URBAN WATERS

FEDERAL PARTNERSHIP

Restoring Urban Waters, Revitalizing Communities

Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)

Supporting the Urban Waters

Federal Partnership

May 12,2015


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Table of Contents

Introduction	3

Vision, Mission and Principles	4

!

Guiding Principles	5 -

Aligning Our Efforts: New NGO
and Association Partners	6

Partner Signatures	7

Alliance for Community Trees	9

American Forests	10

American Planning Association	11

American Rivers	12

American Society of Landscape Architects	13

Amigos de los Rios	14

Arbor Day Foundation	15

Chesapeake Conservancy	17

City Parks Alliance	18

The Conservation Fund	19

Earth Force	21

Groundwork USA	22

The Intertwine Alliance	23

Izaak Walton League of America	24

National Association of Clean Water Agencies.,26

National Recreation and Park Association	27

National Wildlife Federation	28

The Nature Conservancy	30

Restore America's Estuaries	31

River Network	33

SavATree	35

Sierra Club	36

Society of Municipal Arborists	38

Tree Care Industry Association	40

Trust for Public Land	41

U.S. Water Alliance	43

Wilderness Inquiry	45

Wildlife Conservation Society	46


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The Urban Waters Federal Partnership (UWFP) seeks to reconnect urban
communities, particularly those that are overburdened or economically
distressed, with their waterways by building collaboration among federal
agencies, state and local agencies and community-led efforts to promote
economic, environmental and social benefits. The Partnership includes 14
Federal agencies implementing the Vision, Mission and Principles described
on pages 4 and 5.

In support of the UWFP, 28 NGOs signed a support letter on December 3,
2014 (see pages 6-8) pledging to work with the Partnership to achieve the
Vision, Mission and Principles.

This report simply describes, in their words, how the 28 NGOs are working
in urban areas with activities that could link to UWFP actions now
occurring. By making this report public on urbanwaters.gov, the UWFP
intends for all of the NGOs, all 14 Agencies that make up the UWFP, and all
19 UWFP designated locations to understand generally what urban work
actions the NGOs are currently taking. These descriptions will therefore
increase the likelihood that collaboration among all organizations will
proceed with better information about what is being done now and possibly
what opportunities exist.

For each organization, the report summarizes their major activities within
the communities they serve. These major urban activities include, but are
not limited to, river cleanups, green infrastructure installation, connecting
citizens to parks and green spaces, establishing new networks with local
government officials, creating new bike trails and riverfront walkways, and
engaging residents to be urban waters stewards for their watershed.

In the near future, the 28 NGOs, the 14 UWFP agencies and the 19 UWFP
designated locations will be developing more defined plans regarding
collaboration. Such collaborative efforts will be built upon the activities
described in this report, and may, in fact, lead to further creative actions in
addition to those currently being implemented. As these new collaborations
unfold, the UWFP will ensure thatthey are fully described and made
available on www.urbanwaters.gov.

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URBAN WATERS FEDERAL PARTNERSHIP

VISION, MISSION & PRINCIPLES

OUR VISION

Through our partnership, we will revitalize urban waters and the
communities that surround them, transforming overlooked assets into
treasured centerpieces and drivers of urban revival.



THE NEED IS CLEAR

Many of our nation's urban rivers, streams, lakes, forests and wetlands are
polluted, degraded or inaccessible. The surrounding communities often are
not reaping the environmental, economic and social benefits that living near
a water body can provide.

Research demonstrates that a clean, safe, accessible, urban environment
- including urban forests, gardens, parks, lakes, aquifers, and rivers - is
directly linked to improved public health, stronger local economies, and
lower crime rates.

We believe a deeper connection to local water bodies can bring a new
cycle of community hope and energy that will lead to healthier urban
waters, improved public health, strengthened local businesses, and new
jobs, as well as expanded educational, recreational, housing, and social
opportunities.

OUR MISSION

The "Urban Waters Federal Partnership" will help urban and metropolitan
areas, particularly those that are under-served or economically distressed,
connect with their waterways and work to improve them. This federal
partnership will put communities first. We will work to break down govern-
ment program silos and to ensure that our collective efforts will reverse
past neglect, energize existing programs, and engage new partners. We
will listen to, engage and serve the communities where we work, ensuring
they are full partners in restoring and protecting the water that surrounds
them. We will establish strong partnerships with effective community-based
organizations and local government officials to make the most effective use
of economic incentives and other beneficial actions. With the right set of
federal, state, and local tools and the local commitment of political will, the
partnership will leverage existing neighborhood assets. These actions will
be geared to promote early and visible victories to fuel long-term action.
Success will advance the missions of our partnership, our agencies, and the
federal government as a whole.

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GUIDING PRINCIPLES



To guide our work, we will:

•	Promote clean urban waters. We must enhance the value and health of urban waters, recognizing
their rich history, spiritual value, natural beauty, and economic and recreational potential, as well as
their role in basic services, such as water supplies. We know clean water is a foundation for sustainable
communities and healthy ecosystems, and that the watershed is the fundamental planning unit for
water quality protection. That means the Partnership will work with urban communities to connect them
to upstream areas including rural parts of the watersheds, where the large majority of our country's
water originates. In addition to addressing the direct challenges presented by physically, chemically
and biologically degraded urban waters, we will engage these communities in the broader process of
enhancing the value and quality of water resources supplying urban areas using approaches to protect,
manage and restore the lands that surround those waters.

•	Reconnect people to their waterways. Many communities do not have access to their urban waterways.
This cuts them off from a valuable community asset. These assets can be used to spur commercial,
recreational (such as parks, green spaces and cultural centers) and educational opportunities. Indeed,
the reconnection of distressed communities to their waterways can act as a catalyst for greater economic
revitalization and growth as well as improvement in resident well-being.

•	Water conservation. We shall strive to meet urban water needs in a sustainable manner by increasing the
efficiency of water use. The Partnership therefore will strive to educate and work with urban communities
to conserve this precious resource. We will increase efforts to address infrastructure needs, especially

in underserved urban areas where modernization of aging and inefficient infrastructure can lead to
significant water savings. We believe conserving water and using it wisely will be fundamental to our
success.

•	Use urban water systems as a way to promote economic revitalization and prosperity. Healthy
and accessible urban waters enhance any area's economic competitiveness. In urban communities,
water-related environmental improvements will be integrated with other community priorities, such
as revitalizing local businesses, creating jobs, and improving access to job training. Community
revitalization through the promotion of clean urban waters must minimize displacement of existing
residents, expand opportunities for current and new residents, and fully tap into the potential of the
local and regional communities. To achieve these objectives when working locally, the Partnership will
particularly focus on revitalizing communities that are, or have been, disproportionately impacted by
pollution or economic burdens.

•	Encourage community improvements through active partnerships. Strong multi-agency partnerships
at the federal, state, local levels, and with the tribes, will integrate many of the services needed for
community revitalization. Aligning federal policies and funding will break down traditional silos, remove
barriers to collaboration, and increase the accountability and effectiveness to plan and act for future
growth. These goals will also be achieved through innovative regional collaboration and approaches that
connect policies and programs at every level of government and across multiple sectors.

•	Be open and honest, and listening to the communities is the best way to engage them. We will work
with urban populations, not act for them. This means, among other things, to recognize their values and
seek to understand environmental issues through their eyes. We will work from the bottom up rather
than taking a top down, one-size-fits-all approach.

•	Focus on measuring results and evaluation will fuel future success. We need short-term improvements,
but also an analytical view toward sustainable and systemic improvements we can measure using
meaningful outcome measures. We will invest and focus our resources on what is working in targeted
places and draw on the compounding effect of well-coordinated action. By evaluating conditions to
design better solutions and monitoring progress to respond quickly when change is needed, we will
learn what works to develop best practices.

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URBAN WATERS FEDERAL PARTNERSHIP

We, the undersigned organizations, support
the vision, mission, and principles of the Urban
Waters Federal Partnership. We commend
the work that is making a visible difference in
communities across the country by engaging
urban populations in restoring their rivers and
surrounding neighborhoods, improving access
for water recreation, and helping create a
network of parks and greenspaces connecting
downtown cores with suburban and rural areas.
We believe the Partnership provides a powerful
means for federal agencies to better connect
with our metropolitan areas and engage all
residents—especially youth—in conservation
and stewardship of nature where they live, work,
and play.

Aligning Our Efforts:
New NGO and
Association Partners

Supporting actions we plan to undertake include
aligning resources, funding, and expertise to
restore urban waters, parks, and greenspaces;
increase outdoor recreation; engage youth and
residents at pilot sites; and create new initiatives
or projects nationally or at the state or local
levels that achieve complementary results. We
look forward to assisting federal agency partners
with outreach and communications encouraging
urban waters restoration, parks and greenspace
conservation, and outdoor recreation.

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SIGNATURES



Stephen H. Burrington
Executive Director, Groundwork USA



James M. Dwnan, J.D.

Executive Director, American Planning Association

Scott Kovarovics

Executive Director, Izaak Walton League

tJL

Wm. Robert Irvin

President & CEO, American Rivers

Ken Kirk

Executive Director, National Association of Clean Water Agencies



Nancy C. Somerville

CEO & Executive Vice President,	Barbara Tulipane

American Society of Landscape Architects	President & CEO, National Recreation and Park Association

ajXS- ( ( 0 by^5"-

Claire Robinson

Executive Director, Amigos de los Rios

Dan Lambe

President, Arbor Day Foundation

Catherine Nagel

Executive Director, City Parks Alliance

Collin O'Mara

President, National Wildlife Federation
Jeffrey Benoit

President & CEO, Restore Americas Estuaries

Nicole Silk

President, River Network

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SIGNATURES

Michael Brune

Executive Director, Sierra Club

Daniel van Starrenburg
President & CEO, SavATree

Jerri J. LaHaie

Executive Director, Society of Municipal Arborists

Will Rogers	\

President & CEO, The Trust for Public Land

Mark Garvin

President & CEO, Tree Care Industry Association

President, US Water Alliance

President, The Chesapeake Conservancy

Lawrence A. Selzer

President & CEO, The Conservation Fund



Mike Wetter

President, The Intertwine Alliance

Mark Tercek

President, The Nature Conservancy



John F. Calvelli

Executive Vice President of Public Affairs,
Wildlife Conservation Society

As required by the Antideficiency Act, 31 U.S.C. 1341 and 1342, all commitments made by all agencies party to this Partnership agreement are subject to the availability of
appropriated funds and budget priorities. Nothing in this agreement, in and of itself, obligates any agency to expend appropriations or to enter into any contract, assistance
agreement, interagency agreement, or incur other financial obligations. Any transaction involving transfers of funds between the agencies will be handled in accordance with
applicable laws, regulations, and procedures under separate written agreements. Furthermore, this agreement does not create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural,
enforceable by law or equity, by persons who are not party to this agreement, against any party to this agreement, its officers or employees, or any other person. Finally, this
agreement does not impose legally binding requirements on any Federal agency, States or the regulated community, nor does it change or substitute for any existing legally
binding requirements.

Greg J. Lais
Executive Director, Wilderness Inquiry

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Overview

Founded in 1993, Alliance for Community Trees
(ACTrees) is a national nonprofit organization
dedicated to improving the health and livability
of cities by planting and caring fortrees. Today,
ACTrees is a growing coalition of more than 200
organizations involved in grassroots community
greening, public education, policymaking, and other
activities supporting better urban forest stewardship.

ACTrees engages volunteers to take action to
improve the environment where over 90% of people
live: in cities, towns, and metropolitan areas.
ACTrees member organizations have planted and
cared for more than 15 million trees with help from
more than 5 million volunteers.

Mission

Alliance for Community Trees builds the capacity of
its members to plant, sustain, and advocate for trees
in America's communities. To achieve its mission,
ACTrees has established three results-oriented
strategic goals. ACTrees will:

•	SERVE a broad, diverse, and highly engaged
network of members, partners, and volunteers.

•	INFLUENCE public policy and research to
advance sustainable urban and community
forests.

•	BUILD organizational excellence and capacity to
support national programs and enhance member
impact.

Vision

Alliance for Community Trees envisions green,
healthy, interconnected, and prosperous
communities transformed through tree planting,
care, education, and advocacy.

