Wednesday, September 21, 2011South Interior Building Auditorium
PARTNERS IN CONSERVATION
AWARDS CEREMONY
United States Department of the Interior
Message from the Secretary
Welcome to the Department of the Interior’s Partners in Conservation Awards Ceremony. It is my great pleasure to recognize the achievements of more than 500 diverse organizations and individuals who partner with others to conserve and restore our land, help wildlife thrive, address water issues, and forge solutions to complex natural resource challenges.
These awards represent the dedicated and tireless efforts of people from all walks of life from across our Nation. They share a deep commitment to conservation and community.
Today, we celebrate their accomplishments and ask them to join us in a new era of conservation, an era that I hope will rival those of Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, and John F. Kennedy. In coming years, we will have many days like today to celebrate successful partnerships rooted in a common purpose for conservation.
Please join me in congratulating our Partners in Conservation Award winners. Their achievements exemplify excellence in conservation through partnerships and cooperation with others. They are an inspiration to us all, and we are grateful for their efforts.
KenSalazar
Secretary of the Interior
Program
INTRODUCTIONS & NARRATOR Olivia Barton Ferriter Office of the Secretary
WELCOME Robert Stanton Office of the Secretary
KEYNOTE ADDRESS Ken Salazar Secretary of the Interior
PRESENTATION OF THE PARTNERS IN CONSERVATION AWARDS
PRESENTATION OF THE HISTORIC PRESERVATION AWARDS
CLOSING REMARKS Gabrielle Horner Office of the Secretary
Department of the InteriorPartners in Conservation AwardThe Partners in Conservation Award is a Department of the Interior Honor Award established to recognize conservation achievements that include collaborative activity among a diverse range of entities that may include Federal, state, local and tribal governments, private for-profit and nonprofit institutions, other nongovernmental entities, and individuals. This award enables the Secretary to acknowledge in one award the contributions of both Interior and non-Interior personnel. Overall, this award recognizes outstanding conservation results that have been produced primarily because of the engagement and contributions of many partners.
Award Recipients
Utah Reclamation Mitigation Conservation Commission
The Utah Reclamation Mitigation and Conservation Commission was established in 1994 as an Executive branch agency pursuant to the Central Utah Project Completion Act of 1992. The Commission, through multiple partnerships, is building a 21st Century conservation ethic. An exemplary model of transparent decision-making, the Commission has been extremely successful in establishing partnerships with federal and Utah state agencies, local governments, universities, non-profit organizations, and the Ute Tribe to implement a wide variety of ecosystem restoration and wildlife conservation projects. Since their enactment, the Commission has acquired and developed 21,300 acres of wetland and wildlife habitat. It has restored and provided access to 173 miles of rivers and streams. During 2010, the Commission acquired and preserved an additional 1,462 acres of wetlands and 11 miles of rivers and streams.Nominated by the Office of the Assistant Secretary, Water and Science
Jody WilliamsDon A. ChristiansenDallin W. JensenBrad BarberJim KarpowitzMichael C. WelandMark HoldenPamata Lolofie
Richard MingoJohn RiceMaureen WilsonDiane SimmonsChanna VyfvinkelIsabelle SimmonsKim WhitePaula Trater
DOI Oceans, Coasts and Great Lakes Activities Team
Serving as a model for interagency collaboration, the DOI’s Ocean Coastal and Great Lakes Activities Team, of the Office of Policy Analysis, is composed of more than 100 members throughout the Department. This includes the Offices of the Secretary and Assistant Secretary for Insular Affairs and Department Bureaus including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Geological Survey, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, the National Park Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Bureau of Land Management. Through this collaborative effort, the Team has partnered with 27 federal agencies, 9 regional planning areas, Tribal, State and local governments to develop and implement our Nation’s first National Ocean Policy. Nominated by the Office of Policy Analysis, Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and Budget Office of the Secretary
Office of the SecretaryFatima AhmadLaura Daniel DavisKim EltonNahal HamidiDominic MaioneMilo MasonJoan MoodyPat PourchotBarry RothJennifer SiskEileen Sobeck
Office of Policy AnalysisShella BiallasRandal R. BowmanMichael ChezikTerese L. HolmanLiza JohnsonAnn Tihansky
Office of Insular AffairsTony BabautaWendy FinkKaren KoltesNikolao Pula
U.S. Geological SurveyLeslie Holland-BartelsGary BrewerLeon CarlColleen CharlesLeslie DieraufRichard FerraroNorman Grannemann
John HainesSuzette M. KimballMatt LarsenDonna MyersDave RussSusan Russell-RobinsonEric StromJess WeaverWilliam Werkheiser
U.S. Fish & Wildlife ServiceHannibal BoltonBryan ArroyoGabriela ChavarriaChris DarnellJamie GeigerJason GoldbergAndrew GudeAngela GustavsonRichard HannanGeoff HaskettJohn HuffmanLinda KelseyJim KurthSusan ManginWill MeeksDallas MinerMarvin MoriartyGeorge NoguchiCarol PollioGregory SiekaniecJeff UnderwoodBret WolfeCharles Wooley
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and EnforcementEllen AronsonJoan BarminskiMary BoatmanMaureen BornholdtRodney CluckWalter CruickshankAmardeep DhanjuJulie FlemingJennifer GolladayLeslie HaennyLyn HerdtJames J. KendallFred KingRobert P. LaBelleJeff LomanJully McQuilliamsRenee OrrMichael RasserJohn Rodi
Pat RoscignoAlan ThornhillErin TragerDoug VandegraftChristine Taylor
National Park ServiceSarah AllenJeff CrossPhyllis EllinSherri FieldsBert FrostRick HarrisCliff McCreedyJeff MowLynne MurdockAnna TolineElizabeth Johnson
Bureau of Land ManagementEdwin Roberson
Gila Watershed Partnership of Arizona
Since 1983, the Gila Watershed Partnership of Arizona has collaborated with a great diversity of stakeholders to restore the health of the upper Gila watershed, which includes 7,430 square miles in Arizona. The Partnership includes more than 30 Government entities, a multitude of organizations, ranchers, businesses, educational institutions, and private landowners. This diverse group of stakeholders collaborates in consensus-driven efforts to develop solutions to watershed-level challenges. Nominated by the Bureau of Land Management
Arizona Department of Agriculture
Arizona Department of Environmental Quality
Arizona Department of Transportation
Arizona Department of Water Resources
Arizona Game and Fish Department Region V
Arizona Geological Survey
Arizona Nonpoint Education for Municipal Officials
Arizona State Land Department
City of Safford
Coronado Resource Conservation and Development, Inc.
Eastern Arizona College and EAC’s Discovery Park
Farm Bureau
Freeport McMoran Copper & Gold
Friends of Frisco
Gila Valley 4x4 Club
Gila Valley Irrigation District
Gila Valley Natural Resource Conservation District
Graham County
Permian Basin Memorandum of Agreement Program, New Mexico
This innovative collaborative partnership has used technology and partnerships to better protect cultural resources and support archaeological research while streamlining the permitting process for energy development in the Permian Basin of Southeastern New Mexico. Partners include BLM, the New Mexico State Historic Preservation Office, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the Mescalero Apache Tribe, and the New Mexico Archaeological Council. Thirty-five different industry partners have utilized this voluntary program, contributing more than $3.3 million in pooled resources to fund key landscape archaeological research and help foster balance between resource protection and energy development on public lands. Further, the program’s ethnographic inventory with the Mescalero Apache tribe has enabled Mescalero youth and elders to connect with areas of importance to the tribe in southeastern New Mexico and to participate in BLM’s “Take it Outside” program.Nominated by the Bureau of Land Management
New Mexico Historic Preservation DivisionJan Biella
Mescalero Apache TribeHolly Houghten
New Mexico Archaelogical CouncilDeni Seymour
Bureau of Land Management New Mexico State OfficeSigna Larralde
Bureau of Land Management Carlsbad Field OfficeGeorge MacDonell
Greenlee County
San Carlos Apache Tribe
Town of Clifton
Town of Duncan
Town of Thatcher
Town of Pima
Bureau of Land Management Safford Field Office
Bureau of Reclamation Phoenix Area Office
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Arizona Ecological Services Field Offices
U.S. Forest Service-Coronado National Forest, Safford Ranger District
U.S. Forest Service-Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, Clifton Ranger District
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Safford Field Office
University of Arizona
University of Arizona - Graham County Cooperative Extension
Jefferson Conservation Corps Partnership, Oregon
This project is a blue print for engaging, educating and employing youth in conservation. The Jefferson Conservation Corps provides work and training for young adults from the economically-challenged, rural communities in southern Oregon to become stewards of America’s Great Outdoors. This collaboration has created employment opportunities that produce tangible results for natural resource improvement and protection, including the removal of hundreds of acres of harmful weeds, maintenance of miles of trails, and fish habitat and stream restoration in support of endangered Coho salmon. Nominated by the Bureau of Land Management
Bureau of Land Management - OregonColleen DulinEdward W. ShepardGregory S. MclloryJames E. BrimbleKathryn A. SmithKathryn E. WetzelKatrina L. SymonsMatthew C. ChristensonMerry L. HaydonMichael B. MainPamela SterlingPauline Montgomery-BorgRachel ShowalterRoger E. BeckTeresa E. SpickermanWilliam A. Dove
Douglas SWCDChrissy MorganGlenn BradyWalt Barton
Jefferson Conservation CorpsAnthony NormanBrandon WiseJames ConnJason BairdKevin MortonMatthew Rich
Lomakatsi Restoration ProjectAaron NauthJustin CullumbineMarko BeyMichael Mitchell
Project Archaeology
Since 1990 the Bureau of Land Management and Montana State University Project have delivered high-quality conservation and heritage stewardship education programming and materials to nearly 10,000 educators through a collaborative network of 29-state and regional programs. Over 210,000 students have received cultural resource stewardship education in classrooms, museums, visitor centers, and in America’s Great Outdoors.Nominated by the Bureau of Land Management
Boston University American School of Oriental Research
Bureau of Land Management
Wyoming State Office
Colorado State Office
Jackson Field Office
Klamath Falls Field Office
Las Cruces Field Office
Nevada State Office San Joaquin River Gorge
National Division of Education Interpretation and Partnerships
National Division of Heritage Resources
Council for West Virginia Archaeology
Archaeological Analysis of Submerged Sites on the Gulf of Mexico Outer Continental Shelf
From the shipwrecked 1554 Spanish fleet off South Padre Island in Texas to the German U-boats that patrolled the bluish-green waters during the Gulf of Mexico -- shipwrecks represent approximately 500 years of maritime exploration and exploitation in this region. Archaeological Analysis of Submerged Sites on the Gulf of Mexico Outer Continental Shelf is a unique collaboration between Federal, private sector and academic entities to research, document, and raise public awareness of historically significant shipwreck sites that lie on the seafloor of the Gulf of Mexico – to establish surveys and preservation protocols for historic sites and their stories, as we expand our nation’s energy portfolio. Nominated by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement
Dallas Museum of Nature and Science, Texas
Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, & Social Work
Florida Public Archaeology Network
Idaho State Historical Society
Indiana State Museum
Kansas State Historical Society
Kentucky Archaeological Survey
Lindenwood University, Missouri
Missouri Archaeological Society
Montana State University Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Montana State University Department of Education
Nevada State Museum
New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources
New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies
Northern Arizona University Center for Science Teaching and Learning
Project Archaeology
San Diego Archaeological Center
Smithsonian Institution, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History
State of Alaska, Office of History and Archaeology
SWCA Associates, Colorado
Tennessee State Parks
Turning Points in American History, Vermont
University of CA- Berkeley, Archaeological Research Facility
University of Iowa, Office of the Iowa State Archaeologist
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Research Laboratory of Archaeology
University of Wisconsin LaCrosse, Mississippi Valley Archaeological Center
Utah Museum of Natural History
Archaeology Institute University of West FloridaGregory D. CookNorine G. Carroll
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and EnforcementChristopher E. Horrell
Florida Public Archaeology NetworkDella Scott-Ireton
Lousiana State University Geography and AnthropolgyGrazilea Miot da SilvaPatrick A. Hesp
Spree ExpeditionsRobert Franklin Albright Wasson II
Tesla OffshoreAmanda M. EvansErin E. VoisinMatthew E. Keith
Mead A. AllisonClarence F. Sharar III
Subsistence Sharing Network, Alaska
Exemplifying best practices for sustainable resource management within the Department of the Interior, the Subsistence Sharing Network is working to quantify the traditional values of cooperative and reciprocal relationships among Alaska Native people. Through their studies, the network is setting new professional standards for how social science projects could be conducted on the North Slope to achieve broad community support and participation, with responsible dissemination of research results. Nominated by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement
Alaska Department of Fish and Game Division of SubsistenceJames Magdanz
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and EnforcementDr. Dee WilliamsJoyce C. Campbell
Council of Athabascan Tribal GovernmentsBryan Maracle
National Science FoundationAnna Kertulla de Echave
Native Village of KaktovikFenton Rexford
North Slope Borough Department of Wildlife ManagementMike PedersonTaqulik Hepa
University of Alaska Fairbanks Institute of Arctic BiologyDr. Gary Kofinas
University of Alaska Fairbanks School of Natural Resources and Agricultural SciencesDr. Shauna BurnSilver
Venetie Village CouncilEddie Frank
Wainwright Traditional CouncilJune Childress
San Joaquin River Restoration Program, California
The San Joaquin River Restoration Program is a collaborative and cooperative effort among individual land owners, nongovernmental environmental organizations, water users, and state and Federal agencies to restore the San Joaquin River below Friant Dam. Though the Program partners have diverse and competing interests, they are able to work collaboratively to ensure sustainable management of the Nation’s water and natural resources through establishment of clear commitments, diverse technical working groups, and a comprehensive public involvement program. Nominated by the Bureau of Reclamation
Bay InstitutePeter Vorster
California Department of Water ResourcesKaren DulikKevin FaulkenberryPaul RomeroPaula Landis
California Dept of Fish and Game (DFG)Dale MitchellDean MarstonGerald Hatler
U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceDan CastleberryJeff McLainRebecca LorigRobert ClarkeStephanie Rickabaugh
Friant Water Users AuthorityBill LuceRon JacobsmaSteve Ottemoeller
Madera-Chowhilla Water & Power Authority Doug Welch
MWH Americas, Inc.Bill SwansonCraig Moyle
National Marine Fisheries ServiceMaria ReaRhonda Reed
Natural Resources Defense Council Doug ObegiMonty Schmitt
San Joaquin River ConservancyMelinda Marks
San Joaquin River Parkway and Conservation TrustDave Koehler
San Joaquin River Parkway and Conservation TrustSharon Weaver
Alicia E. ForsytheApurba K. BorahDavid M. MooneyDouglas A. DeflitchErin C. RiceJason R. PhillipsKatherine W. RossKatrina E. HarrisonKaylee AllenMargaret A. GiddingMargaret E. BabloMario A. ManzoMichelle L. BanonisRod MeadeStephen J. TigheStephen L. Lee
Camp Lawton Partnership Team, Georgia
One hundred fifty years after the start of the Civil War, a new chapter of Civil War history is being written, thanks to Camp Lawton Partnership Team. The Project began as a collaborative effort between Georgia Department of Natural Resources and Georgia Southern University’s (GSU) Department of Sociology and Anthropology, and later U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) in an attempt to determine the exact location of the Camp Lawton stockade at Magnolia Springs State Park.
The project team works closely with area schools, and regularly speaks to organizations focused on history, education and tourism, as well as at conferences throughout the region. Through their efforts, thousands of people have learned more about their history as citizens of the United States and the value of the cultural resources currently managed by USFWS and Georgia DNR.Nominated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Friends of Nevada Wilderness
Celebrating their 27th Anniversary, Friends of Nevada Wilderness is dedicated to preserving Nevada’s wildlife heritage. With diverse groups of partners, including business, scouting organizations, faith-based and service groups, Friends of Nevada Wilderness have assisted in the designation of more than 3 million acres of wilderness across Nevada.Nominated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceAllan BrownJudy ToppinsPhil KloerRichard Kanaski
Georgia Department of Natural Resources Historic Preservation DivisionDavid Crass
Georgia Department of Natural Resources Magnolia Springs State Park Sam Willaims
Georgia Southern University Department of Sociology and AnthropologyAmanda MorrowDr. John DerdenDr. Sue MooreJames (Kevin) ChapmanMatthew LukeMatthew Newberry
Jenkins County, GeorgiaMabel Jenkins
Bart PattersonDr. Larry DwyerHermi HiattJohn HiattKaren BoegerKurt Kuznicki
Marge SillMeghan WolfPete BradleyRoger SchollShaaron Netherton
Liberty Wildlife Rehabilitation Foundation
Through her work as Executive Director of the Liberty Rehabilitation Foundation, Megan Mosby is a model of dedication to wildlife conservation and Native American cultural and religious practices. Last July, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Southwest Regional Director Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) with Liberty Wildlife Rehabilitation Foundation established and operates a two-year pilot non-eagle feather repository program. The pilot was developed to provide feathers to federally-recognized tribal members for use in cultural, ceremonial and religious practices. Nominated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Megan Mosby
Wyoming Governor’s Sage-Grouse Implementation Team
Composed of State and Federal agencies, natural resource development industries and non-governmental organizations, the Wyoming Governor’s Sage-Grouse Implementation Team has developed a long term, science based strategy for conservation of greater sage-grouse in Wyoming. In addition to this conservation strategy, the Team is allowing for energy development in the State. Their work has resulted in conservation and resource development options that currently conserve 1 million acres of sagebrush habitats in Wyoming. Nominated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Governor Matthew MeadGovernor Dave FreudenthalCommissioner Doug ThompsonHelen JonesJerimiah RiemanRyan Lance
American ColloidJonathan Madill
Audubon Brian Rutledge
Bureau of Land Management - WyomingBill Hill
EnCanaPaul Ulrich
U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceBrian KellyPat Deibert
Horizon Wind EnergyRene Braud
Rimfire RanchJohn Andrikopoulis
U.S. Forest ServiceClinton McCarthyPeter McDonald
Uranium OneDonna Wichers
USDA Natural Resources Conservation ServiceXavier Montoya
Williams PetroleumPenny Bellah
Wyoming Department of AgricultureJason Fearneyhough
Wyoming Department of Environmental QualityCarol BilbroughJohn Corra
Wyoming Game and FishJohn Emmerich
Wyoming Office of State Lands & InvestmentsLynne BoomgaardenSusan Child
2nd Nature: National Parks and the Power of Art, Washington, DC
The 2nd Nature program is engaging DC youth in discovering and connecting to their local national parks through art, music, and media. A partnership between the National Capital Region of the National Park Service and the Latin American Youth Center, 2nd Nature is a model for community engagement and for how to better connect diverse and younger audiences with “America’s Urban Great Outdoors.” Nominated by the National Park Service
Latin American Youth CenterClaudia DiazHoward SolomonLori KaplanMarie Moll
National Park Service National Capital RegionAnne O’NeillLaura HarveyMargie OrtizWendy O’ Sullivan
Wyoming Wildlife and Natural Resource TrustBob Budd
Wyoming Wildlife FederationMark Winland
Pu’ukohola Heiau National Historic Site, Hawaii
After major earthquake damage in 2006, Pu’ukohola Heiau National Historic Site (completed in 1791), one of Hawaii’s most significant Native Hawaiian sites and visitor attractions, volunteers came together over 4 years to restore the sacred temples known as Pu’ukohola Heiau and Mailekini Heiau. While this successful volunteer partnership resulted in a savings of over $3 million and a complete restoration of the temples, one of the most meaningful achievements experienced was the hands-on engagement of 600 native Hawaiians and Hawaiians at heart from across the State of Hawai’i and the mainland. This project provides a international and innovative model for engagement of native peoples in the stewardship of their sacred sites.Nominated by the National Park Service
Na Papa Kanaka o Pu’ukohola HeiauBraven Kalama CabigonDaniel Kawaiaea Sr. John Kaponoai MolitauKe’eaumoku KapuKyle NakaneluaSamuel Gon IIITheodora Kehau Kruse
National Park Service Adam JohnsonDaniel Kawaiaea Jr.Francis SinenciLorna AkimaVirginia HirayamaWalter WongWilliam Akima, Jr.
