Enviva Forest Conservation Fund Helps Virginia Department of Forestry Protect Sensitive Bottomland Hardwood Ecosystem and Rare Species along the Meherrin River
U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities, Greenville, SC
For IMMEDIATE RELEASE (August 10, 2020)
Greenville, S.C. – The Virginia Department of Forestry (VDOF) has secured a conservation easement on 618 acres located along the beautiful Meherrin River in Southampton County, Virginia. The property, which includes 269 acres of bottomland hardwood swamp, 259 acres of mixed pine and hardwood working forests, and 90 acres of open land, will be permanently protected by this transaction thanks in part to a grant from the Enviva Forest Conservation Fund (Fund). The easement will significantly limit development on the property, which is rich in biodiversity, and will promote sound upland forest management via the implementation of a formal forest management plan.
According to the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation’s Natural Heritage Program (DCR-NH), the easement is located in a VDOF Longleaf Pine priority conservation area, with 533 acres of the property located within the Branchville Sand Quarry Conservation site. Additionally, the acreage contains about 1.77 miles of frontage on the Meherrin River. The property’s forest cover, fields, edge areas, and streams provide a habitat for a wide variety of wildlife and plant species. In fact, the property is home to a rare plant, the crowfoot sedge, that lives within this unique “Coastal Plain Bottomland Forest.” Through the easement, this critical natural habitat will be permanently preserved and continuously enhanced.
“The conservation of this property will help support wildlife and fish populations in the local ecosystem, which is mostly in a natural, undeveloped state. With a working forest conservation easement in place, it will continue to contribute to healthy watersheds, wildlife habitat, rare species preservation, and ecosystem restoration while supporting the local economy,” said Rob Farrell, Virginia’s State Forester. “We are grateful to Enviva, not only for their contribution to the preservation of this property but for their support of several other important conservation projects in the area.”
“Congratulations to the Virginia Department of Forestry on this important acquisition,” said Carlton Owen, CEO of the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities. “The conservation easement that will preserve this property will allow both management of the forest on a sustainable basis and the protection of areas that are critical to the health and future of species habitat as well as the watershed’s contribution of clean water to the surrounding community.”
“We’re proud to partner with Virginia Department of Forestry to help conserve this forestland, which contains both bottomland hardwood and upland pine forests,” said John Keppler, Chairman and CEO of Enviva. “Since the inception of our Forest Conservation Fund, Enviva has helped conserve more than 4,200 acres of ecologically sensitive forests in Virginia. This is the third conservation project we’ve helped fund on the Meherrin River, and we are pleased it will help accomplish conservation priorities of the Virginia Department of Forestry as well as the Department of Conservation and Recreation.”
The Fund’s goal is to be a catalyst for investments in forest and habitat conservation in southeast Virginia and North Carolina’s coastal plain. As the Fund enters its fifth year of the planned 10-year partnership, 20 projects have been funded with a total commitment of over $2.4 million, including the transaction announced today. When these projects are completed, the Fund will have helped protect an estimated 27,500 acres of sensitive wetland forests and other habitats.
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About the Enviva Forest Conservation Fund
The Enviva Forest Conservation Fund is a $5 million, 10-year program established by Enviva Holdings, LP in December 2015 to protect environmentally sensitive bottomland and wetland forests. Administered by the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities, the Fund awards grants annually to nonprofit organizations and government agencies for conservation projects in North Carolina and Virginia. Learn more: www.envivaforestfund.org
About the Virginia Department of Forestry
The Virginia Department of Forestry protects and develops healthy, sustainable forest resources for Virginians. With nearly 16 million acres of forestland and more than 108,000 Virginians employed in forestry, forest products, and related industries, Virginia forests provide an overall economic output of more than $21 billion annually. Headquartered in Charlottesville, Va. the agency has forestry staff members assigned to every county to provide citizen service and public safety protection across the Commonwealth, which it’s been doing now for more than 100 years. VDOF is an equal opportunity provider. Learn more: www.dof.virginia.gov
For more information, contact:
For more information contact:
Alicia Cramer, Sr. Vice President, 205-792-8650, alicia@usendowment.org
The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities (the Endowment) is a not-for-profit public charity working collaboratively with partners in the public and private sectors to advance systemic, transformative, and sustainable change for the health and vitality of the nation’s working forests and forest-reliant communities – www.usendowment.org
Rural Development Innovation Group Achieves Multiple Successes During First Four Years, Looks Ahead
U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities, Greenville, SC
For IMMEDIATE RELEASE (July 13, 2020)
GREENVILLE, SC – The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities (Endowment) is pleased to formally recognize the successful first phase of the Rural Development Innovation Group (RDIG), a voluntary collective of development practitioners, intermediates, and other organizations committed to advancing rural community and economic development. RDIG was initiated in 2016 to demonstrate successful and innovative rural economic development strategies, provide peer advice among organizations, and identify national trends and emerging opportunities to support sector-based strategies. The Endowment provided a grant in 2016 to launch RDIG, and over time those funds were matched with the LOR, Mary Reynolds Babcock, Northwest Area, Annie E. Casey, and Incourage Foundations, along with several other funders. RDIG convened for the first time in September 2016 at the invitation of three convening partners: Northern Forest Center, Aspen Institute Community Strategies Group, and the Endowment.