Baltimore, Maryland: in 2013, ACTrees and partner Boise Inc., transformed
an under-utilized space in an urban Baltimore neighborhood into a vibrant
community park. The once vacant lot was cleared of 18 abandoned row houses
and now offers the many benefits of trees and green space - cleaner air, shade,
less water pollution, and higher property values- to the neighborhood. A total
of 24 new large trees were planted, including elm, honey locust, willow oak, and
crape myrtle. Flundreds of smaller plants and shrubs were planted by more than
50 volunteers, and local nonprofit and government partners. In addition to trees
and several planting beds, the park's walking path and small parking area are
made of pervious concrete to help reduce stormwater runoff and improve water
quality.

In September 2014, ACTrees and railway company CSX completed the 1812 Trees
Initiative, a multi-year campaign to plant 1,812 trees in Baltimore. The initiative
honors the bicentennial celebration of America's national anthem, which was
written in Baltimore during the War of 1812. Volunteers from CSX and ACTrees'
partner, the Parks & People Foundation, began the initiative in the fall of 2012,
The ongoing partnership between ACTrees and CSX promotes urban and
community tree planting, care, conservation, and education, while improving the
environment and making Baltimore a cleaner and greener place to live.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: As part of its Community Groves grant program,
ACTrees funded the Pennsylvania!! Horticultural Society (PHS) to plant, maintain,
and harvest fruit and nut trees at Saul Agricultural FSigh School in Philadelphia. In
2013, more than 200 Saul Agricultural Fligh School students helped with planting
and irrigation of the urban orchard. The fruit and nut trees will provide fresh food
for the community and create a greener and healthier community. The orchard
also features educational signs for each of the crops and now serves as a life
lab that engages students in science and horticulture.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

ACTrees supports projects and programs aimed at protecting, enhancing, and
sustaining trees in urban communities across the country.

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American Forests, the oldest national nonprofit
conservation organization in the country, protects
and restores urban and rural forests. Founded in
1875, American Forests has served as a catalyst
for many of the most important milestones in the
conservation movement, including the founding
of the U.S. Forest Service, the national forest and
national park systems, and thousands of forest
ecosystem restoration projects and public education
efforts. Since 1990, American Forests has planted
nearly 50 million trees in forests throughout the
U.S. and in 44 countries, resulting in cleaner air and
drinking water, restored habitat for wildlife and fish,
and the removal of millions of tons of carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere.

The organization's work is guided by science to
identify the right mix of trees in particular locations
for goals ranging from wildlife habitat to urban
spaces that maximize benefits to public health,
ecosystem services, and storm resilience. American
Forests also advocates through federal, state,
and urban policymakers, seeking to show that the
ecological value of trees and forests translates into
the triple bottom line of real social, environmental,
and economic value.

Mission

American Forests works to restore threatened forest
ecosystems and inspire people to value and protect
urban and wild land forests.

American Forests' urban initiatives foster high-impact innovation and integration
with other disciplines, so that green infrastructure can be used to build truly
sustainable urban environments. Their flagship urban program, Community
ReLeaf, helps cities build long-term capacity for restoring and managing
their urban forests. With a goal of engaging 20 cities by 2020, each long-term
collaboration includes three initial phases: an urbantree canopy analysis using
i-Tree and high resolution imagery, strategic land restoration projects through
tree planting and high-impact site design, and outreach to engage residents and
local policymakers.

Additionally, American Forests provides small cost-share grants through its
Global ReLeaf program to leverage community resources for tree planting
projects in urban areas. These projects can include streamside forest buffers,
street trees, and open space plantings in spaces such as parks and vacant lots.

American Forests also develops national communication resources to help
communities learn from one another. For example, Urban Forests Case Studies:
Challenges, Potential and Success in a Dozen Cities, a 108-page book in
both print and online formats, highlights urban forest activities, innovations,
management structures, best practices, and obstacles in various U.S. cities,
including Urban Waters Federal Partnership cities. For the 10 Best Cities
for Urban Forests project, a panel of expert judges identified cities that best
exemplify healthy urban forests. American Forests then provided detailed
information about urban forests in each of the 10 cities so other cities can learn
from these successes.

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American
Planning
Association

https://www.plannirig.org/

Overview

The American Planning Association (APA) is a
nonprofit education and membership organization.
Members include practicing planners, planning
students, elected, and appointed officials, planning
commissioners, and interested citizens.

Mission

The APA and its professional institute, the American
Institute of Certified Planners, are dedicated to
advancing the art, science, and profession of good
planning to create communities that offer better
choices for where and how people work and live.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

APA's flagship program "Great Places in America" celebrates places of
exemplary character, quality, and planning. Places are selected annually and
represent the gold standard in terms of having a true sense of place, cultural and
historical interest, and community involvement. APA Great Places program offers
better choices for where and how people work and live. The 2014 Great Places
in America that are UWFP locations include: Washington, DC, Denver, CO, St.
Louis, MO, Seattle, WA, and Philadelphia, PA.

APA's Sustaining Places Initiative is a multi-year, multi-faceted program to
define the role of planning in addressing human settlement issues relating to
sustainability. Working through a task force and pilot communities across the
country, this initiative has developed guidance for integrating sustainability into
the process, content, and implementation of local government comprehensive
plans.

APA develops and disseminates information on trends, tools, and best practices
in urban planning through its Research and Advisory Service programs.

Planning Advisory Service provides practical guidance on topics of concern to
practitioners, along with innovative best practices to address emerging planning
issues. The three National Centers of Planning conduct applied, policy-relevant
research on green communities, hazards planning, and planning and community
health,

APA's Community Assistance Program provides place-based assistance and
advisory services to communities, regions, and neighborhoods. The program
engages planning professionals and demonstrates the benefits of planning to
communities around the country. There are two components of the Community
Assistance Program: the Community Planning Assistance Teams and the
Community Planning Workshops.

The 2014 AICP Community Planning Workshop focused on community
revitalization of the Broad Street corridor, which connects the MARTA Five
Points Station and Garnett Street Station in the historic heart of downtown

Atlanta.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

American Rivers is working to reconnect communities with their urban rivers
through blue trails and river cleanups, and advocates for innovative approaches
to water management like green infrastructure, natural flood management, and
water efficiency practices.

•	National River Cleanup was launched in 1991, offering support to individuals,
organizations, and anyone interested in conducting a cleanup on their local
river. By registering a cleanup with American Rivers, organizers receive
free trash bags, assistance with online and print media coverage, volunteer
promotion online, and technical support. Since its start, more than 1,241,610
volunteers have participated in thousands of cleanups across the country
covering more than 252,694 miles of waterways. These cleanups have
removed more than 20.7 million pounds of litter and debris from America's
rivers and streams.

•	In urban areas, people are often disconnected from rivers. Blue Trails help
connect people to their local rivers and increase access to recreational
opportunities. Though many rivers have suffered from decades of neglect,
pollution, and other ills, communities are taking steps to connect with their
rivers through recreation and environmental education.

•	American Rivers works on the local, state, and federal levels to advocate for
green infrastructure, a cost-effective approach to stormwater management
that works with nature by using techniques such as green roofs, rain gardens,
and porous pavement to reduce polluted stormwater runoff and flooding while
improving quality of life and valuable neighborhood greenspace. American
Rivers also works to ensure that there is funding available to communities to
implement these approaches and advocate for corresponding requirements
and incentives in state and federal policy, such as reforming national
regulations to control polluted stormwater runoff.

•	American Rivers is also making urban communities safer by restoring rivers
through the removal of unsafe and obsolete dams. For example, American
Rivers is managing the Darby Creek Restoration Project in metropolitan
Philadelphia. This $1.3 million project involves the removal ofthree dams and

a set of abandoned railroad piers, restoring the lower 9.7 miles of Darby Creek
to free-flowing condition.

American Rivers protects wild rivers, restores
damaged rivers, and conserves clean water for
people and nature. Since 1973, American Rivers
has protected and restored more than 150,000 miles
of rivers through advocacy efforts, on-the-ground
projects, and an annual America's Most Endangered
Rivers® campaign. Through river conservation work
American Rivers works to ensure clean drinking
water supplies, revitalize fish and wildlife, improve
recreation, and leave a legacy of healthy rivers for
future generations.

Mission

In order to carry out its mission and achieve its
vision, American Rivers has developed a new
Strategic Plan for a more focused and effective
conservation organization. Accordingly, the
organization has identified three Strategic Goals to
guide its work over the next five years:

Strategic Goal #1: American Rivers will improve
the health of rivers across the nation by protecting
and restoring flows, connectivity, water quality, and
habitats in priority rivers and basins.

Strategic Goal #2: American Rivers will be
recognized as the leading advocate for river
conservation in national policy discussions and
debates.

Strategic Goal #3: American Rivers will be a
financially sound and sustainable organization with
a growing base of unrestricted financial support and
dedicated support for priority programs.

Overview

Non-Governmental Org.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

Washington, DC: ASLA's Green Roof Demonstration Project atop the Society's
headquarters in Washington D.C. showcases the environmental benefits of green
roofs as well as what landscape architects contribute to green infrastructure
projects. Green roofs have significant community benefits such as controlling
stormwater runoff, improving water quality, reducing the urban heat island
effect, and improving air quality—all of which ASLA is committed to monitoring.
ASLA also uses the green roof as a teaching tool, offering tours to policymakers,
design professionals, students, and the general public to showcase how the
green roof has benefited the community.

In October 2014, ASLA joined the Green Infrastructure Collaborative, a network
of federal agencies, non-governmental organizations, and private-sector entities
with the goal of helping communities implement green infrastructure as a means
of addressing water quality issues and community development goals. Upon
joining the Collaborative, the Society pledged to establish a green infrastructure
streetscape demonstration project in ASLA's Washington D.C. Chinatown
neighborhood. The project includes the design, installation, and maintenance
of an interconnected series of vegetated systems and innovative infrastructure
technologies to manage stormwater runoff and beautify the public space. This
project will serve as a model and educational tool for developers, designers, city
officials, and the public. Located in an urban area that faces significant issues
related to combined sewer outflows and a degraded watershed, the high level of
visibility of the project is particularly important.

Overview

Founded in 1899, the American Society of Landscape
Architects (ASLA) is the national professional
association for landscape architects. Landscape
architects lead the stewardship, planning, and
design of our built and natural environments.
Stewardship of the land has always served a central
role in the mission of the ASLA and is an integral
element of all outreach.

ASLA works to increase the public's awareness of
and appreciation for the profession of landscape
architecture and its contributions to quality of life.
ASLA is an active advocate for the environment and
sustainable design, livable communities, surface
transportation, historic preservation, and storm-
water management issues, among others.

Mission

The Society's mission is to advance landscape
architecture through advocacy, communication,
education, and fellowship.

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Overview

Amigos de los Rios (Amigos) is a nonprofit 501(c)
(3) organization established in 2003. Amigos
works to create vibrant communities by designing
quality public environments in collaboration with
local governments, businesses, and residents.
Amigos also strives to bring renewed life to urban
neighborhoods. Stewards of the East Los Angeles
County Emerald Necklace Park Network, Amigos
collaborates with communities to protect and
restore open spaces by designing quality public
environments (parks and trails) that revitalize city
neighborhoods within economically challenged
communities in Southern California.

Mission

The mission of Amigos is to create a regional
Emerald Necklace of sustainable open spaces along
urban river corridors that connect the mountains
to the sea — protecting the environment and
strengthening community life for the benefit of
current and future generations.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

Los Angeles, California: Over the past eleven years Amigos de los Rios has
worked as a liaison between the community and public agencies to facilitate
the collaborative effort known as the Emerald Necklace Expanded Vision Plan.
The work by Amigos is based on the 1929 Olmsted Bartholomew Plan for the Los
Angeles Basin - reinterpreted in contemporary terms. In 2005, Amigos de los
Rios introduced the initial Emerald Necklace Vision Plan that outlined a detailed
strategy for the development of a 17 mile loop of beautiful multi-benefit parks
and greenways connecting 10 cities and nearly 500,000 residents along the Rio
Hondo and San Gabriel Rivers watershed areas located in East Los Angeles
County. Last year, with funding from the California Natural Resources Agency
and in partnership with the Conservation Fund, Amigos released the Emerald
Necklace Expanded Green Infrastructure Plan for the La Basin. The goal of
Amigos is to improve ecosystem services and public health throughout the Los
Angeles Basin with connections between the Santa Monica Mountains, Rim of
the Valley, and San Gabriel Mountains, and from the Mountains to the Pacific
Ocean by linking trails, parks and open spaces greenway along the Rio Hondo,
San Gabriel, and the Los Angeles Urban River corridors Rivers. The eastern
portion of Regional Park Network includes:

•	62 cities in the San Gabriel and • 56 miles of wash and creek trails
Gateway Cities East County Los • Approximately 450 existing parks
Angeles region	# Approximately 60 potential parks

•	More than 7,500 acres of land	# 30,000 trees (estimated)

•	75 miles of multi-benefit river trails

Amigos park projects use green infrastructure methodologies, such as on-site
water filtration, bioswales, and low-water-use irrigation, as well as drought-
tolerant and native-plant landscaping, to conserve water and to protect
biodiversity and our natural resources. Amigos provides knowledge, skills, and
leadership in the following areas:

•	Developing community partnerships and organizing community action
programs

•	Conservation of open and natural spaces within the metropolitan region

•	Efficiently utilizing funding for green infrastructure projects, including
sustainability planning

•	Promoting community involvement in all aspects of project planning, design,
and development

•	Curriculum creation for K-12 and family-oriented multi-cultural environmental
education programs

•	Developing vocational green collar training certification programs

•	Collective Impact Coalition Building between diverse government agencies
and communities

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

The Arbor Day Foundation has worked in communities around the country,
many of which are in the UWFP network. Starting in 1976, the foundation has
recognized communities through Tree City USA, a national program that provides
the framework for community forestry management for cities and towns across
America. Communities achieve Tree City USA status by meeting four core
standards of sound urban forestry management: maintaining a tree board or
department, having a community tree ordinance, spending at least $2 per capita
on urban forestry and celebrating Arbor Day.

