain a habitat project that will provide a sanctuary for
wildlife.  This sanctuary is planned as an "outdoor classroom" for local
residents and visitors.

Friends of the North Pork of the Shenandoah ($5,000)
Patricia Maier, 122 South Commerce St., Woodstock, VA 22664
The Friends of the North Fork of the Shenandoah River will train fourth grade
students, in all four  Shenandoah County Elementary Schools, about water
quality and water monitoring.  This program will reach 16 fourth grade classes
and approximately 400  student!!.

Keep Fauqier Clean ($4,999)
Patricia Katzen, 78 West Lee St., Suite 100, Warrenton, VA 22186
The non-profit organization, Keep Fauquier Clean, will create the project they
have titled: "A Garden with a Message."  The environmental garden will include
a constructed wetlands demonstration site. The anticipated environmental
benefits include better use of water, less expensive waste water treatment,
and a reduction of non-point source pollution  in the Chesapeake Bay.

Virginia Commonwealth  University ($4,997)
Elske Smith, Box 568 MCV Station, Richmond, VA 23298
The Virginia Commonwealth University will hold a workshop on renewable energy
for Richmond-Petersburg area teachers, fifth through twelfth grades.

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University ($4,991)
James Parkhurst, 301 Burruss Hall, Blacksburg, VA 24061-0249
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University's Department of Fisheries
and Wildlife will train County-based Cooperative Extension Educators.  At a
workshop these educators will learn about wetlands and wetland-related issues.

VIRGIN ISLANDS

University of the Virgin Islands ($4,994)
Marcia O. Taylor, Eastern Caribbean Center, Virgin Islands Marine Advisory
Service (VIMAS), Charlotte Anuili*, St. Thomas, U.S.Virgin Islands 00802
VIMAS will develop marine field service curriculum materials for the Virgin
Islands Department of  Education.  These materials, which will suitable for use
in any tropical environment, will serve as a pilot program in St..Croix
Central High School's  field studies center and for teacher workshops.  The
project will expand the school's marine science curriculum and educate
students about local marine resources.

WASHINGTON

Bainbridge Island School District ($21,942)
Brent Peterson, 8489 Madison Ave. NE, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110
The purpose of this project is to develop and  integrate a school district-wide
education program with the Bainbridge Is]and watershed management planning
process and to develop action plans that protect the quality of Bainbridge
Island's watersheds. Teachers will be trained  in.watershed characterization
techniques and the process of student action project implementation.

Department of Ecology  ($5,000)
Sandi Newton, P.O. Box 47600, Olympia, WA 98504-7600
Funding will be used to develop a workshop, instructional videos, and
classroom materials for high school driver education, automotive shop,
science,  and social studies teachers to educate and train students on the
proper use and maintenance of motor vehicles to ensure air quality.


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 Environmental  Education Association of  Washington ($5,000)
 RUBS  Banbey, P.O.  Box  4122,  Bellingham,  WA 98227
 "Projact  Diversity"  addresses  a statewide  need  to bring under represented
 populations  into the mainstream of  environmental  education  and to  bring the
 environmental  education community closer to minority  and under represented
 communities.   Localized workshop series, held throughout the  state,  will
 include recommended  approaches in structured problem  solving,  interactive
 "hands-on* exercises,  and  community action strategies.

 North Cascades Institute ($5,000)
 Saul  Weisberg,  2105  Highway  20,  Sedro Woolley,  WA 98284
 This  project,  "Watershed Restoration Education,"  will make  practical
 connections  between  clrssroom  instruction  and field applications in  watershed
 restoration.   Teacher  training will be  provided for middle  school  classroom
 teachers  on  "how to" involve children in environmental  restoration and  how to
 lead  restoration projects  for  sixth grade  classes.  This is a cooperative
 partnership  with children, school districts, natural resource agencies,  the
 three Skagit River Indian  Tribes, and the  business community.

