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Awards
This is the fifth time the county's Department
of Natural Resources has presented the Green Globe Awards. The biennial
award was first given on Earth Day 1997. All recipients excel in
leadership and activities that foster environmental stewardship
by protecting the environment, managing natural resources and benefiting
the community.
Nominees are participants in various programs sponsored by the
County. Currently hundreds of businesses actively participate in
County programs and thousands of citizens work hand-in- hand with
us to protect our environmental legacy.
King County Executive Ron Sims presented the Green Globe Awards
at Westlake Park on Earth Day on April 22, 2005 at Westlake
Park.
Award Winners
Environmental Catalyst
William Ruckelshaus
Lifetime Achievement Award
The Late Joel Kuperberg
Leader in Biosolids Award
Dr. Sally Brown, University of Washington, College
of Forest Resources, and Dr. Chuck Henry, University of Washington
- Bothell, Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences
Leader in Open Space Conservation Award
The Trust for Public Land
Leader in Hazardous Waste Reduction Award
AAA Washington
Leader in Habitat Protection Award
Wendy Walsh
Leader in Industrial Waste Reduction
Honeywell International
Leader Market Development for Recyclable Materials
Award
YK Products, LLC
Leader in Recycling, Waste Prevention and Use
of Recycled Materials Award
The RE Store
Leader in Resource Management Award
Alayne Blickle, Director, Horses for Clean Water
Leader in Water Quality Protection Award
Eastside Fire & Rescue
Leader in Sustainable Building Award
Port Blakely Communities
Leader in Sustainable Schools Award
The Evergreen School
Leader in Alternative Energy Award
FuelCell Energy, Inc.
Environmental
Catalyst
William Ruckelshaus
William
Ruckelshaus will receive the Environmental Catalyst Award,
which is King County's highest honor and is bestowed on individuals
for their extraordinary effort in bringing people of diverse interests
together to solve environmental problems in the community's best
interests. No one in the Puget Sound area is more deserving than
Bill Ruckelshaus, who co-founded the Shared Strategy process, along
with King County Executive Ron Sims and others. The Shared Strategy
is the framework within which King County watersheds are preparing
groundbreaking plans - by June 30, 2005 - for recovering harvestable
and sustainable populations of salmon across the Puget Sound region.
Mr. Ruckelshaus' hands-on experience in solving tough quality of
life problems has guided Shared Strategy's visionary yet pragmatic
approach, and gives the region confidence that we can achieve this
bold goal. Mr. Ruckelshaus is also chairman of the state Salmon
Recovery Funding Board, which provides a critical funding source
for salmon habitat and acquisition projects in King County watersheds
and beyond. And Mr. Ruckelshaus is also a member of the U.S. Commission
on Ocean Policy, which is helping bring attention to the importance
of protecting and restoring saltwater areas, including Puget Sound,
that are important to salmon recovery and a range of cultural, economic,
and quality of life interests, e.g., shellfish harvest and the tourism
industry. Mr. Ruckelshaus became the United States Environmental
Protection Agency's first Administrator when the agency was formed
in December 1970, where he served until April 1973. In April 1973
he was appointed acting Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
and in the same year was appointed Deputy Attorney General of the
United States Department of Justice. Mr. Ruckelshaus is currently
a Strategic Director in the Madrona Venture Fund, formed in 1999
and a principal in Madrona Investment Group, L.L.C. (MIG), a Seattle
based investment company, formed in 1996.
Lifetime
Achievement Award
The late Joel Kuperberg
The
late Joel Kuperberg received the Lifetime Achievement
Award for significant work during his lifetime to preserve and protect
our environment. The award was accepted by his wife, Yvonne Kuperberg.
Joel Kuperberg lived on Vashon for the past 25 years with his wife
Yvonne. He was considered a leader for conservation on Vashon/Maury
Islands, having worked to protect Fern Cove and the Shinglemill
Salmon Preserve.
On the island he was active in Salmon Watchers, Preserve Our Islands,
Audubon, Protect Our Water, Land Trust, and Vashon-Maury Island
Community Council. He also helped found the Forest Stewards to promote
sustainable forestry and to educate landowners about forestry.
Joel was born in Feburary 1927 in Miami, Florida and earned a masters
in botany. He utilized that education to protection Florida’s
ecosystems, including founding the Collier County Conservancy, assisting
in establishing two national estuarine sanctuaries and serving as
Executive Director of the Florida State Lands Agency. Joel passed
away in late December.