Participating communities have demonstrated a commitment to caring for and
managing their public trees. Together, those 3,400 Tree City USA communities
serve as home to more than 135 million Americans. Allied recognition programs
for electric utility companies (Tree Line USA) and universities (Tree Campus USA)
continue to expand the brand and influence of urban forestry programs delivered
by the foundation.

The Bronx, New York: The Foundation's TD Green Streets program provides
funds to support the city of New York and The Bronx River Alliance to improve
wildlife habitat, and protect and restore the Bronx River Forest. By engaging
volunteers from local schools and community groups, the project will help build
the long-term stewardship of the Bronx River Forest, which is one of the last
functioning floodplains in all of New York City. Although major improvements
have been made this past decade, continued management is needed to sustain
the vital functions the floodplain provides to the river. This project will help to
plant more than 500 native trees in 3 plots totaling 13,340 square feet (.31 acres)
over the span of a year. By engaging the community in planting and stewardship
activities, and providing education about environmental issues on the river, funds
from TD Green Streets will help hundreds of people connect to their natural
surroundings and become advocates for the forest's future. The project is a
valuable opportunity for residents of all ages to gain lifelong skills in ecological
restoration and develop a foundation of stewardship for the river.

Overview

Founded in 1972, the centennial of the first Arbor
Day observance, the Arbor Day Foundation has
grown to become the largest nonprofit membership
organization dedicated to planting trees. The
foundation now has over one million members,
supporters, and valued partners.

The foundation supports a range of education
and conservation programs to replant our nation's
forests, create a foundation for urban forestry
management in communities across the country,
and connect children with nature.

Mission

The Arbor Day Foundation works to inspire people to
plant, nurture, and celebrate trees.

New Jersey Communities The New Jersey Community Tree Recovery Campaign
is a partnership between the Arbor Day Foundation and the New Jersey Division
of State Forestry Services. This campaign provided trees to homeowners and
communities who lost their urban canopy in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. The
project provided tens of thousands of seedling trees to those in need and will
pave the way for restoration of New Jersey's community forests for years to
come. Planting efforts began in spring 2014, with 115,000 trees distributed at 97
separate events in 18 New Jersey counties affected by Hurricane Sandy.

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Pike National Forest, Colorado: The Buffalo Creek
Fire burned 12,000 acres on Pike National Forest
in 1996 and the Hayman Fire burned approximately
137,000 acres in 2002, the largest fire in Colorado's
history. Both fires had a devastating impact on the
upper South Platte watershed, the primary water
source for the City of Denver. In moderate and
high intensity burn areas, 100% of the trees were
lost along with future seed sources for natural
regeneration. Foundation programs to reforest these
damaged portions of a critical watershed will help
deliver clean water to millions of Denver residents.

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Overview

The Chesapeake Conservancy is dedicated to
ensuring conservation, stewardship, and access
of the Chesapeake Bay, its lands, and rivers. The
Conservancy was created out of a merger between
the Friends of the John Smith Chesapeake Trail and
Friends of Chesapeake Gateways.

In the five years since the Friends of the John
Smith Chesapeake Trail was first founded, the
Conservancy has recognized a need for a strong
organization that can advocate, marshal new
resources, and forge new partnerships to increase
public access to the Chesapeake and its great
rivers, ensure conservation of the region's most
treasured landscapes and waterways, and promote
stewardship and enjoyment of the region's natural,
cultural, and historic treasures.

Mission

The Chesapeake Conservancy's mission is to
strengthen the connection between people and the
watershed, conserve the landscapes and special
places that sustain the Chesapeake's unique
natural and cultural resources, and encourage the
exploration and celebration of the Chesapeake as a
national treasure.

The Conservancy advances this mission through
partnerships and citizen engagement; educational
programs; land conservation, public access and
recreational opportunities; advocacy; and signature
initiatives to connect people with the natural and
cultural heritage of the Chesapeake Bay.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

Washington, DC and Hampton Roads, Virginia The Chesapeake Conservancy
and the National Park Service (NPS) have developed a John Smith Trail
Conservation Strategy that defines a process for prioritizing conservation areas
along the Capt. John Smith Trail, a historic trail that covers more than 3,000
miles of the Chesapeake Bay and tributaries that are important to the visitor
experience. Working alongside the NPS, the Conservancy is implementing
this strategy along each segment of the trail, which is being implemented
and managed on a segment by segment basis due to its considerable length.
For each segment, the NPS, the Conservancy, and a team of local partners
develop a segment plan that identifies key areas for conservation using the Trail
Conservation Strategy and prioritizes implementation activities, including new
access sites and interpretive signage. The Lower James River Segment Plan has
been completed and the Potomac River Segment Plan is in progress.

Baltimore, Maryland: The Chesapeake Conservancy began its work in Baltimore
by advocating for the designation of the nation's first Urban Wildlife Refuge
Partnership, Masonville Cove. Located on the southern side of Baltimore Harbor,
Masonville Cove, a former Dredged Material Containment Facility, now provides
an environmental education center and public access to the water for several
underserved communities. Masonville Cove now serves as a cornerstone for a
new initiative, Greater Baltimore Wilderness.

Chesapeake Conservancy staff members are actively engaged in and serve on
the steering committee of Greater Baltimore Wilderness, a coalition of partners
spearheaded by the USFWS Chesapeake Bay Office that aims to create a
resilient network of parks and open spaces in the greater Baltimore area . The
Coalition is building upon previous conservation efforts and is concentrating
its work on projects that incorporate four principal focus efforts: resilience,
biodiversity, equity, and discovery.

To raise awareness and help launch the initiative, the Conservancy, in
partnership with National Geographic, produced a Baltimore Wilderness map
to highlight the resources that exist and the need to create a more resilient
network. Concurrently, the Conservancy has launched the Mamie Parker
Journey: Inspiring Youth to Embrace the Chesapeake speaker series. Dr. Mamie
Parker, former Assistant Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and
current board member of the Chesapeake Conservancy, will speak to high school
students across Baltimore, inspiring them with her personal story to explore and
pursue careers in conservation and the environment.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

City Parks Alliance provides numerous opportunities to highlight and support the
Urban Waters Partnership:

Biennial International Urban Park Conferences:The next City Parks Alliance
biennial international urban parks conference. Greater & Greener 2015:
Innovative Parks, Vibrant Cities, will be held in San Francisco, April 11-14, 2015,
Greater & Greener 2015will bring together 1,000 urban leaders from around the
world to debate, celebrate, organize, connect, and share with others who are
working to improve the economy and environment of cities across the nation and
around the world.

City Parks Alliance's 2015 conference will be the premier forum for showcasing
innovative and effective park development, maintenance, programming,
and policy and their intersection with city planning, economic development,
environmental sustainability, community engagement, transportation, and
neighborhood equity,

Webinars: City Parks Alliance provides webinars to support its member
organizations and others working in the urban realm. This unique program
features the nation's top urban park leaders and provides on-line expertise about
pressing issues facing managers and stewards of our nation's urban parks.
Webinars are presented throughout the year, focusing on building effective park
partnerships between the public and private sectors. Recent webinar topics
have included Stormwater Management: Partnerships and Best Practices;
Stormwater Management and Design; and The Changing Role of Parks in Urban
Water Management, among others.

Public/Private Partnerships: City Parks Alliance is taking a lead role in
providing expertise on howto use public-private partnership models as a way
of managing, funding, and programming parks. Through forums, webinars,
and training sessions, City Parks Alliance brings together experts to provide
guidance on the best way to create a partnership framework. At a time when
funding for parks and greenspace continues to be challenged by competition
from other cash-strapped agencies, this framework will help support
collaborative governance to leverage resources around green infrastructure,
parkland acquisition, and park development and sustainability.

Overview

Established in 2000 by a nationwide group of urban
parks administrators and advocates, the City
Parks Alliance is the only independent, nationwide
membership organization solely dedicated to urban
parks. It unites and serves a growing network
of hundreds of civic and community leaders,
government agencies, parks and recreation
authorities, funders, and others.

The City Parks Alliance leads and serves the
community of diverse organizations that encompass
the parks world, from neighborhood groups to
government agencies, championing high quality
urban parks throughout the nation and recognizing
city parks as an integral part of forming stronger,
more vibrant cities that nurture their residents from
every walk of life.

Mission

The mission ofthe City Parks Alliance is to
engage, educate, and nurture a broad-based
constituency to support the creation, revitalization,
and sustainability of parks and green spaces that
contribute to dynamic cities. The organization's
vision is that everyone in urban America will have
access to parks and green spaces that are clean,
safe, and vibrant.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

The Fund has effectively worked in communities around the country,
including many communities where the UWFP has also been active. The Fund
brings a variety of tools and programs to its work in urban areas to support
communities and their conservation efforts. The Fund's urban activities include
strategic conservation planning, land acquisition, assistance to underserved
communities in organizing and accessing needed resources, financing for green
entrepreneurs and local land trusts, and training for community, government, and
business leaders.

Atlanta, Georgia: The Fund has worked for more than a decade on expanding
parks and greenspaces in the City of Atlanta, adding more than 200 acres
to the city's greenspaces in almost: 40 projects since 2003. This work began
with a strategic GIS assessment of the need for additional greenspaces
commissioned by the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation. Over the past 4
years, the Fund has worked on land acquisition for new park space in the
underserved neighborhoods of English Avenue and Vine City in the upper part
of the Proctor Creek Watershed. These acquisitions include the first parks for
each of these neighborhoods, which face significant storm water flooding and
some of the highest crime, poverty, and vacancy rates in Atlanta. They also lie
in the headwaters of Proctor Creek and its tributaries, waterways besieged
by high bacteria levels, illegal dumping, pollution, and erosion resulting from
irresponsible planning and development. In partnership with the city, The Arthur
M. Blank Foundation, The Waterfall Foundation, Park Pride, and community
organizations, the Fund is working to implement Park Pride's green infrastructure
vision for adding strategic greenspaces that can address storm water flooding
and improve quality of life for neighborhood residents. Through its Resourceful
Communities program, the Fund has worked closely with neighborhood residents
to build initiatives for new park space and to ensure projects include economic,
social, and environmental benefits - including employing neighborhood residents
in building the first park for the English Avenue neighborhood. Together, the Fund,
its partners, and residents are helping to bring economic development, improved
water quality, flood mitigation, and improved public health and quality of life
through new, strategically designed greenspaces.

The Conservation Fund pursues conservation
of important lands and waters and supports
sustainable economic development. Since 1985, the
Fund has protected more than 7 million acres of land
and aquatic areas across the nation, demonstrating
that effective land and water conservation makes
good economic sense. It works hand-in-hand with
communities, government agencies, businesses,
landowners, and conservation nonprofits and other
partners to achieve their conservation priorities.

The Fund provides a range of services to support
its partners' conservation efforts, including land
acquisition, conservation finance, community and
economic development, environmental mitigation
services, green infrastructure planning, and
conservation leadership training,

Mission

The Conservation Fund, working with public, private
and nonprofit partners, protects America's legacy of
land and water resources through land acquisition,
leadership training and sustainable community, and
economic development, emphasizing the integration
of economic and environmental goals.