 Northwest Chicano  Network  ($5,000)
 Amelia Ramon,  120  Sunny*id*  Ave., Oranger,  WA 98932
 The project will work  with government agencies, nonprofit organizations,  and
 schools to implement an environmental education program, with a focus on
 pollution prevention and environmental  equity (waste  reduction, household
 hazardous waste, and pesticides).   The  goal is  to motivate  the general  public
 to make informed and responsible decisions that impact  the  environment.
 Spanish/English printed materials will  be  developed.  Existing brochures and
 focus  sheets will  be translated  into Spanish.   Radio public service
 announcements, call-in programs, and surveys will be used to  provide
 environmental  information.

 Olympic Peninsula  Foundation ($4,985)
 Betsy  Carlson, 1200  W.  Sims  Way Suite 201,  Port Townsend, WA  98368
 In partnership with  Olympic  Peninsula Foundation  and Port Townsend School
 District,  this project  will  create  a cross-age  tutoring  program on wetlands
 for seventh and eighth grade students and  third and fourth  grade students.  A
 two-week  eighth grade  wetland  tutoring curriculum will be created  to instruct
 younger students.  To  improve  their  understanding of and protection  for  local
 wetlands,  third and  fifth  grade students will participate in  classroom  and
 outdoor workshops  on wetlands.

 Pacific Science Center  ($5,000)
 Suzanne Tripp, 200 Second Ave. North, Seattle,  WA 98109
This project will  support  the  development  of the  Mercer  Slough  School Program
 for elementary school  groups.   "Hands-on"  learning experiences  will  be  offered
 for classes on field trips to  the slough.   The  classes will study  the
ecosystems of the  freshwater peat bog and  its surrounding scrub-shrub and
 forest wetland communities.

Pacific Lutheran University  ($7,800)
Rachel Nugent, 12180 121st St., Tacoma, WA  98447
Pacific Lutheran University will conduct a  four-week summer course for  K-12
teachers,  providing  "hands-on", inter-disciplinary approaches to watershed
evaluation and planning-with the focus on the Clover Creek Watershed.   The
course facilitates partnerships between the university,  a non-profit citizen
organization, and the county by involving them  in a cooperative process  of
gathering, interpreting, and disseminating  data and analysis.
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 Seattle Audubon  Society  ($5,000)
 lUthy Malley, 8028 35th  Ave. HE, Seattle, WA 98115
 "Finding Urban Nature Program" uses volunteers to lead third and fourth
 graders in Seattle Public Schools through a series of eight separate "hands-
 on" nature oriented science explorations over the course of a school year.
 The goal* of these explorations are to teach children about nature and science
 and the basics of scientific investigation and to show the children that the
 natural world is everywhere—even on the school grounds.

 Spokane Conservation District  ($9,663)
 Christine Armstrong, North 222 Havana, Spokane, WA 99202
 This existing project incorporates watershed education into the social
 studies, science, and language arts.  Around 1,000 high school and middle
 school students  will work on the Upper Palouse Habitat Restoration Project.
 Students have spent time in the field learning about riparian habitat and
 doing actual restoration work; now they will develop an understanding of the
 individual and cultural  choices which impact the water quality.  They will
 study the history of areas to provide the context in which these choices have
 been made.

 Thurston Conservation District ($4,992).
 Rochelle Rothaus, 6128 Capitol Blvd. South, Olympia, WA 98501
 A teacher training will  be provided for teachers in six schools on applying
 Project GREEN to the Budd/Deschutes Watershed.  The training will include
 instruction on monitoring, telecommunications and global change.  The training
 will use an action research/community problem solving approach to education.
 Students and teachers will be able to participate in field work with community
 members.

 University of Washington ($4,751)
 Nan Little, Dept. of Chemistry BG-10, Seattle, WA 98195
 Science Role Models program was developed to address issues of science based
 environmental education  and to increase the numbers of women and minorities
 entering careers in science.  This project targets Native American, women, and
 other minority students  to research and make environmental education
 presentations at local high schools.