The St. Petersburg Times noted that as director of the Florida
State Lands Agency “he defied some of Florida’s most
influential developers.” He left that job to run the Trust
for Public Land and ultimately moved to Vashon Island
Leader in
Biosolids Award
Dr. Sally Brown, University of
Washington, College of Forest Resources, and Dr Chuck Henry, University
of Washington - Bothell, Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences
Dr.
Sally Brown and Dr. Chuck Henry received the Leader
in Biosolids Award for outstanding work to create a closed-loop
recycling system using biosolids to grow canola for biodiesel to
be used as fuel for transporting biosolids. Biosolids provide soils
with organic matter and nutrients, often improving crop yield. In
eastern Washington, farmers already use King County biosolids on
wheat, hops, orchards and pastures, but they are always keen to
try new crops that may expand the local economy. Scientists Brown
and Henry convinced a Yakima Valley farmer to test growing canola
as a biofuel crop. They secured a grant from U.S. Department of
Agriculture to study the potential to increase canola crop yield
by fertilizing with biosolids, and to evaluate business strategies
for extracting the canola oil and converting it to biodiesel. The
first phase of the project demonstrated the use of biosolids as
a fertilizer for canola and the economic feasibility of biodiesel
production. A second phase of the project has been proposed to USDA
to further develop and implement the business plan, including increasing
the acreage of canola crops fertilized with biosolids, oil extraction,
biodiesel production and marketing the canola by-products and biodiesel.
Sally Brown and Chuck Henry provided the vision and the expertise
to develop an innovative and collaborative research project that
may lead to a new market for biosolids and a ‘home-grown’
source of biofuel.
Leader
in Open Space Conservation Award
The Trust for Public Land
The
Trust for Public Land received the Leader in Open Space
Conservation Award for outstanding work in protecting King County's
ecological lands, regional trails, farms, forests and shoreline
areas to ensure that the Cascade Foothills remain forested, critical
salmon habitat is protected and missing links in the regional trail
system are completed. Roger Hoesterey, NW Regional Director accepted
the award.
The Trust for Public Land recently helped develop the Greenprint
for King County, a powerful computer model that allows King County
to assess where conservation actions and land acquisition will produce
the most public benefits. The Trust for Public Land has also played
a key role in numerous open space protection efforts in King County,
including Tollgate Farm, Rattlesnake Ridge and Lake, Bear Creek,
Mount Si, Echo Lake, West Tiger Mountain, Middle Fork Snoqualmie
River, Raging River, Cedar River and more. And TPL was a founding
partner of the Mountains to Sound Greenway.
The Trust for Public Land is a private, nonprofit land conservation
organization that works across the nation to conserve land for people.
Founded in 1972, TPL specializes in conservation real estate, applying
its expertise in negotiation, public finance and law to protect
land for public use. Working with private landowners, communities
and government agencies, TPL has helped protect more than 1,400
special places nationwide for people to enjoy as parks, playgrounds,
community gardens, historic landmarks and wilderness lands.
Leader in
Hazardous Waste Reduction Award
AAA Washington
AAA
Washington received the Leader in Hazardous Waste Reduction
Award for its demonstration of outstanding leadership in reducing
hazardous waste and promoting the ethic of environmental responsibility.
Overall as a corporation, AAA Washington/Inland has implemented
best practices in their own facilities; assisted AAA-approved shops
that they work with to be environmentally responsible; and has provided
pollution prevention assistance and education to thousands of AAA
members. Charlie Liekweg, President and CEO of AAA Washington and
company representatives accepted the award.
AAA Washington's fleet operations have implemented a variety of
waste reducing practices from using non chlorinated brake cleaners,
to purchasing tow trucks that use a clean biodiesel mixture - lowering
their dependence on foreign oil and improving air quality. When
they were slated to move to a new location near the Magnolia bridge
in Seattle, design and construction of the new space incorporated
the best environmental practices, such as a built-in indoor vehicle
wash pad and complete elimination of a solvent parts washing tank
- earning them the 5star EnviroStars rating.
Many of AAA's affiliated approved automotive repair (AAR) facilities
are EnviroStars certified as well. Potential approved shops are
inspected by AAA with the EnviroStars qualification standards in
mind. Shops that meet both AAA requirements and have been EnviroStars
certified, are highlighted on the website with the EnviroStars logo.