More than two-thirds of the nation’s 3,143 counties are rural, and so are the majority of incorporated places. Most of the 574 federally recognized tribes in the U.S. have a significant presence in the country’s rural regions. Ninety-seven percent of the United States’ landmass is rural, and one in five Americans lives in a rural area. Rural entrepreneurs start businesses at higher rates than their urban counterparts, and they have higher five-year business survival rates. These mostly small businesses play a particularly vital role in rural America, creating roughly two-thirds of new jobs and supporting the economic and social well-being of their communities.
“Our motivation for RDIG’s creation was the shared conviction that the innovation in rural economic and community development practice from around the nation must become better known, connected, and leveraged to accelerate better and more equitable development more quickly in more rural places,” said Janet Topolsky, Executive Director, Community Strategies Group of the Aspen Institute. “Every RDIG member is deeply committed to and involved in rural community and economic development that steers away from an over-reliance on business recruitment and resource extraction. Instead, we are advancing build-from-within ‘wealth-building’ approaches that strengthen and leverage local assets and know-how to increase more widely shared prosperity for local people, places, businesses, and economies.”
RDIG’s principal goals are to:
- Accelerate the adoption, adaptation, and impact of innovative rural development strategies.
- Forge and provide a strong voice for sensible and productive rural development strategies and partnerships via constructive dialogues with philanthropic and government investors.
- Convene key innovators to increase learning, leadership, and dissemination about “what works” throughout fields relevant to rural development. See more on the Group’s principles.
In just a few short years, RDIG has undertaken several successful initiatives:
- The America’s Rural Opportunity (ARO) series highlights innovation and on-the-ground practitioners from rural places who are successfully addressing important facets of rural economic development. Since February 2017, twelve ARO panels have featured policymakers, rural economic and community development practitioners, and rural business and philanthropic leaders in dialogue around advancing development innovations and a rural opportunity agenda.
- A Critical Rural Development Program framework that reviewed and provided suggested improvements to a dozen USDA RD programs – and held a briefing for Congressional staff in 2017. Individual RDIG members briefed many more congressional and agency staff on our principles and rural program report cards. Some of our proposed changes were incorporated into the 2018 Farm Bill. Others have been used as the basis for additional rural investment legislation.
- With significant RDIG input, Aspen CSG has published a report on Rural Development Hubs that bolsters RDIG’s principles, features many RDIG member organizations, and underscores the importance of doing economic development differently. This publication has been distributed nationally with the report and the concept of Rural Development Hubs now regularly cited in other publications and featured at several conferences and meetings ranging from a National Institute of Health Population Health Virtual Roundtable and Colorado’s Just Transition from Coal Advisory Committee the North Carolina Annual Rural Assembly to Rural RISE.
- Policy Letters to Congress, calling for bi-partisan Congressional support of U.S. rural communities severely and negatively impacted by COVID-19. RDIG spearheaded a June 12, 2020 policy letter sent to Congressional leaders, including approximately 60 Chiefs of Staff, Legislative Directors, and Staff Directors – and a companion letter to the Office of Management and Budget. More than 100 representatives signed each letter, with each signatory representing an organization or innovator from across the nation. Both letters are available online on the Northern Forest Center’s website.
Rob Riley, President of the Northern Forest Center and one of the founding members of RDIG said, “Since 2016, interest in rural America has grown considerably and rural narratives are considerably more constructive and complex – if not more positive – than they were in 2016. RDIG, through advocacy, ARO events, philanthropic engagement, and ongoing communications has had a sparking effect on that – and on giving hope and inspiration to other national rural organizations that are now stepping up to the plate to do more.”
Looking ahead, the Group, in partnership with the Aspen Institute Community Strategies Group, is poised to continue its role in bringing the issues and opportunities of rural America to the fore.
“Rural places, resources, and people are significant contributors to the nation’s progress and well-being. RDIG has built a reputation as a unique resource on rural economies and rural development,” said Carlton Owen, CEO of the Endowment. “With increased interest, awareness, and funding, this collaborative effort to support rural communities has achieved the power of the original vision and reached the point that it can be transitioned from a pilot to a vibrant, self-sustaining program. The Endowment is extremely proud to have been a part of its foundation.”
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For more information contact:
Alicia Cramer, Sr. Vice President, 205-792-8650, alicia@usendowment.org
The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities (the Endowment) is a not-for-profit public charity working collaboratively with partners in the public and private sectors to advance systemic, transformative, and sustainable change for the health and vitality of the nation’s working forests and forest-reliant communities – www.usendowment.org