 Washington State University Cooperative Extension ($14,623)
 Craig MacConnell, Courthouse Annex-1000 N. Forest St., Bellingham, WA 98225
 The "Lake Whatcom Watershed School and Community Partnership Project" is
 designed to promote interaction among watershed volunteers, science students,
 and the public.   Participants will work together on the study of Lake Whatcom,
 the municipal water supply and its outlet, Whatcom Creek.  They will collect
 and analyze data.  This  data will be used by .the residents of Whatcom County
 to make informed decisions when developing the watershed management plan.

WEST VIRGINIA

Monogalia County Health  Department ($4,995)
Dr. Sally Taylor, 453 Van Voorhis Rd., Morgantown, WV 26505
The Monongalia County Health Department will sponsor three workshops: one for
the public; a second for plumbers and contract specialists; and another for
 State Health Department  Environmental Specialists.  The environmental
 objective of this project is to protect drinking water from contaminants.

The Woodlands Mountain Institute ($5,000)
John Eckman, Main & Dogwood Streets, P.O. Box 907, Franklin, WV 26807
The Woodlands Mountain Institute will train 100 youth in West Virginia about
environmental assessment.  The environmental benefit of this project is that
 students will return to  their communities following the training to begin
 local environmental action or environmental assessment projects.
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 WISCONSIN

 River Alliance of Wisconsin  ($5,000)
 Sara Johnson, 122 State  St.,  Suit*  200, Madison, WI  53703
 To  hold  an  interactive workshop  at  Wisconsin's  1994  statewide  conference  on
 rivers and  watersheds that will  convene partners in  watershed  management  to
 discuss  societal aspects of  river use and protection.  Funds will be used to
 provide  stipends for workshop facilitators and  scholarships for Native
 Americans,  farmers  and other under-represented individuals.  The workshop  will
 use consensus building and conflict resolution  techniques to first  find common
 ground and  then to  develop long-term solutions  for preserving  Wisconsin's
 rivers.

 Friends  of  Riverside Nature  Center  ($4,300)
 Else Ankel, 3368 N-Bartlett  Ave., Milwaukee, WZ 53211
 To  carry out a program entitled  "Lead Poisoning Prevention—A  Pilot Project
 for Community Education  in Milwaukee."  The program  aims to increase knowledge
 about health risks  of ingested lead-containing  paint and to provide
 information about removing lead  paint from the  home.  Outcomes of the project
 include  educating more than  100  community residents  about lead poisoning  and
 prevention; conducting educator  workshops on lead to middle-school teachers in
 eight schools; training  fifteen,  community people to  safely remove lead paint
 from their  home; and, testing thirty homes for  the presence of lead paint.

Lac du Flambeau Public School ($3,969)
Karen Crisnan, 2899 Highway  47,  Lac du Flambeau, WI  54538
To  incorporate environmental  education in the new school's curriculum.  Funds
will be  used to integrate environmental concepts, outdoor education, and
Native American culture  across the  school's curriculum and to  develop teacher
workshops for K-8 teachers that  promote the environmental curriculum focus.
The school, which opened in  the  1993-94 school  year, is located on the Lake
Superior Chippewa Indian reservation.  More than 90  percent of the school's
student  population  is Native  American.

WYOMING

Uinta County School District  #1  ($5,000)
Craig Patterson, 701 W.  Cheyenne Dr., Evanston, WY 82931-6002
This project is designed to  use  computers and software as a new approach  to
teaching students about  environmental impacts and environmental sciences  and
to upgrade the school's  current  ecology and environmental science curriculum.
The results should provide a  new teaching tool which will reduce time required
to teach students to use statistical techniques when quantifying data.
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                U.S. EPA REPRESENTATIVES AND MAILING ADDRESSES