Overview

Los Angeles, California: The Fund has been a key partner with Los Angeles-
based Amigos de los Rios, a nonprofit organization working to protect and
restore open spaces and revitalize communities in the Los Angeles region.
Amigos has convened the Emerald Necklace Coalition, 62 member agencies
with a connection to East Los Angeles, that pledged to work collaboratively to
preserve and restore the Los Angeles and San Gabriel watersheds and their
rivers and tributaries for recreational open space, native habitat restoration,

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conservation, and education and to re-connect
residents with green space in the many working-
class neighborhoods these watersheds transect.
The Fund recently worked with Amigos and its
partners to refresh its vision of linked natural
and green spaces extending from the San
Gabriel Mountains to the Pacific Ocean along an
interconnected greenway around the Rio Hondo,
San Gabriel, and the lower Los Angeles Rivers. The
new Emerald Necklace Forest to Ocean Expanded
Vision plan, released just a few months ago,
presents a contemporary vision for re-creating Los
Angeles County as a better place to live, work, and
play for decades to come. In addition to the green
infrastructure planning and leadership training
assistance, the Fund has provided advance funding
for implementing some of the vision through its Land
Conservation Loan Program.

Baltimore, Maryland: Working with the leaders
of the Greater Baltimore Wilderness Coalition,
including the Patapsco Urban Waters Partnership,
the Fund has taken a leading role in defining a major
regional coastal green infrastructure resiliency
projectthat will help position the partnership's
efforts on the lower Patapsco and Inner Harbor into
a broader watershed and landscape context. The
Fund is leading a team of partners including the
American Planning Association, U.S. Geological
Survey, Center for Chesapeake Communities, and
Chesapeake Conservancy in a projectthat will
engage regional local governments in coordinated
planning around natural and nature-based green
infrastructure calculated to protect communities,
built infrastructure, and natural resources from
adverse coastal storm impacts and effects of
climate change such as sea level rise.

Washington, DC: The Fund has been active in efforts to increase public
awareness and engagement with the Anacostia River restoration in the District
of Columbia. Along with the Chesapeake Conservancy, the Fund supported the
creation of the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historical Trail, the
nation's first all-water National Historical Trail. The John Smith Trail provides an
unparalleled opportunity for the public to learn and appreciate Native American
history. Smith's voyages more than 400 years ago, and the ecology, then and
now, of the Chesapeake Bay watershed, including major tributaries such as the
Potomac and Anacostia. Working with the Anacostia Watershed Society, the
Fund developed a new Anacostia River Water Trail Guide, highlighting historical,
cultural, natural, and recreational points of interest on or adjacentto the river, as
well as paddling, hiking, biking, and other activities. The guide also spotlighted
opportunities for new points of access and community connections to the river
corridor.

New Orleans, Louisiana: For more than 15 years, the Fund has worked to protect
and restore coastal wetland and associated upland habitats, like those found
around Lake Pontchartrain. Recently, the Fund supported the construction of
an elevated boardwalk atthe northwest corner of Joyce Wildlife Management
Area providing visitors easy access to view wildlife and vegetation within the
ecosystem. The Fund also acquired 675 acres of diverse wetland habitat near
the town of Maurepas, which will enhance an ongoing, multi-partner effort to
expand and preserve key ecosystems within the West Pontchartrain-Maurepas
Swamp Important Bird Area (IBA), a critical link in the migratory path for millions
of birds annually travelling between North American nesting grounds and their
wintering areas in Central and South America.

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JH?+

Earth Force

St

http://earthforce.org/

Overview

Earth Force is a nongovernment organization
that works to engage young people to become
active citizens who improve the environment and
their communities now and in the future. The
organization's vision consists of a nation where
young people from all walks of life are actively
making positive change to the environment at their
schools, in their neighborhoods, and in partnership
with their communities.

To support this vision the organization operates
Centers of Excellence, including a six-step model
(i.e., the "Earth Force Process"), to support young
people in finding their voice while assuming
leadership roles in creating sustainable solutions
and solving local environmental problems.

The organization approaches its work through a
"Collective Impact" lens and collaborates in an
intentional, mutually beneficial way with local
organizations in the communities served. Through
building uncommon collaboratives, and driven by
evidence-based and inclusive practices. Earth Force
improves the way students of all ages learn and
transforms the way communities engage our next
generation of scientists, policymakers, and change
agents.

Mission

To engage young people as active citizens who
improve the environment and their communities now
and in the future.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

The organization's General Motors (GM) Global Rivers Environmental Education
Network program (GM GREEN) uses Earth Force's Youth Engagement Partnership
structure to provide opportunities for young people to learn more about the
watersheds they live in and to use their findings to create lasting solutions for
pressing water quality issues. Through GM GREEN, Earth Force, local partners,
and mentors at General Motors make progress on a shared commitment to
civic engagement, education, and the environment. GM GREEN provides
middle and high school students with exciting, hands-on science programs
around watershed assessment and improvement through the Protecting Our
Watershed curriculum. Educators are connected to local partners, including
GM environmental engineers, who assist with water quality monitoring, offer
classroom support, help make community connections, and coordinate events.

In recent years, GM GREEN has led to valuable community and youth education
and engagement in cities across the country, including Denver, Colorado,

Kansas City, Kansas, and Baltimore, Maryland where the UWFP is also currently
working to restore urban waters and rejuvenate the surrounding communities.
In 2013, GM GREEN included all U.S. cities with GM manufacturing facilities and
added six GM communities in Canada.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

EPA has partnered up with Groundwork USA and River Network to: establish
the Urban Waters Learning Network to create and promote networking and
to provide technical assistance and learning opportunities to more than 120
EPA Urban Waters grantees and other urban waters practitioners all over the
country. The goal of the Urban Waters Learning Network is to improve the
"impaired urban water resources - rivers, lakes, wetlands and more - and the
socioeconomically challenged communities around them by providing local
organizations, tribal and local governments with the skills and techniques to
effectively restore these resources over time."

In addition, of the local 20 Groundwork Trusts across the country, many have
major urban waterways programs including:

Groundwork Denver, Colorado: This trust has led holistic watershed planning
efforts for the urbanized section of Bear Creek, which has included community
outreach, stakeholder engagement, water quality data analysis, and modeling to
determine sources of pollution.

Groundwork New Orleans, Louisiana: Following Hurricane Katrina, the Lower
Ninth Ward of New Orleans was left with vacant lots, and once flourishing
wetlands became an urban swamp decimated by salt water intrusion. The trust
initiated a movement to "take back the streets" through improved stormwater
management as a way to answer community needs. Bayou Bienvenue was also
restored, so that it: now contains a shade structure, rain garden, native plants, fruit
trees, benches, and educational signage.

Groundwork Anacostia, DC: A Bandalong Litter Trap was installed to collect
floating litter in the Watts Branch tributary of the Anacostia River, which is
well-known for its critical levels of pollution and litter. Managed by a core of
volunteers, the litter trap collects more than 5,500 tons of trash per year.

Overview

Groundwork USA is a national organization with
local roots, engaging local businesses, residents
and government officials to revitalize neighborhoods
and transform community liabilities into community

assets.

Groundwork USA's key objectives are to:

•	Increase the capacity of diverse, multi-ethnic
communities to improve and care fortheir local
environment;

•	Clean up and care for neglected areasto signal
community pride, rejuvenation, and social equity;
and

•	Engage business, government, non-profits, and
communities to work together for sustainable
environmental care, enhancement, and
environmental justice.

Mission

The mission of the Groundwork USA network
is to bring about the sustained regeneration,
improvement, and management of the physical
environment by developing community-based
partnerships which empower people, businesses,
and organizations to promote environmental,
economic, and social well-being.

Groundwork Milwaukee, Wisconsin Through various partnerships, this trust
initiated best management practices for storm water (rain gardens, rain barrels,
plantings) on 53 properties within the Kinnickinnic rivershed using theiryouth
Green Team.

Groundwork Lawrence, Massachusetts: This trust has been instrumental in the
on-the-ground visualization of a 3.5 mile greenway along the Spicket River—a
12-year project.

Groundwork Hudson Valley, New York For more than a decade this trust led
the effort to daylight the Saw Mill River in downtown Yonkers, On November 15,
2011, waters began to flow aboveground for the first time in 90 years - a major
achievement for the trust and the city.

Other Groundwork trusts with urban waters projects include: Groundwork Dallas,
Groundwork San Diego Chollas Creek, and Groundwork Cincinnati Mill Creek.

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Overview

The Intertwine Alliance is a coalition of public,
private and nonprofit organizations working together
to integrate nature more deeply into the Portland
- Vancouver Metropolitan Region. The Alliance
is broad and diverse. It includes nonprofits, from
small to large, that have missions ranging from
conservation to community health. It includes
parks agencies, from municipal parks departments
to the National Park Service. Private companies
are also partners in The Intertwine Alliance,
including prominent firms in the sportswear, health,
engineering, architecture, and utility sectors.

The Alliance applies the Collective Impact
Framework to address a wide range of urban issues
and challenges. The Intertwine Alliance works to
attract new investment in parks, trails, and natural
areas, better leverage existing investment, and more
deeply engage residents and policymakers.

Mission

The mission of The Intertwine Alliance is to integrate
nature more deeply into the Portland metropolitan
region. It does this by attracting new investment,
engaging the public, and enabling Alliance members
to join forces for greater collective impact.

The Intertwine Alliance developed a regional conservation strategy and
biodiversity guide for the Portland - Vancouver metropolitan region. The strategy
identifies priority habitats, which has allowed conservation practitioners to
develop large landscape restoration strategies, often focused on specific
watersheds. These works were developed in typical Intertwine Alliance fashion:
161 individual contributors from 75 organizations joined forces to create them.

The Intertwine Alliance has brought together the environmental, health, and
social justice sectors to explore how to leverage investments in nature to
achieve community health outcomes. The Intertwine Alliance is harnessing the
power of its coalition as a force for social and environmental justice. This is
being done through a variety of programs that draw on the wisdom of existing
community leaders who support peer learning and offer trainings to The
Intertwine Alliance community.

The Intertwine Alliance has developed a public engagement campaign called
"Our Common Ground," which is being implemented through the collective
contributions of Alliance partners. The goal of the campaign is to engage
residents with nature in the metropolitan region.

The Alliance has integrated information from 28 area parks agencies to create
a comprehensive online, interactive park and trail map to encourage residents
to explore nature near where they live. As a next step, The Intertwine Alliance
has raised more than $200,000 to develop a mobile application for the greater
Portland community that supports learning about native species in the region.
Part travel guide, part wildlife encyclopedia, the app will be the first of its kind
in the U.S. and will encourage individuals in the Portland region to enjoy and
connect with nature. The app is being built on open source technologies so that
it can be adopted by other metropolitan regions.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

The Intertwine Alliance addresses a wide range of issues including community
health, conservation, ecosystem services, urban forestry, conservation
education, public engagement, nature play, parks, trails, and equity / inclusion.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

Community-Based Conservation: Izaak Walton League chapters are rooted
in communities across America, meeting local conservation challenges and
working to introduce youth and families to conservation and outdoor recreation.
League members build nature trails, restore stream banks, plant trees and rain
gardens, and prevent the spread of invasive species on land and in the water. A
December 2013 survey found that 35 percent of League chapters are restoring
local fish and wildlife habitat. League members help establish urban gardens for
communities and school children. Members also educate homeowners about
ways to reduce runoff, including rain barrels.

Clean Waterlhe League has been at the forefront of every major clean water
battle in the United States, from a decades-long push for federal water pollution
control in the 1940s to efforts today to restore Clean Water Act protections for
critical streams and wetlands. Volunteers around the country use the League's
landmark Save Our Streams (SOS) program to monitor local waterways, plan
restoration projects, and report water quality problems. The Izaak Walton
League provides several resources to help community groups initiate an SOS
project in their area, including stream monitoring procedures, data collection
forms, and step-by-step guides for stream restoration, advocacy, and education.

Through the Save Our Streams program, League members in Syracuse
documented a sharp decline in water quality in Beartrap Creek, a tributary
of Onondaga Lake. State scientists confirmed the problem: The water was
contaminated with large quantities of ethylene glycol, an airplane de-icer. The
chemical was traced to Syracuse's Hancock International Airport. Thanks to the
volunteers' monitoring data and advocacy efforts, the airport agreed to build a
de-icer reclamation and treatment facility. This is just one of the many volunteer-
led victories that brought Lake Onondaga back from the dead.