Scanning the Conservation Horizon A Guide to Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment
The National Wildlife Federation in conjunction with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service led the conservation community in the development of a guidebook called, “Scanning the Conservation Horizon, A Guide to Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment.” This guidebook is being used across Department of the Interior (DOI) bureaus and the Landscape Conservation Cooperatives to guide standardized vulnerability assessment of the resources it manages and will allow comparison of risk across DOI bureaus for a common understanding of the impacts of climate change.Nominated by the U.S. Geological Survey
Center for Conservation BiologyMichael Wilson
EcoAdaptJennie Hoffman
U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceNancy Green
Manomet Center for Conservation ScienceHector Galbraith
Massachusetts Division of Fish and WildlifeJohn O’Leary
National Park ServiceJohn Gross
National Wildlife FederationBruce SteinDoug InkleyNaomi EdelsonPatty Glick
NatureServBruce Young
Nevada Natural Heritage ProgramJennifer NewmarkKristin Szabo
Texas Tech UniversityKatharine Hayhoe
The Heinz Center for Science Economics and the EnvironmentDennis Ojima
The Nature ConservancyCarolyn EnquistEvan GirvetzPatrick McCarthy
U.S. Forest ServiceDeborah FinchKaren BagneLinda JoyceMegan Friggens
U.S. Geological Survey K. Bruce Jones
University of WashingtonJosh LawlerMichael Case
Washington Department of Fish and WildlifeRocky Beach
Wildlife Conservation SocietyMolly Cross
World Wildlife FundJeff Price
Southern Arizona Buffelgrass Coordination Center
An integrated effort by Federal, local government, academic and private institutions, Southern Arizona Buffelgrass Coordination Center (SABCC), is protecting the ecosystem and community from invasive buffelgrass. By working across jurisdictions and coordinating among public and private institutions, the SABCC has created a partnership that has synchronized regional efforts, realized efficiencies by directing both information and resources toward a common infrastructure, and engaged and educated legislators and the public. Nominated by the U.S. Geological Survey
Arizona-Sonora Desert MuseumRick Brusca Tim Vimmerstedt
Bureau of Land Management Tucson Field Office Brian BellewDarrell Tersey
Colorado State University Gregory Newman
Comcast Kelle Maslyn
Cox Communications Lisa Lovallo
Logan Simpson Design Richard Remington
National Park Service Saguaro National Park Dana BackerDarla Sidles
Northern Arizona State University Aaryn Olsson
Pima Association of Governments Claire Zucker
Pima County Natural Resources Parks and Recreation Chuck HuckelberryDoug SiegelKerry Baldwin
Pima County Office of Emergency Management and Homeland Security Jeff GuthrieMike Hein
Pima County Rural/Metro Fire Department Tom Brandhuber
Sonoran Desert Weedwackers - Southern Arizona Native Plants SocietyMarilyn Hanson
Sonoran Institute Cheryl McIntyre
Southern Arizona Leadership Council Jim Kiser Ron ShoopmanSarah Brown Smallhouse
Southwest Gas Walter Richter
The Thomas R. Brown FoundationsSarah Brown Smallhouse
Tohono O’odham Nation Karen Howe
Town of Marana Janine Spencer
Town of Oro ValleyKarn Boyce
Town of Sahuarita Mary Reynolds
Trico Frank Gonzales
Tucson Audubon Society Kendall Kroesen
Tucson Clean and Beautiful City of TucsonB.J. Cordova
Tucson Electric PowerErik BakkenJohn Brown
Tucson International Airport Bill Haldeman
Bonnie AllinTina Moore
U.S. Forest Service Coronado National Forest Jim UpchurchSharon Biedenbender
U.S. Forest Service Southwestern Regional Office Allan White
U.S. Geological SurveyJeff Morisette
Julio BetancourtSharon K. GrossTracy Holcombe
University of Arizona Chuck HutchinsonMike Candrea
Southern Arizona Buffelgrass Coordination CenterLindy Brigham Sarah Brown Smallhouse Travis Bean