U.S. EPA HEADQUARTERS — For Granta Over S25.000
Mailing Address*
U.S. EPA, Env Ed Grants
Environmental Education
 Division (1707)
Office of Communications,
 Education, and Public Affairs
401 M Street, S.W.
Washington, O.C. 20460

U.S. EPA REGIONAL OFFICES — For Grants of S25.000 or Less
                                          Information:
                                          George Walker or Kathleen MacKinnon
                                          Environmental Education Specialists
                                          202-260-8619 or 202-260-4951
BPA Region I — CT. ME. MA. NH. RI. VT
Mailing Address:
U.S. EPA, Region I
Env Ed Grants
Grants Information and
 Management Section
JFK Federal Building (PGI)
Boston, MA 02203
                                          Information:
                                          Maria Pirie
                                          Environmental Education Coordinator
                                          617-565-9447
                     NY. PR. VI
EPA Region II — NJ.	
Mailing Address:
U.S. EPA, Region II
Env Ed Grants
Grants Administration Branch
26 Federal Plaza (Room 1714)
New York, NY 10278
                                          Information:
                                          Teresa Ippolito
                                          Environmental Education Coordinator
                                          212-264-2980
EPA Region III — DC.	
Mailing Address:
U.S. EPA, Region III
Env Ed Grants
Grants Management Chief  (3PM71)
Grants Management Section
841 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107
                      DE. MD. PA. VA. WV
                                          Information:
                                          Bonnie Smith or Amelia Libertz
                                          Environmental Education Coordinators
                                          215-597-9076 or 215-597-9817
EPA Region IV — AL.
Mailing Address:
U.S. EPA, Region IV
Env Ed Grants
Office of Public Affairs
345 Courtland Street, NE
Atlanta, GA 30365
                     FL. OA. KY. MS. NC.
                         (E2)
SC. TN
 Information:
 Rae Hallisey
 Environmental Education Office
 404-347-3004
EPA Region V — IL. IN. MI. MM. OH. WI
Mailing Address:
U.S. EPA, Region V
Env Ed Grants
Grants Management Section  (MC-10J)
77 West Jackson Boulevard
Chicago, IL 60604
                                          Information:
                                          Suzanne Saric
                                          Environmental Education Coordinator
                                          312-353-3209
                                      42

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 Region VI  — AH.  LA.  KM.  OK. TI
 Mailing Addresss
 U.S. EPA,  Region  VI
 Env Ed Grant*
 Environmental Education Coordinator  (6X)
 1445 ROM  Avenue
 Dallas, TX 75202

 Region VII — IA.  KS, MO. ME
 Mailing Address:
 U.S. EPA,  Region  VII
 Env Ed Grants
 Grants Administration Division
 726 Minnesota Avenue
 Kansas City, KS 66101

 Region VIII — CO. MT. NP, 3D. UT. WY
 Mailing Address:
 U.S. EPA,  Region  VIII
 Env Ed Grants
 999 18th Street (80EA)
 Denver, CO 80202-2466
                                           Information:
                                           Sandy Sevier
                                           Environmental Education Coordinator
                                           214-655-2204
                                          Information:
                                          Rowena Michaels
                                          Environmental Education Coordinator
                                          913-551-7003
                                          Information:
                                          Cace Forget
                                          Environmental Education Coordinator
                                          303-294-1113
                                             Quasi.
Region II — A2. CA. HI. MV. American Somoa.
Northern Marianas. Republic of Palau
Mailing Address:                          Information:
U.S. EPA, Region IX                       Ida Tolliver
Env Ed Grants                             Environmental Education. Coordinator
Office of Public Affairs (E2)             415-744-1581 or 1582
75 Hawthorne Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
Region I — AK. ID. OR, WA
Mailing Address:
U.S. EPA, Region X
Env Ed Grants
Public Information Center (SO-143)
1200 Sixth Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101
                                          Information:
                                          Sally Hanft
                                          Environmental Education Coordinator
                                          206-553-1207
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