Overview

Founded in 1922, the Izaak Walton League is one of
the nation's oldest and most respected conservation
organizations. With a powerful grassroots network
of 245 local chapters nationwide, the League takes a
common-sense approach to protecting our country's
natural heritage and improving outdoor recreation
opportunities for ail Americans.

The League believes that America needs smart
solutions that are good for the environment and
the economy atthe same time. Relying on a unique
blend of community-based conservation and
common-sense advocacy, the League has made
significant progress to protect and restore our
nation's waters, promote clean energy, and advance
sustainable agriculture.

Mission

To conserve, restore, and promote the sustainable
use and enjoyment of our natural resources,
including soil, air, woods, waters, and wildlife.

More than 500 volunteers working through the Virginia Save Our Streams (VA
SOS) program monitored more than 200 stream sites across the state in 2013.
The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality relies on this information to
identify and address water quality problems across the state. The information is
also used by volunteers to identify pollution problems and evaluate the success
of stream restoration projects.

Clean Energy:Jhe League has worked in the upper Midwest and across the
country to advance energy efficiency and promote renewable energy resources
to power homes, businesses, and vehicles. Legislation championed bythe
League in Minnesota - including a nation-leading renewable energy standard
for utilities and a statewide energy policy that seeks to limit greenhouse gas

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emissions - serves as a model for other states.
The League won a decade-long battle for strong
federal regulation of the largest source of mercury
emissions in the United States: coal-fired power
plants.

The League recently succeeded in securing a
true calculation of the value of solar energy. The
Minnesota Public Utilities Commission approved a
statewide "Value of Solar" methodology to more
accurately calculate the net value of solar power
- particularly power generated by homeowners
and communities -to the energy grid. This is
an objective way to ensure customers are fairly
compensated for the energy their solar systems
generate. It also ensures that utilities and other
customers accurately pay for the benefits this solar
energy provides.

Restored Rivers and Lakes: League members are
leading conservation efforts in the Great Lakes
region, and League staff members are organizing
a similar member-engagement effort around
Chesapeake Bay restoration. The League is
pioneering outreach to Maryland homeowners in the
Muddy Branch watershed (which eventually drains
into the Chesapeake Bay) to improve installation
rates for rain barrels, rain gardens, and other
conservation landscapes that can improve local
water quality.

The League is working with federal and state
agencies and private stakeholders to assess the
environmental challenges facing the Missouri River
and find solutions that work for the region's ecology
and economy. These solutions include restoring
areas of the river and increasing opportunities
for recreation. Promoting recreational use of the
Missouri River is an excellent way to increase river
stewardship. The League worked with colleagues
and stakeholders to obtain a National Water Trail

Network listing for stretches of the river. These trails attract paddlers from
across the country providing benefits to local economies. The League also
helps to coordinate Missouri River clean ups in communities in the region -
including Yankton, SD; Sioux City, IA; Omaha, NE; Council Bluffs, IA; and Pierre,
SD - that bring hundreds of volunteers to the river. Through their efforts, the
river is healthier for fish and wildlife and more attractive to recreational users.
The League also plays a major role in organizing the annual Missouri River
Watershed Education Festival, which draws hundreds of high school students to
Yankton, SD, each year to learn about the many issues facing the river and the
nation's natural resources.

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National
Association of
Clean Water
Agencies

http://www.nacwa.org/

Overview

The National Association of Clean Water Agencies
(NACWA) is a nationally-recognized leader in
environmental policy and a sought-after technical
resource on water quality and ecosystem protection
issues as it relates to the Clean Water Act. NACWA
was established in 1970 by a group of municipal
wastewater agencies who came together to secure
federal funding for municipal wastewater treatment
and discuss emerging national interest in improving
the quality of the nation's waters.

Mission

NACWA is a dynamic national organization, involved
in all facets of water quality protection. Viewed
as a key stakeholder in both the legislative and
regulatory arenas, NACWA aims to build credible,
collaborative relationships with members of
Congress, presidential administrations, and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

For 40 years, NACWA has been the clean water community's voice in Congress,
at the EPA, in the courts, and in the media. NACWA's credible, collaborative
relationships with these institutions and in-depth understanding of current clean
water challenges make the association uniquely qualified to respond to today's
increasingly complex challenges.

Water Quality: NACWA works with members of the clean water community
on 21st century challenges facing clean water agencies every day. Recently,
NACWA efforts have focused issue by issue and more broadly on exploring
possible fixes to the way the nation approaches its water quality needs. Its focus
areas have included: nutrients, emerging contaminants, water quality standards,
mercury, and total maximum daily loads.

Storm water: Urban stormwater runoff is a growing environmental concern in
communities throughout the nation and many NACWA members are responsible
for stormwater management activities. On behalf of municipal separate
stormwater sewer systems (MS4) communities NACWA believes reduction
in adverse water quality impacts from stormwater is best achieved through
watershed approaches and complementing traditional infrastructure with
innovative managementtechniques such as green infrastructure. This blend of
sustainable infrastructure improves water quality while providing myriad co-
benefits to the community.

The Water Resources Utility of the Future (UOTF): UOTF is defined by today's
utility leaders pioneering innovative technologies and cutting-edge practices
with a focus on resource recovery, NACWA is committed to making sure the
array of UOTF issues - whether related to energy production, water reuse, green
infrastructure or watershed-based approaches - are priorities with Congress,
the Administration and other key stakeholders going forward.

Climate Change: NACWA believes that climate change is primarily a water issue,
and the association's advocacy focuses on the interrelationships between water
resources and climate change, including the needs of clean water agencies in
adapting to climate change impacts and further research about these impacts.
NACWA is also committed to ensuring that greenhouse gas emissions from
wastewater treatment are accurately estimated and that any mitigation efforts
that target wastewater are reasonable.

NACWA promotes a watershed based approach to water quality to holistically
consider all causes of water quality impairment and to restore the physical,
chemical, and biological integrity of the nation's waters. NACWA's Strategic
Watershed Task Force issued its recommendations for a "Viable and Vital 21st
Century Clean Water Policy" on the 35th anniversary of the Clean Water Act, and
the task force is now working on one of the report's primary recommendations,
the "21st Century Watershed Action."

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http://www.nrpa.org

Overview

National Recreation and Park Association (NRPA)
is the leading nonprofit organization dedicated to
the advancement of public parks, recreation, and
conservation. Their work draws national focus to
successes generated at the local level, NRPA's
membership includes more than 46,000 individuals,
and represents public spaces in urban communities,
rural settings, and everything in between. This broad
membership enables them to leverage their role in
conservation, health and wellness, and social equity
to improve their communities.

NRPA partners with organizations, including
those in the federal government, nonprofits, and
commercial enterprises. Funded through dues,
grants, registrations, and charitable contributions,
NRPA produces research, education, and policy
initiatives for their members that ultimately enrich
the communities they serve, NRPA is a strong
supporter of state side Land and Water Conservation
Fund (LWCF) and introduced legislation to fund
urban parks.

Mission

NRPA works to advance parks, recreation, and
environmental conservation efforts that enhance the
quality of life for all people.

Washington, DC: For its kick-off project, NRPA collaborated with Washington
Parks & People, George Mason University (GMU), and the Washington, D.C.
Department of Parks and Recreation to help revitalize Marvin Gaye Park
in Northeast D.C., and improve the health and wellness of the local youth
population.

Atlanta, Georgia: In 2011, NRPA and partners revitalized Selena Butler Park in
Atlanta. The park is rich in African-American history, being located just blocks
from the Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site and named for Selena
Sloan Butler, one of the original founders of the National Parent-Teacher
Association,

Los Angeles, California The site for the park at El Sereno was a one acre parcel
of unused land owned by Caltrans, the state transportation agency. Sitting
vacant for decades, the parcel originally caught the eye of the Los Angeles
Department of Recreation and Parks in their search to bring more local parks
to underserved urban communities. The extraordinary efforts of the NRPA and
partners produced a jewel of a park for young children.

The NRPA also collects data through its EcoBenefits calculator to measure
the ecological and economic benefits of parks. The categories include various
measures of water quality benefits, considering water runoff, velocity, erosion,
and pollution effects of properly managed water detention and flood control
systems. The NRPA also advocates for funding for urban park programs and
develops white papers and policy positions to authorize legislation that supports
urban parks.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

The NRPA has supported the building and revitalization of parks through the
Parks Build Community initiative in several urban areas around the country.
Parks Build Community is a national initiative demonstrating the transformative
impact of parks on the health and vitality of communities across America. To
date, Parks Build Community projects have been completed in Washington, DC,
Atlanta, GA, Los Angeles, CA, Houston, TX, and Charlotte, NC.


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Overview

The National Wildlife Federation (NWF) is working
to protect the ecosystems that are most critical to
native wildlife. NWF works to improve federal and
state policies that will improve wildlife conservation
on hundreds of millions of acres of public, tribal,
and private lands, including thousands of miles
of streams, rivers, lakes and coastlines across
America.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

Gardening for Wildlife Program: NWF's Gardening for Wildlife Program reaches
thousands of Americans encouraging them to restore wildlife habitat where
they live, work, play, learn (Schoolyards program), and worship (Sacred Grounds
program). In Baltimore, working with the National Aquarium, there is a new
certified wildlife habitat program aimed at the dual actions of water quality and
quantity, and wildlife habitat. The program operates on the belief that actions
taken in your own yard to attract wildlife and protect aquatic habitats can
provide a wide range of benefits that reach far beyond local waterways.

Mission

The National Wildlife Federation (NWF) is America's
largest conservation organization, inspiring
Americans to protect wildlife for our children's
future. NWF programs educate and inspire people
to protect wildlife and wildlife habitat. NWF focuses
its conservation and education work in three major
areas that will have the biggest impact on the future
of America's wildlife:

•	Protecting and restoring wildlife habitat, including
where people live, work, learn, play, and worship

•	Connecting children to nature for a nation of
happier, healthier kids. These connections in
early life will teach children to appreciate and
respect the natural world so they can be good
conservation stewards in the future

•	Providing guidance and seeking solutions
to make the nation's wildlife, people, and
communities more resilient to the major threats
posed by climate change

Climate Smart Communities: NWF works where people live - in cities and
towns-to promote wildlife-friendly and climate-smart approaches to urban
sustainability. Climate change is intensifying existing stresses on wildlife and
their habitats and amplifying natural hazards that threaten people and property
where we work. Having a deep understanding of the hazards associated with
climate change, the Climate-Smart Communities program helps cities and towns
use nature-based approaches to prepare forthe impacts of climate change in
ways that support people, wildlife, and habitat. NWF is working with a set of
communities to better understand their adaptation needs, challenges, and to
generate early examples of successful nature-based adaptation approaches.
This program seeks solutions and provides guidance to communities to help
them prepare for the impacts of climate change on not only their communities,
but also wildlife and habitat.

Great Lakes (Western Lake Erie Basin, near Toledo, Ohio): Through its Midwest
Urban Initiative, NWF is working in the Great Lakes region's largest urban
centers and communities of color to help strengthen the work being done on
energy and sustainability, green job development, air and water quality, brown
field and hazardous waste clean-up, and environmental justice issues.

Mississippi River Delta (Lake Pontchartrain Area/ New Orleans): NWF is
partnering with Environmental Defense Fund and National Audubon Society for
the RESTORE the Mississippi River Delta campaign to ensure that the Mississippi
River Delta is safe and sustainable for people and wildlife. To do this, NWF and
its partners are working to: 1.) Expedite the design and implementation of large-
scale initiatives that restore the Mississippi River's natural capacity to build
land, 2.) Ensure the safety of communities and businesses in the river delta by
advocating for hurricane protection that includes coastal restoration and non-
structural measures, 3.) Create sustained national and state funding and political
will to move restoration from plan to action.

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The Chesapeake Bay: NWF is part of the Choose
Clean Water Coaiitionto serve as a strong, united,
effective advocate for restoring the thousands of
streams and rivers flowing to the Chesapeake Bay.
The Coalition coordinates policy, message, action,
and accountability for clean water at the federal,
state, and local levels. The Coalition supports the
implementation of state clean water blueprints,
EPA's Chesapeake Bay pollution limits, and best
practices for information sharing within and
between states.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

The Nature Conservancy's Resilient Cities initiative is helping targeted cities
around the world assess and invest in natural infrastructure solutions to key
urban challenges, including water supply, flood and storm protection, and air
and water pollution. Contributing to this effort, the Conservancy has developed
a Coastal Resilience Tool to enable communities to explore different flooding
scenarios, analyze impacts on communities, and develop solutions to address
these challenges.

In the United States, the Conservancy's Urban Strategies Initiative is focusing
on 13 cities using a concept of whole-systems conservation and assisting cities
in evaluating and implementing solutions that use nature to help reduce air
pollutants, sustain clean water supplies, and protect communities from storms
and hurricanes.

The Nature Conservancy has developed the science to enable governments,
companies, and communities to use and share space, protect natural areas,
improve resource management, and invest more wisely for a sustainable future.
The Nature Conservancy's Development by Design (DbD) provides a holistic view
of how future development could affect our natural systems and offers solutions
for ensuring their health over the long-term for the people and precious wildlife
that depend upon them.

Overview

The Nature Conservancy is the leading conservation
organization working around the world to protect
ecologically important lands and waters for nature
and people. Its vision is to leave a sustainable world
for future generations. The Nature Conservancy
maintains programmatic areas that focus on
freshwater, lands, and marine conservation, resilient
cities, and climate change.

Mission

The mission of The Nature Conservancy is to
conserve the lands and waters on which all life
depends.

The Nature Conservancy has formed the Great Rivers partnership to bring
together diverse stakeholders and best science to work toward sustainable
management and development of the world's most critical river systems. Through
the Water Funds efforts, the Nature Conservancy works with communities in the
U.S. and around the globe to protect the watersheds that supply their drinking
water.

The Nature Conservancy has been involved in many initiatives across the
country, including cities where the UWFP has been involved.

Delaware River Basin: The Nature Conservancy has helped to identify local
restoration landscape opportunities that will benefit communities and the natural
environment to support the Delaware River Basin Conservation Initiative.

The organization has also supported efforts to restore the Chesapeake Bay,

Puget Sound, Great Lakes, Penobscot River, and other conservation actions in all
50 states.

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Restore America's Estuaries is a national nonprofit
organization established in 1995 as an alliance of
eleven community-based conservation organizations
working to protect and restore the vital habitats of
our nation's estuaries. Restore America's Estuaries
is dedicated to working closely with community,
private, and governmental organizations to preserve
the extraordinary heritage of our nation's estuaries.

Mission

Restore America's Estuaries is dedicated to the
protection and restoration of bays and estuaries as
essential resources for our nation.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

New Orleans, Louisiana: Restore America's Estuaries and NOAA are providing
support for the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana's Oyster Shell Recycling
Program. The program is working collaboratively with restaurants throughout
New Orleans to recycle used oyster shells to restore oyster reefs and shoreline
habitat across coastal Louisiana. The project allows local restaurants and their
patrons to play a part in helping preserve our coast. This project is keeping a
valuable natural resource out of landfills and provides multiple benefits, which
include protection and restoration of adjacent marshes, support of valuable
fisheries, improvement of local water quality, recreational opportunities for the
public, and a buffer for our coastal communities from the impacts of storms and
sea level rise.

Jamaica Bay, New York: Restore America's Estuaries and NOAA are providing
support for American Littoral Society's "Jamaica Bay CleanSweep" program
which is removing hundreds of derelict boats, abandoned docks and other large
marine debris, in addition to improving water quality and protecting the salt
marsh, this initiative preserves habitat for wildlife and improves the recreational
environment for anglers, boaters, and community members. In 2013, the
American Littoral Society, with the help of local volunteers, located, mapped and
documented more than 590 items of large marine debris. While Jamaica Bay is
surrounded by commercial, industrial, and residential developments in Brooklyn
and Queens, the Bay's waters, upland salt marshes, and islands provide valuable
habitat, migratory and breeding grounds for 330 bird species and 107 species of
finfish, along with recreational opportunities for residents.

Overview

Puget Sound, Washington: Restore America's Estuaries is working to advance
science and understanding on carbon sequestration, and the loss of wetlands
occurring across the country. This year, Restore America's Estuaries released
the first landscape scale assessment of the climate mitigation benefits of
restoring tidal wetland habitat. The study evaluated the Snohomish Estuary
in Puget Sound because it is a representative system of the wider Pacific
Northwest Region in terms of geomorphology, land use, and management
issues. The Study, "Coastal Blue Carbon Opportunity Assessment for Snohomish
Estuary: The Climate Benefits of Estuary Restoration" finds that currently
planned and in-construction restoration projects in the Snohomish estuary will
result in at least 2.55 million tons of C02 sequestered from the atmosphere over
the next 100-years. This is equivalent to the 1-year emissions for 500,000 average
passenger cars. If plans expanded to fully restore the Snohomish estuary, the
sequestration potential jumps to 8.9 million tons of C02, equal to the 1-year
emissions of about 1.7 million passenger cars.

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Tampa Bay, Florida: Restore America's Estuaries
"Targeting Blue Carbon" project in partnership
with Tampa Bay Watch, Environmental Science
Associates (ESA), The Tampa Bay Environmental
Restoration Fund, and additional support from the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
will determine the past and potential future climate
mitigation benefits of blue carbon ecosystem
restoration and conservation in the Tampa Bay
estuary. The assessment is an important part of a
strategic effort by Restore America's Estuaries to
increase understanding of the climate mitigation and
adaptation benefits of estuary habitat restoration
and conservation. It will utilize a transferrable
approach and use the model recently developed for
the Snohomish estuary in Washington.

Key Initiatives

Restoration Fund:The Tampa Bay Environmental
Restoration Fund is a grants program with the
goal of funding projects which restore and protect
Tampa Bay and its watershed. It is managed through
a partnership between the Tampa Bay Estuary
Program (TBEP) and Restore America's Estuaries
(RAE). The Restoration Fund works to encourage
local and national contributions from the public
and private sectors and achieve measurable
conservation outcomes. The Restoration Fund
also works to implement the habitat, species,
and nutrient reduction priorities that have been
developed bythe Tampa Bay Estuary Program and
its partners, and outlined in the Comprehensive
Conservation and Management Plan.

National Estuaries Week: For 2014 Restore America's Estuaries member and
partners along with NOAA's National Estuarine Research Reserve System,
and EPA's National Estuary Program organized special events such as beach
cleanups, hikes, canoe and kayaktrips, cruises, and workshops across the
nation. In 2014,69 events engaged 19,149 volunteers in a combined 83,846 hours
of service.

Living Shorelines Initiative: Restore America's Estuaries advocates for shoreline
protection options that allow for natural coastal processes such as native plans,
stones and sand fill to filter runoff and preserve natural wetland habitat. In 2013,
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Chesapeake Bay Trust, and
Restore America's Estuaries co-hosted the 2013 Mid-Atlantic Living Shorelines
Summit, an in-depth discussion of the state of science, policy, and practice of
Living Shorelines in the Mid-Atlantic region.

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Overview

Over the past 26 years. River Network has been at
the forefront of expanding interest in protecting
the waters of our country, encouraging diversity in
the environmental movement, and helping engaged
citizens to take a stand for their waters. Since 1988,
River Network has accomplished their mission
by investing in local efforts, and helping advance
impact at more significant scales (system, state,
regional, national). They offer one-on-one mentoring
and consulting, virtual trainings, and conferences to
strengthen local efforts; convene groups for greater
impact; and increase the transfer of practical water
management solutions.

Mission

River Network envisions a future of clean and ample
water for people and nature, where local caretakers
are well-equipped, effective, and courageous
champions for our rivers. Their mission directly
supports this vision. River Network empowers
and unites people and communities to protect and
restore rivers and other waters that sustain all life.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

EPA has partnered up with River Network and Groundwork USA to establish
the Urban Waters Learning Network to create and promote networking,
provide technical assistance, and provide learning opportunities to more than
120 EPA Urban Waters grantees and other urban waters practitioners all over
the country. The goal of the Urban Waters Learning Network is to improve
impaired urban water resources - rivers, lakes, wetlands, and more - and the
socioeconomically challenged communities around them by providing local
organizations, and tribal and local governments with the skills and techniques to
effectively restore these resources over time.

River Network also helps local champions - coalitions, organizations and leaders
- become more effective, sustainable, and results-oriented, so they can have the
greatest possible impact on our rivers and other waters. They have supported
community-based organizations across many Federal Urban Waters locations,
including Anacostia, DC/MO (i.e. Anacostia Riverkeeper, Anacostia Watershed
Society, & Groundwork Anacostia); Atlanta, GA (i.e. West Atlanta Watershed
Association); Grand Rapids, Ml (i.e. Plaster Creek Stewards); Seattle, WA (i.e.
Duwamish River Cleanup Coalition/TAG); and the Western Lake Erie Basin,
Toledo, OH (i.e. Save the Maumee River).

River Network partners with local organizations to focus funding, skills, and
learning around particular issues. Its members carefully select watersheds and
issues that can provide replicable models and lessons learned for watershed
groups all around the country. Examples include:

Louisville, Kentucky (Beargrass Creek); Rochester, Michigan (Paint Creek);
Rochester Hills, Michigan: River Network has partnered with the Charles River
Watershed Association (Boston, MA) and other organizations to disseminate
the Blue Cities™ model to integrating water resources planning and urban
development decision-making. Blue Cities™ integrates techniques such as
Low Impact Development (LID), Green Building, Green infrastructure. Green
Corridors, and stormwater management to help solve problems and build a
sustainable urban future. In the last two years, they have begun Blue CitiesTM
work in Beargrass Creek (Louisville, KY) and Paint Creek (Rochester & Rochester
Hills, Ml).

Nashville, Tennessee: River Network is working with Smart Growth America and
Nashville city staff to calculate the proportion of the stormwater runoff coming
from the local road system and to identify and cost of green street features to
infiltrate that stormwater, with the long-term goal of reducing combined sewer
overflows (CSOs). River Network's goal is to help enable the City of Nashville to

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systematically incorporate green street features into
their CSO abatement plan. This pilot Green Streets
project will inform the development of a manual to
help mid-sized cities nationwide implement green
streets projects.

Portland, Oregon (Willamette River): River Network
is working with restoration experts, city officials,
private landowners, local organizations and
economists to determine what motivates private
riparian restoration, to help develop an identity for
a 14-mile stretch of the Willamette River and, in
turn, generate and coordinate interest in restoration
within it.

Salt Lake City, Utah (Jordan River): River Network
and various Partners are investigating how changes
to flow management might enhance efforts to
achieve water quality criteria for dissolved oxygen,
while also improving ecosystem function in the
lower Jordan River. As the project progresses. River
Network has published a number of interim "Lab
Reports" that summarize the approach, lessons
learned, and future plans at key points in the
process.

Tacoma, Washington: River Network, Stewardship Partners, Depave and the
Pierce Conservation District have worked closely over the past 18 months to
promote the idea of community "depaving" in the cities of Puyallup and Tacoma,
introducing numerous community institutions, and community leaders to the
benefits of increasing green spaces while addressing the water quality impacts
of impervious surfaces. The team has performed its first demonstration projects
in the North Slope neighborhood of Tacoma and on the grounds of a Catholic
school in Puyallup, WA- another project in Tacoma is in the planning stages.
This project is an effort to disseminate the "community depaving" approach
more broadly.

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SavATree

http://www.savatree.com/

Overview

SavATree, the green choice for tree service and
shrub care, provides environmentally sensible
services to residential, commercial, historic, and
government properties in the Northeast, Mid-
Atlantic, and Mid-West. Services are performed by
certified arborists and trained field specialists and
include: tree care, tree assessment, and tree canopy
planning at the site and landscape scales.

Mission

SavATree's mission is to provide high-quality
professional shrub and tree services performed by
certified arborists and highly trained crews that help
create a sustainable, beautiful, healthy, and safe
tree canopy. Urban tree canopy assessed, planned
for, monitored, and cared for by SavATree helps
cities across the Chesapeake Bay and beyond reach
water quality goals.

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

Baltimore, Maryland: SavATree provides project support to the U.S. Forest
Service Northern Research Station, serving as Ambassadorto the Baltimore
Urban Waters Partnership. This partnership works with federal, state, local,
NGO, and private partners to help improve water quality in Baltimore.

SavATree integrates and advances the primary elements of the Baltimore
Urban Waters Partnership business plan through: 1) the Green Pattern Book, a
set of typologies of green infrastructure projects; 2) Local Projects; 3) Models
and Monitoring, including water quality, collaboration network, and land cover
monitoring; and 4) Mapping of local projects using green infrastructure along
with monitoring and collaborative networks. These are contextualized within
a framework of outreach, education, adaptive management, and workforce
development.

SavATree also facilitates linkages between the Baltimore Urban Waters
Partnership and other agency efforts in Baltimore such as the Baltimore
Ecosystem Study, a long-term ecological research project of the National
Science Foundation, and the Baltimore Wood Project, a joint effort between the
Forest Products Lab and the Northern Research Station.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

The Sierra Club has a long legacy of involvement across the country, including
in communities where the UWFP is currently supporting initiatives. Below are a
few examples.

Albuquerque, New Mexico: Sierra Club uses action teams based in New
Mexico's largest towns to work on the protection of nearby natural areas.

Team members meet monthly to plan strategies including tabling, petitioning,
presentations, and outings to build awareness about these natural areas, in
Albuquerque, Sierra Club is working to protectthe "Bosque," more formally
known as Rio Grande Valley State Park, one of the only intact riparian areas
within a city in the entire United States. The Bosque Action Team has a
Bosquitos Committee, led by parents of young children, which runs monthly
events to get families outdoors and teach them about the Bosque. The team
also runs outings for all age groups to the Bosque in English and will soon
offer Spanish-language outings. Sierra Club is also working with the U.S. Fish
& Wildlife Service and the Outdoors Alliance for Kids (co-founded by Sierra
Club) on a project to connect children and youth to the newest Urban Wildlife
Refuge in America, Valle de Oro. Sierra Club helped to support the establishment
of the Rio Grande del Norte and Organ Mountains Desert-Peaks as National
Monuments, using the action team model to engage new leaders and volunteers.

Overview

The Sierra Club is America's largest and most
influential grassroots environmental organization,
with more than 2.4 million members and supporters
nationwide. In addition to creating opportunities
for people of all ages, levels and locations to have
meaningful outdoor experiences, the Sierra Club
works to safeguard the health of our communities,
protect wildlife, and preserve our remaining
wild places through grassroots activism, public
education, lobbying, and litigation.

Mission

The mission of the Sierra Club is to explore, enjoy,
and protectthe wild places ofthe earth;to practice
and promote the responsible use ofthe earth's
ecosystems and resources; to educate and enlist
humanity to protect and restore the quality ofthe
natural and human environment; and to use all
lawful means to carry out these objectives.

Baltimore, Maryland: Climate change is already affecting the Mid-Atlantic
States. Storms characterized by high rain intensity are becoming more frequent,
leading to increases in polluted runoff into Maryland's rivers and streams and
the already highly polluted Chesapeake Bay. Baltimore's watersheds are heavily
impacted by pollution from past and current industrial activity and polluted
runoff generated from its many impervious surfaces. The Maryland Sierra Club
has been organizing city residents to support a five-year dramatic expansion
of green practices designed to reduce polluted runoff, which will include tree
plantings and construction of green infrastructure practices. Additionally, Sierra
Club is advocating for inclusion ofthe impacts of climate change in the city's
stormwater management plans.

Detroit, Michigan: Climate change in the Great Lakes region is increasing
severe storms, with associated flooding, polluted runoff, sewage overflows, and
beach closures. The most vulnerable neighborhoods are home to low-income
persons and communities of color who have outdated water infrastructure,
sit next to polluting industries, and are dominated by impermeable surfaces,
such as rooftops and asphalt that worsen storm water runoff. In Detroit,

Sierra Club is increasing green infrastructure (e.g. native plants, rain gardens,
wetlands, trees, green roofs, and bioswales) to reduce the number and volume

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of sewage overflows and extend the life of the
city's wastewater system. More than 30 community
leaders are now certified rain barrel trainers who
promote installing rain barrels to reduce both storm
water overflow and the high cost of water bills.
Sierra Club also sponsors biking outings to show
community leaders successful green infrastructure
projects.

Los Angeles, California: Sierra Club has
successfully connected underserved residents to
the Angeles National Forest (ANF). Sierra Club spent
years in the San Gabriel Valley and surrounding
communities, learning about residents' lack of
recreational opportunities, parks, open space, and
voice in how the ANF's San Gabriel Mountains
were being managed. Sierra Club empowered and
trained local community leaders to become effective
advocates. Today, the San Gabriel Mountains
Forever (SGMF) coalition is a diverse partnership
of more than one hundred city, business, faith,
health, and conservation community leaders who
are increasing equitable access and protections
for the San Gabriel Mountains watershed. Sierra
Club and SGMF played an important role in the
recent establishment of the San Gabriel Mountains
National Monument. Additionally, Sierra Club's
Angeles Chapter and San Gorgonio Chapter (serving
the Inland area of Southern California, Riverside and
San Bernardino) support a strong network of citizen
activists and local outings and run several open
space campaigns throughout the counties.

New Orleans, Louisiana: New Orleans' high
vulnerability to hurricanes and floods will only
increase asthe climate continues to warm. Inthe
meantime, recovery from past storms continues. The
restoration of Bayou Bienvenue and Bayou Sauvage
is an important part of rebuilding the Lower Ninth
Ward and New Orleans East because these bayous

provide both recreational opportunities and critical buffering against storms.
The Sierra Club has been building relationships with diverse constituencies for
more than 10 years throughout Louisiana and the Gulf Coast, but in particular
with African American and Vietnamese communities in the Lower Ninth Ward
and New Orleans East. Sierra Club works with the Vietnamese community in
New Orleans East to clean up and restore Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife
Refuge, which protects the community from storm surges. Recently, Sierra Club
installed accessible walkways so that disabled people can enjoy the bayou's
beauty and sanctuary. Sierra Club also works with the Vietnamese American
Youth Leadership Association to provide hiking and biking opportunities along
the Maxent Canal for diverse communities in New Orleans East.

Inspiring Connections Outdoors (ICO): Sierra Club's volunteer-run ICO groups
nationwide conduct more than 900 outings every year for approximately 15,000
participants, primarily youth from urban communities. ICO groups are in the
following cities, towns, and counties: Birmingham (AL), Phoenix and Tucson (AZ),
Los Angeles, Orange County, Sacramento, San Diego, San Francisco, and San
Jose (CA), Boulder and Denver (CO), Hartford and New Haven (CT), Washington
(DC), Gainesville, Jacksonville, Miami, Manatee-Sarasota, Orlando, Tampa
Bay and West Palm Beach (FL), Atlanta (GA), Chicago (IL), Bloomington (IN),
Lexington and Louisville (KY), Baltimore (MD), Boston (MA), Ann Arbor, Detroit,
and Grand Rapids (Ml), Minneapolis/St. Paul (MN), St. Louis (Ml), Las Vegas
(NV), North Central (NJ), New York City (NY), Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill -
Triangle (NC), Cincinnati and Cleveland (OH), Portland and Central Oregon/Bend
(OR), Harrisburg and Philadelphia (PA), Nashville and Knoxville (TN), Austin,
Dallas, El Paso, San Antonio, and Houston (TX), Seattle and Spokane (WA), and
Madison (Wl).

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

In partnership with other organizations and with assistance from the US DA
Forest Service, SMA is developing collaboration tools to engage urban
forestry professionals and emergency managers on a regional level to develop
Vegetative Risk Management Plans (VRMP). The goals of a VRMP are to reduce
the impact of storms on the urban forest, lessen personal injuries and property
damage, and decrease emergency management cost. This project includes
a Vegetation Risk Management Template and detailed instructions on howto
develop the associated GIS tool, called the Urban Tree Risk Index.

SMA has recently developed a set of Urban Forestry Best Management
Practices for use by municipal arborists, planners, urban foresters, concerned
citizens, green industry professionals, or anyone interested in creating and
sustaining trees and green space in their communities. They are designed to
be simple, easy-to-understand, and versatile for anyone wishing to explain,
understand, or investigate the many ways in which green development makes
good economic sense.

SMA sponsors the Municipal Forestry Institute, a comprehensive training
program for people who plan, manage, or advocate for urban forestry programs
and who want to become more effective leaders. The goal of the institute is to
educate people in the leadership and managerial aspects of urban forestry.

Overview

The Society of Municipal Arborists (SMA) is an
organization of municipal arborists and urban
foresters as well as consultants, commercial
firms, nonprofits, tree boards, tree wardens, allied
professionals, and citizens who actively practice
or support some facet of municipal forestry. As a
professional affiliate of the International Society of
Arboriculture, the SMA has members from across
North America and beyond. SMA strives to promote
and improve the practice of professional municipal
arboriculture, stimulate interest in planting and
presentation of shade trees and landscape plants,
and promote public awareness of the beautification
of urban areas with arboricultural practices.

Mission

SMA aims to build the confidence, competence,
and camaraderie of the family of professionals who
create and sustain community forests.

SMA prints a bimonthly electronic magazine, called City Trees, which provides
the latest news in urban forestry research, products, and services, and highlights
communities around the world. They also provide information on their website
to create networking and educational opportunities that promote the sound,
professional management of urban forests.

For the past 50 years, SMA has held an annual conference and trade show in
cities across North America, providing an opportunity for the urban forestry
community to learn from the experience and expertise of its members.

The Society of Municipal Arborists has developed a peer-reviewed program that
formally recognizes urban and community forestry programs for implementing
excellent and comprehensive management practices. Accreditation is structured
to build on the Arbor Day Foundation's successful Tree City USA designation by
incorporating additional professional standards deemed important by SMA for
managing municipal trees. It also applies to programs internationally, not just
in the United States. SMA Accreditation sets a high bar, and offers the highest
recognition for notable accomplishments.

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SMA offers an exchange program for municipal
arborists, including those working in the non-profit
arena, in locations around the world. The purpose is
to create a way for municipal arborists to exchange
urban forestry expertise, management ideas ,and
technology through "in-person" contact and on-site
experience. Not only does the program facilitate
the transfer of knowledge, it helps foster an
international community of municipal arborists.

With the ongoing threat of pests, SMA has
developed a comprehensive approach to managing
Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) through its position paper,
toolbox, and webcast, all of which are available on
the website to communities battling this destructive
insect.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

TCIA holds trainings related to appropriate tree care practices and tree care
industry trade shows and conferences, with some topics related to urban
activities such as urban forestry and urban wood utilization.

The Tree Care Industry Association Foundation (TCIAF) is dedicated to advancing
education and professional development in the green industry. Additionally
the TCIAF works to improve safety and reduce accident rates in the tree care
industry, and disseminate information key to practitioners and consumers about
proper tree care.

TCIAF works to achieve these goals through the following:

•	Financial support, which includes funding for the Robert Felix Memorial
Scholarship Fund and expense reimbursementto schools attending Student
Career Days

•	Enterprise and workforce development, by facilitating job creation and
illuminating career pathways in field of commercial/urban arboriculture

•	Training, education, and program content, for employees and employers,
which promotes a strong and sustainable safety culture within the company
and employee team

Overview

Established in 1938 asthe National Arborist
Association, today's Tree Care Industry Association
(TCIA) is a trade association of more than 2,200
commercial tree care firms and affiliated companies.
TCIA develops safety and education programs,
standards of tree care practice, and management
information for arboriculture firms around the world.
The training materials are produced by arborists,
for arborists, and tested in the field. TCIA also has
the nation's only accreditation program that helps
consumers find tree care companies that have been
inspected and accredited based on adherence
to industry standards for quality and safety,
maintenance of trained and professional staff,
and dedication to ethics and quality in business
practices.

Mission

TCIA works to advance the tree care business
through the development of safety and education
programs, standards of tree care practice, and
management information for arboriculture firms
around the world.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

TPL is the only national organization working in cities and suburbs across
America to ensure that everyone - in particular, every child - enjoys close to
home access to a park, playground, or natural area. Today, nearlyten million
Americans live within a ten-minute walk of a park or natural area created with
TPL's help, and millions more visit these sites every year. As an organization,
they are working toward a day when everyone has easy access to a safe, green
place to play.

Through its Parks for People, Climate Smart Cities, and Green Infrastructure
programs, TPL is working to help cities achieve clean urban waters, vibrant public
park systems, and build livable, energy-efficient, and resilient communities.

TPL is engaged in many initiatives in communities where UVVFP is also involved.

Overview

The Trust for Public Land (TPL) creates parks and
protects land for people, ensuring healthy, livable
communities for generations to come. Since 1972,
The Trust for Public Land has protected more than
3 million acres and completed more than 5,200 park
and conservation projects.

TPL believes that everyone should have the
opportunity to connect with nature. And as research
clearly shows, access to nature is an essential
prescription for the physical, environmental, social,
and economic health of a community.

TPL helps communities raise funds for conservation,
conduct conservation research and planning,
acquire and protect land, and design and renovate
parks, gardens, and playgrounds. Today, nearlyten
million people live within a ten-minute walk of a TPL
park, garden, or natural area, and millions more visit
these sites every year.

Mission

TPL creates parks and protects land for people,
ensuring healthy, livable communities for
generations to come.

Albuquerque, New Mexico: TPL is working to preserve vital stretches of
the Middle Rio Grande to safeguard fragile watershed, protect drinking
water supplies, and revitalize river habitat for public enjoyment. Recent
accomplishments include the creation of the Valle de Oro National Wildlife
Refuge, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's first urban refuge in its southwest
region. This new refuge - the culmination of over 10 years of community effort
to protect one of the last undeveloped areas along the river in the park-poor
South Valley section of Bernalillo County - is a successful partnership effort that
drew funding support from state, local, private, and federal sources. The refuge's
location within an hour's drive of 60 percent of New Mexico's population means
that an important segment of the population will have an opportunity to learn
about the importance of the Rio Grande to people and wildlife alike.

Atlanta, Georgia: TPL is working with neighbors and the City of Atlanta to
transform Proctor Creek with a greenway trail system. When complete, the
greenway will connect the BeltLine to the Chattahoochee River and will connect
neighborhoods to parks. TPL has also acquired some 33 properties as a partner
in the Atlanta Beltline project, a 22 mile loop of historic railroad that circles
downtown and midtown Atlanta. The mostly abandoned rail corridor connects 45
diverse neighborhoods, including many of the city's most underserved by parks,
and provides an extraordinary opportunity to link parks, trails, and transit to
foster more livable communities.

Denver, Colorado: TPL has helped in developing a plan for future open space,
and is mapping existing green infrastructure in the Denver Metro area. The study
area includes 13 major rivers and streams and will map parks, trails, and riparian
corridors. The information will be used to plan for green spaces for communities
without access to open space.

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Los Angeles, California: TPL and its partners
have been working for several years to transform
the Los Angeles River from a forgotten concrete
channel into a usable river greenway. The vision
consists of a network of parks, trails, natural areas,
and community spaces linking 13 cities and 25
communities along the 51-mile length of the river.
The majority of these communities lack parks,
bike paths, and walkways, and many suffer from
environmental degradation, poor-quality housing,
and aging school facilities. The project aims to help
combat the health impacts of obesity and inactivity,
and to provide new recreation opportunities to
millions. Currently, TPL is working to create a new
park - The Reseda River Loop - at the point where
Aliso Creek joins the Los Angeles River.

Newark, New Jersey: TPL worked in partnership
with the Essex County Parks System to establish the
city's first waterfront park, including a greenspace
to play and a connection to the Passaic River. The
partners are continuing their work to include a
second riverfront park segment, including a walking
and biking trail, floating boat dock, riverfront
boardwalk, and other settings for relaxation, picnics,
exercise, and environmental education.

New York City, New York: TPL has worked in
partnership with Pratt Institute to develop a
"greenprint" based on the community's input and
vision, for a waterfront on the Bronx side of the
Harlem River. The waterfront design will include
green infrastructure to reduce stormwater runoff,
and community gardens. TPL, through its Climate
Smart Cities program, is also partnering with the
City of New York, Columbia University, and Drexel
University to create green buffers like wetlands
and waterfront parks to protect the city from future
storm events. Important new research suggests
that New York City's risk of coastal flooding has

increased twenty-fold since 1844 thanks to one foot of sea level rise and an
additional one-foot increase in flood levels from a "ten-year" storm event.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Through its Parks for People-Philadelphia
program, TPL is playing a key role in implementing the Green2015 Initiative to
transform 500 acres of land into neighborhood green spaces by 2015. TPL works
with the City of Philadelphia to identify existing schoolyards and recreation
centers as prime opportunities for conversion into greened play spaces and
recreation areas. The recently completed green schoolyard at William Dick
Elementary School along with a groundbreaking of a similar project at Hank
Gathers Recreation Center are examples of the work TPL is doing to leverage
Philadelphia Water Department funds directed toward meeting federally-
mandated stormwater management regulations, committed state funding
through the Pennsylvania Department of Conversation and Natural Resources
(DCNR), and private philanthropy raised by TPL.

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U.S. Water
Alliance

http://www.uswateraliiance.org/

Overview

The U.S. Water Alliance was established in 2008
to break down the "silos" and provide sector-wide
leadership for building a national platform for
holistic water policy. The Alliance is committed to
uniting people and policy for water sustainability in a
changing climate. That means convening, inspiring,
and educating to change the way America views,
values, and manages water-from quantity to quality,
above and below ground. The Alliance emphasizes
the importance and value of each aspect of
the water cycle and promotes more integrated,
sustainable management of water and watersheds
(a concept we call "one water" management). The
Alliance focuses on changing old paradigms, such
as shifting the perception of water from invisible to
invaluable and integrating more green infrastructure
into the gray.

Mission

The U.S. Water Alliance's mission is to advance a
national water vision that values water, integrates,
and coordinates for "one water" sustainability, and
innovates for the future.

Tagline: "Uniting People and Policy for One Water
Sustainability"

Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

A National Water Vision:The Alliance is developing principles of sustainability
through national dialogues, roundtables, and meetings. Shrinking budgets
and increasing demands are putting pressures on the water sector overall to
embrace innovation, integration, and collaboration like never before. Engaging
water association leaders to develop a national water policy framework helps to
unify our voices and coordinate our efforts. The Alliance's goal is to collaborate
on a flexible framework that highlights the value of water and the need for
specific and sustainable actions.

U.S. Water Prize: Created, sponsored, and administered bythe Alliance on an
annual basis, the U.S. Water Prize is the first of its kind to honor individuals
and organizations that have made outstanding achievements in protecting and
improving the health and wealth of water and watersheds throughout America.

The Value of Water Coalition: The U.S. Water Alliance manages the Value
of Water Coalition, which unites public and private sector leaders, utilities,
and organizations to bolster public support for protecting water and investing
in its future. The Alliance helps to plan and carry out the Coalition's public-
awareness campaign, curates the Coalition's online presence, including its
website and social media feeds, and oversees current and new member
relations and development. The Alliance continues to be a leader in shaping the
Water Works! Campaign, a high-profile project of the Coalition to promote the
economic, environmental, and social benefits of water infrastructure investment.

Urban Water Sustainability Council:lhe Council helps usher in the paradigm
shift toward green infrastructure and resource recovery for water sustainability
in a changing climate. It provides a forum for urban leaders in the fields of water,
sustainability, infrastructure, planning, politics, and science to meet and share
ideas and strategies for creating green, sustainable cities.

Activities supported bythe Council include:

•	Hosting an annual One Water Leadership Summit where urban water pioneers
are showcased for their innovative approaches to water management

•	A united voice with other partner organizations to inform stormwater and
other urban water regulations and guidelines

•	Forums to allow the easy transfer of knowledge among Council members on
local issues of finance, law, policies, practices, regulations, and legislation.

Business Advisory Council: Working through the Council, the Alliance
gathers suggestions on ways to spur innovation in technology and regulation,
advance public-private partnerships, and underscore the value of water

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through communications strategies and pricing
dialogues. The Business Advisory Council has
convened national dialogues and roundtables on
the economics of water, technology innovation, and
water quality trading.

One Water Network:The Alliance convenes
leaders from an array of organizations to advance
integrated, holistic watershed management (what
the Alliance refers to as One Water Management).
The network focuses on exploring the gaps, policy
priorities, and research needs for urban watersheds
There is recognition among researchers and others
that shifting the water paradigm will involve more
than technical solutions but require a collaboration
of leaders to meet challenges posed on the
regulatory, policy, and institutional fronts, which is
why the Alliance hosts the One Water Leadership
Summit.

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Urban Activities Potentially Related to the Partnership

Wl conducts a number of programs designed to share the benefits of outdoor
adventures with urban youth, families, and people with disabilities. Each year, Wl
conducts more than 400 events, serving more than 24,000 people.

The Share the Adventure and Families Integrating Together programs are an
opportunity for families, couples, and individuals to experience nature, whether
they are outdoor novices or seasoned veterans. The Gateway to Adventure
program assists and trains people with disabilities to develop communication,
leadership, and outdoor skills that translate into their everyday lives. The Urban
Wilderness Canoe Adventures (UWCA) and Canoemobiie programs engage more
than 19,000 youth each year in introductory outdoor experiences, looping them in
to a network of opportunities for continued engagement in the outdoor sector.

Wilderness Inquiry (Wl) is a non-profit organization
that is dedicated to sharing high quality outdoor
adventures with people of all ages, abilities, and
backgrounds. Since 1978, Wl has served over
375,000 people on trips throughout the world
doing activities like canoeing, kayaking, hiking,
camping, horseback riding, and more. Through five
different programs—Share the Adventure, Families
Integrating Together, Gateway to Adventure, Urban
Wilderness Canoe Adventures, and Canoemobiie—
Wilderness Inquiry engages anyone and everyone in
the outdoors in their backyard or across the globe.

Overview

Mission

Wl's mission is to connect people from all walks
of life to the natural world through shared outdoor
adventures. Through the medium of outdoor
adventure travel, Wl inspires personal growth,
enhanced awareness of the environment, and
community integration. Wl adventures encourage
people to open themselves to new possibilities and
opportunities.

The UWCA and Canoemobiie program are built on a collective impact model,
a broad cross-sector coordination of local organizations, civic groups, state
entities, and federal agencies that work together, share resources, and make
large-scale impact on a collective basis. Wilderness Inquiry's Canoemobiie is a
roving fleet of vans, each with six 24' Voyageur canoes and a crew of outdoor
educators that travels across America to bring outdoor literacy to urban youth
and engage them on the waterways in their communities. In coordination
with partners such as NPS, EPA, USGS, DOI, Army Corps, and many more, the
Canoemobiie has engaged youth in more than 26 cities including Washington
DC, New York, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta, and Louisville. These cities do, and will
continue, to align with the EPA's designated urban waters locations, paddling on
rivers like the Harlem, Anacostia, Passaic, Delaware, and more.

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The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), founded in
1895, has the clear mission to save wildlife and wild
places across the globe. WCS began in the early
1900's when it successfully helped the American
bison recover on the Western Plains. Today, WCS
protects many of the world's iconic creatures in
North America and abroad, including gorillas in the
Congo, tigers in India, wolverines in the Yellowstone
Rockies, and ocean giants in amazing seascapes.

Mission

WCS saves wildlife and wild places worldwide
through science, conservation action, education,
and inspiring people to value nature.

WCS currently manages about 500 conservation projects in more than 60
countries, and educates millions of visitors its four zoos and aquarium in New
York City on important issues affecting the planet. WCS parks include: the Bronx
Zoo, New York Aquarium, Central ParkZoo, Prospect ParkZoo, and Queens Zoo.
Within the Bronx Zoo 26,000-square-foot Wildlife Health Center (WHC), WCS
vets now diagnose ailments via endoscopic procedures, X-rays, ultrasounds,
and an in-house clinical laboratory. The New York Aquarium's Aquatic Animal
Health Center performs complex diagnostic, surgical, and follow-up care in a
15,000-square-foot medical and research center,

WCS is committed to conservation efforts in its own backyard. WCS's ambitious
New York Seascape conservation program combines research, education, and
policy to protect critical habitat and species within the coastal and ocean waters
of the New York tri-state area. It is a joint initiative of the New York Aquarium and
the WCS-Marine Program.

The Bronx Zoo's Mitsubishi Riverwalk nature trail protects acres of the Bronx
River watershed and highlights the many native species that thrive here. WCS
has been working to rehabilitate the river's passageways for native fish such
as alewife herring in partnership with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA).

Other WCS Bronx River projects include a study of songbirds' habitat that stop
over at the Bronx Zoo's riverbanks as they wing their way toward their northern
breeding and southern wintering grounds. Bronx Zoo ornithologists are studying
the migrants to determine whether they are able to get their fill of bird food in
New York's crucial stopover points.

On October 23,2014, WCS and NOAA held a Symposium on Bronx River
Restoration. Plenary sessions included speakers from the Bronx River Alliance,
Yale University, National Park Service, NOAA, and other conservation and
watershed organizations.

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URBAN WATERS

FEDERAL PARTNERSHIP

Restoring Urban Waters, Revitalizing Communities


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