Each year around Earth Day, AAA Washington hosts a vehicle battery
roundup, collecting car batteries from the public and sending them
to recycling centers. Proceeds from this event are contributed to
the Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust. This year the event was expanded
to replace and recycle hazardous mercury switches from vehicles,
which are used to operate lights under the hood and in the trunk.
Leader
in Habitat Protection Award
Wendy Walsh
Wendy
Walsh received the Leader in Habitat Protection Award her
efforts to protect and restore fish and wildlife habitat. Her interest
in working on environmental issues began over 30 years ago, when
she and her husband purchased their 61 acre property that has a
½ mile long section of Bear Creek running through it. She
began educating the entire student and parent population at Cottage
Lake Elementary on the treasures within Bear Creek. Today, Wendy
routinely offers tours, educational events and research opportunities
from her home. The property has been placed into a permanent conservation
easement so that future generations are able to enjoy and appreciate
the original natural landscape.
Wendy is also active in Freshwater Mussel Awareness and Conservation
and while she works hard and loves all the wildlife, freshwater
mussel’s hold a special place in her heart and in the stream
bed running through her property. Upon learning that mussels are
an indicator species for the health of a stream, Wendy became interested
in protecting the Bear Creek mussels and has worked on this for
30 years. Her environmental action and education efforts are as
enthusiastic and purposeful as they were when she began over three
decades ago.
Leader in
Industrial Waste Reduction
Honeywell International
Honeywell
International received the Leader in Industrial Waste
Reduction Award for its efforts to voluntarily implement innovative
pollution prevention strategies, significantly updating its pretreatment
equipment and methods. Honeywell was the Industrial Waste program's
2003 EnvirOvation Award winner. Over the last several years Honeywell
voluntarily updated its wastewater pretreatment equipment and methods,
spending more than $1.7 million for a state-of-the-art system with
many safety features, redundant controls and monitoring features.
The system neutralizes acidic wastewater from the company's metal-finishing
and electronic component operations, resulting in an approximate
33 percent reduction in the generation of dangerous waste. Shaila
Nyborg accepted the award.
Honeywell is also protecting our environment through a culture
of environmental stewardship it promotes throughout the company.
In 2004 Honeywell purchased a triple-rinse station, at a cost of
around $35,000, to prepare its empty one-gallon hazardous materials
containers for recycling. Last year Honeywell also turned in its
single dumpster and switched to two, one for mixed recyclables and
one for waste. Recyclable materials are segregated and picked up
weekly. Honeywell has encouraged its employees to recycle electronics
with two recycling events, one for household electronics, which
collected 4,000 pounds of household electronics and one for cell
phones, which collected 166 pounds of cell phone and cell phone
equipment.
Leader
in Market Development for Recyclable Materials Award
YK Products LLC
YK
Products LLC of Everett received the Leader in Market
Development for Recyclable Materials Award for its outstanding
efforts to create markets for recyclable materials and products.
YK Products manufactures U.S. Cold Patch, a revolutionary new cold
asphalt product made from recycled asphalt pavement that is used
for patching potholes and cracks in roads and parking lots. Every
year some 20 million tons of asphalt pavement is disposed in the
nation's landfills. Using YK Products patented technology, old asphalt
is being converted into a durable, premium patching compound instead
of being thrown away. The product is now widely used by municipal
public works departments in Washington (including Seattle and King
County), Oregon, California, Nevada, Utah and Arizona. John Ackerman
accepted the award.
In just six years, YK Products has developed and patented the U.S.
Cold Patch technology, proved the structural and environmental superiority
of this new material through independent tests conducted at the
Superpave lab at Washington State University, and earned a significant
share of the consumer market for cold asphalt in the western and
mountain states region. This year U.S. Cold Patch will begin national
distribution to the retail and industrial markets through home improvement
stores and industrial suppliers. YK Products is a partner in King
County's LinkUp program, which works with businesses to improve
markets for recycled materials.
