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Blue Ridge Parkway
Parks As Classrooms receives funding from Parkway Foundation

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Date: October 25, 2006
Contact: Tina White, (828) 271 4779 ext 312

The Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation recently awarded a $98,000 grant that will make it possible for Parkway rangers to conduct educational outreach programs for students in communities along the entire 469-mile scenic corridor. Dr. Houck Medford, executive director of the Foundation, noted that this year’s grant--the largest his organization has given for “Parks as Classrooms”--will let the Parkway’s educational rangers offer these activities throughout the school year.

Last year Parkway staff gave programs to some 37,000 students, both in the classroom and as part of school field trips in which students explored the ecology of Parkway streams and forests, learned about wildlife, and took part in hands-on demonstrations of regional history and culture. “Funding shortfalls make it very, very difficult for the Parkway to offer these programs without philanthropic support and we’re delighted to step in and meet this need,” Medford said.

Medford said that adjacent development, air pollution, exotic plants and a host of other threats are undermining the scenic and natural qualities of the Parkway. “Instilling in children a reflective and informed appreciation of the Parkway and the values it represents is essential to preservation of this national treasure and, more broadly, to the future of this wonderful mountain region.”

Parkway Superintendent Phil Francis described the gift as “just another example of the Foundation’s on-going support that lets us provide much-needed services and undertake initiatives that are far beyond what we could accomplish on our own.”

Medford said that the grant was made possible by the generosity of private individuals, corporations and other foundations, and by revenues from the sale of Blue Ridge Parkway specialty license tags in North Carolina. Each tag returns $20 to the Foundation. According to Medford, the tag money is used for a number of projects and has helped reprint the official Parkway brochure, underwrite scientific studies and visitor surveys, purchase interpretive exhibits, and support planning for the Moses H. Cone Memorial Park.

More information about the specialty tag program and other activities by the Foundation is available on-line at www.brpfoundation.org or by calling (336) 721-0260.

Graceful curves and old fences along the Parkway  

Did You Know?
The Blue Ridge Parkway was designed as a recreational motor road, connecting Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah National Parks.

Last Updated: November 02, 2006 at 08:42 EST