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September 24, 2007
Summer indoors?
This from PPIC and Stewardship Council...
Seems like a lot of kids did not get outdoors this summer.
2007: The Summer without the Outdoors
Comments on new data about California's teens and their summer vacation
Findings from the Public Policy Institute of California Poll released September 21, 2007:
· There are 2.8 million teens in California between 13-17 years old (8% of the population)
· 47% of the teens participated in outdoor nature activities once or not at all. This means 1.3 million teens did not hike, go camping or experience nature during the summer.
· 41% of parents say their child did not participate in outdoor team activities (soccer, baseball, or football) over the summer. (Approx 1.15 million teens)
· Amazingly, 17% of parents say their child did not visit a playground, park or beach this summer. The same number, 17%, said their child did not engage in individual activities in the outdoors (biking, running, or swimming). (Approx 476,000 teens)
· Three times as many Latino parents as White (16% to 5%) said their children never visited a playground, park or beach this summer.
· The PPIC surveyed 333 parents in September 2007 and carries a margin of error of +/- 5.5%.
Findings available at: http://www.ppic.org/main/pressroom.asp
"In July of this year, Governor Schwarzenegger issued a proclamation recognizing The California Children's Outdoor Bill of Rights, a list of 10 activities children should experience by the time they turn 14, including exploring nature and learning how to swim. We should all work together to ensure that all children, regardless of where they live or the outdoor activity they choose, are afforded the greatest opportunity possible to regularly explore the wonder and beauty of California's spectacular natural resources."
- California Secretary for Resources Mike Chrisman, President of the Stewardship Council Board of Directors
"Our kids need outdoor spaces to explore, learn and grow, and they need adults to help them show them the way. Not only is a connection to the outdoors vital to the health and well-being of our youth, but how can we hope to build the future stewards of our state without this connection? The Stewardship Council is committed to helping connect kids to the outdoors because the health of the next generation and the future of our state depend on it. Clearly we all have work to do."
-Jayne Battey, Stewardship Council, Executive Director
"Kids learn and grow in the outdoors and we just aren't giving them the opportunity to participate in outdoor learning and play. This is a wake up call to educators and policy leaders to join the Stewardship Council in helping expand opportunities for all children to participate in outdoor activities."
- Conrad Benedicto, Wilderness Arts & Literacy Collaborative, San Francisco
About the Stewardship Council
The Pacific Forest and Watershed Lands Stewardship Council has allocated over $2 million in grants to dozens of organizations across Northern and Central California that provide kids with exposure to nature and the outdoors. Over the next ten years, the program will award $30 million in grants and other resources.
The Stewardship Council is a collaborative land conservation and youth investment foundation. Its mandate includes evaluating and providing recommendations for the conservation of over 140,000 acres of PG&E watershed lands spread across 22 California counties, as well as investing in community-based park and environmental education opportunities for underserved youth. For more information about the Stewardship Council visit www.stewardshipcouncil.org.
For purposes of full disclosure, I do proudly do work for the Stewardship Council.
Posted by Josh Cook at 10:45 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
History repeating itself
This from Bill Leonard's electronic newesletter...
“It appears we have appointed our worst generals to command forces, and our most gifted and brilliant to edit newspapers. In fact, I discovered by reading newspapers that these editor/geniuses plainly saw all my strategic defects from the start, yet failed to inform me until it was too late. Accordingly, I am readily willing to yield my command to these obviously superior intellects, and I will, in turn, do my best for the Cause by writing editorials - after the fact.”
---- Robert E. Lee, 1863
Posted by Josh Cook at 10:39 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
September 12, 2007
Another cool free technology advance...

Welcome to Google Voice Local Search
Google Voice Local Search is Google’s experimental service to make local-business search accessible over the phone.
Using this service, you can:
* search for a local business by name or category.
You can say "Giovanni's Pizzeria" or just "pizza".
* get connected to the business, free of charge.
* get the details by SMS if you’re using a mobile phone.
Just say "text message".
Posted by Josh Cook at 11:03 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
September 04, 2007
Demographics
As our demographics change it is amazing what things are affected...
Diversity in the parks
By JULIANA BARBASSA
Associated Press writer Tuesday, September 04, 2007
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. -- Jorge Castaneda kneels on a rocky ledge with a map of the Sierra Nevada spread before him.
"There aren't street names," the 18-year-old says only half-jokingly to the guides about to take him on his first backpacking trip. "How are we supposed to read these maps?"
Castaneda is with a group of young men from inner-city Oakland and Los Angeles who are heading into the Yosemite backcountry for a five-day, 20-mile excursion sponsored by an outdoor education program called WildLink.
The group's aim is to help them forge a connection with public lands that will keep them coming back, and hopefully beef up the slowly diminishing and overwhelmingly white ranks of those who spend their free time hiking, climbing, fishing or otherwise enjoying open spaces.