Leader in
Recycling, Waste Prevention and Use of Recycled Materials Award
The RE Store
The
RE Store of Ballard received the Leader in Recycling,
Waste Prevention and Use of Recycled Materials Award for its
outstanding efforts to promote waste prevention, recycling and the
use of recycled products in the workplace. The RE Store in Seattle
has succeeded in diverting tons of reusable building materials from
the landfill by salvaging and selling things like cabinets, doors,
lumber, lighting, flooring, sinks and hardware from construction
sites. The Seattle RE Store opened in 1999 and in 2004 forged an
innovative partnership with King County to reclaim building materials
from County projects. At no cost to the County, the RE Store picks
up reusable materials from King County renovation and deconstruction
sites and resells the materials through its Ballard store. More
than five tons of materials were diverted from the landfill in just
the first four months of the partnership. Now, the City of Seattle,
the Port of Seattle, the City of Honolulu and others are using this
as a model for their own proposed salvage agreements. Pat Finn accepted
the award.
In addition to the King County sites, RE Store salvage crews have
recovered usable building materials from many renovation, demolition
and deconstruction sites at a number of Seattle schools, the Kingdome
and the old Fircrest buildings in Shoreline. The RE Store has pioneered
innovative projects such as saving landscape plants from construction
sites and has been a tireless promoter of waste prevention, hosting
a Recycled Art Show at its store and sponsoring an award-winning
reuse display at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show.
Leader in
Resource Management Award
Alayne Blickle, Director, Horses
for Clean Water
Alayne
Blickle received the Leader in Resource Management Award
for her efforts to conserve resource lands and promote innovative
agricultural or forest management practices that protect the environment.
As Director of Horses for Clean Water for the past 12 years, Blickle
has transformed the relationship of horse owners and their land
by showing them how to reduce unhealthy surface and groundwater
runoff that can affect water quality and fish habitat. Her innovative
practices are a hit with horse owners because they also promote
healthier horses and easier chore time.
With a county of over 20,000 horses, Blickle’s efforts have
reached an important population with practical information on proper
manure and mud management, pasture management, how to exclude horses
from streams and wetlands, and how property conditions can mitigate
the effects of horses on the land. She created the monthly "Green
Horse" e-mail magazine, which provides information for horse
owners and features environmental best management practices. In
partnership with King County she also developed a "Horse Businesses
for Clean Water" manual that has been widely distributed to
commercial stables to assist them as they improve or begin to make
significant changes to their horsekeeping practices. Blickle leads
by example, using her own farm for tours and educational events.
Leader in
Water Quality Protection Award
Eastside Fire & Rescue
Eastside
Fire & Rescue received the Leader in Water Quality
Protection Award for its efforts to prevent pollution and protect
the region’s lakes, streams and Puget Sound. Eastside Fire
& Rescue operates 16 fire stations, serving Carnation, Issaquah,
North Bend, and Sammamish, and Preston, May Valley, Tiger Mountain,
and Wilderness Rim.
A year ago, Eastside Fire & Rescue began significant changes
to protect the environment. Fire trucks and other vehicles were
typically washed in the station house driveways where the soapy
runoff drained to the storm drains. Now, all vehicles are either
washed inside the stations so that the water goes to the sanitary
sewer or on a grassy or gravel area to allow the washwater to infiltrate
slowly into the ground. Also, they began draining fluids from cars
before cutting them open as practice for rescues to keep any auto
fluids from spilling on the ground. An auto recycler now picks up
the hulks and parts once the practice exercise is finished.
The mechanics shop is located at the headquarters station in Issaquah.
In the past, dirty engines were steam cleaned prior to maintenance
on a gravel area behind the building. This meant oil and other vehicle
fluids were being washed into the ground. They now take the trucks
and other rescue vehicles to the new Issaquah Public Works maintenance
facility that has a closed loop recycling system for steam cleaning.
They have added a new stormwater training class to the annual training
program that firefighters and officers are required to complete.
They are currently working on a computer version so the training
can be done on the internet.
The environmental ethic of Eastside Fire & Rescue can also been
seen in its newest station. Station No. 73, built three years ago
in the Issaquah Highlands area, has been awarded a "Green Building"
award. One of its many green features is that rainwater is collected
from the rooftop, and reused for vehicle washing and fire fighting
practices at the station house.
Leader in Sustainable
Building Award
Port Blakely Communities
Port
Blakely Communities received the Leader in Sustainable
Building Award for its efforts to encourage the wise use of resources
in their building practices. Port Blakely Communities, developer
of the Issaquah Highlands Community, is an active member of the
Built Green program and the driving force behind the Built Green
Idea Home, which opened in 2004.
Port Blakely Communities implemented extensive sustainable development
features into Issaquah Highlands such as preservation of over 1,500
acres as permanent open space and habitat for local wildlife and
over 120-acres of wetlands to ensure a healthy ecosystem, community
protection from unauthorized pesticide/herbicide use by homeowners,
homeowner education on Best Management Practices for green living,
and structured land so that stormwater infiltrates naturally to
help protect Issaquah drinking water, aquifer and streams. Judd
Kirk, President of Port Blakely Communities accepted the award.
In addition, Port Blakely Communities required all builders at
Issaquah Highlands to meet Built Green 3-star certification, which
encourages participation in King County's Construction Works program
and also requires all builders to submit a recycling plan for minimizing
construction wastes. On the land development side, Port Blakely
Communities recycled dirt that would have normally gone to a landfill,
separating it into topsoil, rocks, and fill for reuse. Judd Kirk,
President of Port Blakely Communities accepted the award.
Leader in
Sustainable Schools Award
The Evergreen School
The
Evergreen School in Shoreline received the Leader in Sustainable
Schools Award for its outstanding efforts to expand conservation
practices and raise awareness among students and staff about the
importance of stewardship practices.
The Evergreen School, a private pre-K through 8th grade school
in Shoreline, has made substantial gains in reducing their environmental
footprint and setting a good example for their students, staff and
other schools. As a participant in the King County Green Schools
Program, the Evergreen School pledged to make environmental gains
in the categories of Waste Reduction and Recycling, Water Conservation,
Energy Conservation, and Environmental Education and has made measurable
strides in each of these areas.
Plastic utensils have been virtually banned school-wide from delivered
and self-brought lunches, and students now use durable utensils
and mugs. Residual food waste from school lunches is composted in
a medium-scale composting system on-site. Recycling has increased,
requiring the upsizing of the recycling dumpster from 1.8 cubic
yards per month to 4 cubic yards per month. The school is now considering
implementing an on-site yard debris composting program.
Low flow sinks and toilets are in use throughout the school. An
efficient irrigation system is in place for the school’s play
fields. The students observed and gathered data on water use (including
hand washing habits) and made recommendations for how much water
could be saved if students changed their behavior (by turning off
water while soaping up, etc).
The school’s heating and ventilation system was re-commissioned,
thermostats were reset, and a faulty pump was identified and replaced.
In fact, natural gas use dropped from 23 therms per month to 15.3
therms per month between August 2001 and April 2004. Solar power
is being researched for possible implementation in the future.
Upper classes (grades 4 and 5) designed and led a Conservation
Carnival to educate younger students. They developed hands-on materials
and games for booths on Food Waste Composting, Recycling, Reuse,
Energy Conservation and Water Conservation. The school’s computer
staff is initiating a program to accept electronics from the school
community for use in teaching students about computer repair, and
to assure the safe recycling of all units brought to the school.
Leader in
Alternative Energy Award
FuelCell Energy, Inc.
FuelCell
Inc, received the Leader in Alternative Energy for its
leadership in taking the risk, providing the expertise and making
the substantial investment in a fuel cell demonstration project
with King County and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. FuelCell
Energy, in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
and King County, has created the world’s largest demonstration
project of a single-unit fuel cell power plant. Using digester gas
from King County’s South Treatment Plant in Renton, this fuel
cell power plant can produce up to one megawatt of electricity,
enough to run 1,000 households.
The electricity generated by the fuel cell is used to run some
of the treatment plant equipment and has cut power costs down by
15 percent. Power generated from the fuel cell is “green”
power in at least three ways. First, it uses a renewable fuel source,
wastewater digester gas. Second, it produces power efficiently.
Third, has very low emissions and emits substantially fewer pollutants
than combustion engines and turbines.
If this demonstration project proves successful, full-scale fuel
cells could provide electricity all over the country. In the United
States alone, over 400 treatment plants produce enough digester
gas to generate a megawatt of electricity each from a stationary
fuel cell. Tours of the demonstration project are available by contacting
the county’s Wastewater Treatment Division.
For more information visit http://dnr.metrokc.gov/wtd/fuelcell/index.htm
.
Related Information:
2003 Green Globe Award
Winners
2001 Green Globe Award
Winners
1999 Green Globe Award
Winners
For information on how you or your business can get involved, or
on any of the Green Globe Award Winners, call 206-296-8361. |