By DuPage Monarch Project
Connie Schmidt presents award to Jeff Palmquist of Fox Valley Park District |
The DuPage Monarch Project recognized the Fox Valley and Naperville Park Districts at a virtual awards ceremony on January 19th for their outstanding commitments to the recovery of monarchs and pollinators. While many things came to a standstill during the coronavirus pandemic, the Fox Valley and Naperville Park Districts continued on with their mission of providing islands of nature where both people and pollinators find safe refuge from the challenges they’re facing.
Fox Valley Park District is the recipient of the Jane
Foulser Habitat Award for the addition of over 19 acres of habitat during the
past year. The District has been developing additional pollinator habitat
within the 548 acres classified and managed as natural areas since 2016 when
they joined the DuPage Monarch Project. As the evidence of pollinator decline
grows and the critical role pollinators play in ecological and human health
becomes clear, Fox Valley Park District is to be commended for steadily
increasing the amount and quality of suitable habitat available to bees,
butterflies, and the many species of pollinating insects.
“This award validates the commitment of the Fox Valley Park District and our staff to pollinator habitat. Expansion, enhancement, and management of pollinator habitat remain a top priority of our Board of Commissioners. The award directly supports our pillar of conservation and environmental stewardship, and we appreciate the DuPage Monarch Project’s collaborative approach in addressing monarch decline,” said Jeff Palmquist, Director of Planning, Research, and Grants for the Fox Valley Park District.
Connie Schmidt presents award to Naperville Park District |
“We thank the DuPage Monarch Project for this award, which
recognizes our efforts to not only increase monarch habitat but educate the
public about this important issue. Each year we display monarch butterflies in
our nature center, allowing visitors to view the stages of a monarch’s life.
Since 2016 we have added five Monarch Waystations to our parks and hosted a
Monarch Festival that was attended by 700 people. At the Naperville Park
District, we are committed to taking care of the environment by expanding
pollinator habitat and involving the community each step of the way,” said
Angelique Harshman, Nature Center Manager at the Knoch Knolls Nature Center.
“DuPage Monarch Project is proud of the Fox Valley and
Naperville Park Districts for integrating pollinator preservation into the
vision for their parks,” said Lonnie Morris, Coordinator, DuPage Monarch
Project. “Excellent progress is being made on achieving our shared vision of a
pollinator-friendly county.”
DuPage Monarch Project is an umbrella organization for the
collaboration of four premier DuPage environmental organizations united in
their concern for pollinator decline. The Forest Preserve District of DuPage
County, River Prairie Group of the Illinois Sierra Club, The Conservation
Foundation, and Wild Ones Greater DuPage Chapter share the goal of increasing
public awareness of the plight of pollinators and advocating for increasing the
amount of healthy habitat available for them.
Web site – https://dupagemonarchs.com/
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