A 2004 survey by the U.S. Forest Service showed that 92.7 percent of those who visited national forests over a three-year period were white, even though the country's ethnic and racial makeup includes growing numbers of Hispanics, Asians and blacks.
Overall, the number of people visiting public lands also is dwindling. The National Park Service found in 2006 it had nearly a million fewer visitors than the year before, and 14.5 million fewer than in 1999.
Experts say a range of factors are contributing to the drop in visitor numbers, from gas prices to shorter vacations. But "it may be that a certain portion of our decline is because population growth is being driven by people who are not traditional national park users," says Jim Gramann, visiting chief social scientist with the National Park Service.
A tenuous connection between new generations of Americans and public lands has potential consequences not just for individuals who miss out on the physical and mental benefits of being outdoors, but also for the future of open spaces, say those committed to fostering that relationship.
"We have to make sure the people who will be voting in the future care about wilderness," says park ranger Cynthia Ramaciotti, one of the leaders of the backpacking trip and a coordinator with WildLink, which partners with the Yosemite Institute, the U.S. Forest Service and National Park Service. "It's not just for the individuals themselves, but also for future protection."
Her thoughts are echoed by Gail Kimbell, head of the U.S. Forest Service.
"Perhaps one of the biggest threats to our nation's forests and grasslands is environmental illiteracy," Kimbell told Congress in May, when her agency awarded a half-million dollars in grants meant to connect urban and minority kids to the land.
Helped in part by these kinds of initiatives, programs such as WildLink are popping up around the country. But many experts agree it's hard to change recreation patterns and perceptions.
A National Park Service survey in 2003 showed Americans of all backgrounds gave the same reasons for staying away from public lands -- cost, distance, not knowing what to do there and lack of interest. But some differences emerged, giving a sense how cultural perceptions of the outdoors might vary among groups.
Blacks were significantly more likely to say they received poor service from park employees or that they felt uncomfortable while visiting parks. Hispanics expressed greater concern than others about having to make reservations too far in advance, and about personal safety while outdoors.
Experts say these perceptions can be changed, but only through a concerted effort.
"It takes more than one week outdoors," says Gramann.
Nina Roberts, a professor at San Francisco State University's Department of Recreation, says some of the biggest impediments are access to the gear and knowledge needed for certain outdoor activities, and for newcomers, understanding English-language signs and American rules about use of public space.
For example, her own research has found that many Hispanics prefer to spend time off with their extended families, but limits on how many people can occupy a campsite or picnic facility can get in the way.
"There's a myth in the broader community that ethnic minorities don't like outdoor areas, that they don't care about nature," Roberts said. "That's untrue."
Partnerships with groups like WildLink help remove some of these impediments.
Wildlink reaches young people through community service organizations, Boys and Girls clubs and schools, tapping into grants and private foundation money to cover the costs.
Before hitting the trail, the young men on the WildLink Yosemite trip learned the basics of surviving outdoors, such as how to read a compass, use a bear canister, filter water and use a camp stove. Most of the equipment was provided by the program: backpacks, rain gear, mats to sleep on.
But not every barrier can be removed. Two young men from the Los Angeles area who'd signed up for the June trip had to cancel because they were injured in a gang-related, drive-by shooting the day before, organizers said.
"We're in the wilderness out there too, so in a way it's the same thing as here," said Castaneda. "We're used to fighting bullets, whereas out here we have bears. We're used to walking the streets, and out here it's the woods. But it's about surviving just the same."
Public lands administrators are also rethinking how land is used, and what information different visitors might find interesting.
"One reason why national parks may be under-visited by some populations is that they're not telling stories that are relevant to that population," said Gramann, the National Park Service scientist.
Interpreters at Civil War battlefields, for example, have traditionally focused on war tactics, rather than discussing slavery and the reasons the war was fought.
Federal officials have focused in recent years on acquiring new sites that might appeal to particular groups.
Manzanar National Historic Site, near the California border with Nevada, marks a site where Japanese-Americans were interned during World War II. It joined the Park Service in 1997.
The newest national park unit, Sand Creek National Historic Site in southeastern Colorado, was dedicated in April on the site where Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians were massacred by U.S. soldiers in 1864.
Often, one good experience will give people a reason to come back, said Jamila Chandler, who is black and has been on countless trips first as a participant and now as a chaperone for Urban Releaf, an Oakland-based urban environmental education program that partnered with WildLink for the Yosemite trip.
"Your environment affects you," Chandler said. "If you have all this concrete, all this litter, all this stuff around you, your mind is clutter. If you're in a place with clean air, beautiful trees, beautiful scenery, your mind is totally different."
Whatever it takes to make the connection between people and land, it seemed to be working for the young men hitting the trail. They cracked jokes as they hiked, and when it came time to stop for lunch, shared food each had carried.
"Out here there's the feeling you can count on someone else," said Pedro Sarmiento, who started participating in WildLink in 2003, and now helps coordinate trips. "More kids should experience this at least once in their lives."
Posted by Josh Cook at 11:00 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack