More About RRI
The mission of Resource Renewal Institute is to strengthen society's ability to secure the future health of the planet by fostering innovative solutions to increasingly complex environmental problems. RRI combines education, advocacy, organizational development, and sustainability analysis to leverage the global adoption of long-term environmental management strategies to benefit natural resources, wildlife, and society. As a lean organization with a small staff, one key RRI strategy is to incubate new initiatives that are each focused on a specific issue which later become separate organizations.
Major project sectors include:
Green Planning - an initiative to bring internationally acclaimed comprehensive environmental policy to the United States through advocacy, diverse educational programs, and direct linkage activities with key policy makers.
Water Resources - a program to improve existing water policy and law, to educate and engage the public in water issues, and to legally designate more water for wildlife with an emphasis on fish habitat, primarily salmon. Major elements of this program area are The Water Heritage Trust, a subsidiary formed by RRI; the recent Columbia River Salmon Restoration Initiative; and RRI's decade-long CA water rights activism focused on the Sacramento River system including the Sacramento River/Yolo Bypass Salmon Restoration Program.
The RRI River Warrior Awards recognizes and rewards individuals and small organizations whose work is often the reason why a river keeps flowing or powerful water interests are kept honest.
Land and Conservation Policy - a program area that focuses on strengthening the long-term integrity of land conservation. Defense of Place, a subsidiary project of RRI, works to assure that parks, open space, and wildlife refuges stay protected in perpetuity. The Public Trust Alliance, another subsidiary initiated by RRI, works to build the capacity of the public and government representatives to use the public trust doctrine to preserve and defend valuable public resources.
An active project of RRI in this sector is the RRI Council of Elders. This project utilizes the singular, decades-long experience of former senior government scientists to solve national environmental problems. Free from political pressure, Elders continue their public service with outspoken, science-based policy recommendations developed collaboratively.

 

Mexico City’s Green Plan Honored By Dutch

Congratulations to Mayor Ebrard on receiving the Dutch order of the Orange-Nassau!

Around the year 2000, RRI led several delegations of dozens of Mexican officials to the Netherlands to learn about its Green Plan. Many officials returned to Mexico eager to replicate the environmental gains seen in Holland. Mexico City’s ‘Plan Verde’ is inspired by the Dutch example.

Mexico City Environmental Secretary Martha Delgado joined RRI for a conference several years ago and we have this update from her. “I’m pleased to share with you that Mexico City’s Green Plan has been awarded very much around the world: UN Habitat, World Sustainable Building Council, Livable Cities, City Mayors Foundation, Harvard College and other important instututions have recongnize our achievements in very different fields!!! Today Mayor Ebrard was awarded with the Orange-Nassau (more…)



 


Current Bay Nature article on salmon and rice

Take a look at the kind of ideas RRI cooks up in the new issue of Bay Nature. This time it’s salmon and rice–before they reach your table. You can check out the article on innovative use of fallow rice fields to support young salmon in the Sacramento River area at Baynature.org



 

 

Johnson Viewpoint in SacBee: governor isn’t looking out for environment

Once upon a time, when I was Governor Brown’s Resources Secretary, his office was all about the moon; now it’s narrow economics that have taken over. While the Governor deserves being seen as a good leader with a tough fiscal burden, it is no excuse to let the environment go down the drain. Our precious resource assets include forests, parks, air and soil, to name a few factors that make California a world-class place to live. No issue is as important as water for the future of our state.

http://www.sacbee.com/2012/04/01/4380297/governor-isnt-looking-out-for.html



 

 

Knowland Park: Irreplaceable Native Species Threatened in the Name of “Conservation”

Defense of Place is honored to lend its voice to the Save Knowland Park Coalition campaign to halt a project by the Oakland (California) Zoo that would obliterate irreplaceable and rare native grassland, plants, and fragile wildlife habitats within the 500-acre park.

Using a bait and switch strategy to bypass provisions of a 1998 Master Plan – and in betrayal of the original State-mandated purpose of the parkland – the City of Oakland and the Zoo have proposed an expansion that will besiege 52 acres of Knowland Park. The ever-shifting plans now include a 34,000 square-foot building that tops a ridgeline; an aerial gondola with 30-foot towers; animal exhibits in simulated “natural” settings; and, a chain link fence around the development that would symbolize the end of the Park’s wild, natural and open space.

“The Zoo calls the development a conservation exhibit,” said Laura Baker of the Friends of Knowland Park, “but it’s a naked land grab that destroys top-quality habitat. The cruel irony is that the public has been duped about what it’s getting in the expansion. Once the theme park goes up, the public will have to pay to access to areas they can now enjoy for free.”

Coalition leader Ruth Malone adds: “In the 21st century, it just doesn’t pass the laugh test for a city to take its finest wildland park, pave it over, and call it conservation.”

The inflated building plans would result in a multi-story building in the heart of the Park that would be more an administrative facility (featuring incomparable views of San Francisco Bay) than the Zoo-described “interpretive center.”

After attempts to mediate on the project’s size and scope failed, the Friends of Knowland Park and the California Native Plant Society sued the Zoo and the city for violations of the California Environmental Quality Act and State Planning and Zoning Laws. Hearings continue in April on the issue in Alameda County Superior Court.

However, Zoo officials are not waiting for final adjudication. Instead, they have already marked their “territory” among native heritage oaks and rare stands of maritime chaparral by spray painting the trees slated for clear-cutting for the administration building and by placing stakes that mark the gondola’s towers and terminal.

Along with dismay over the unthinkable loss of Knowland Park’s unique natural resources, Defense of Place laments the Zoo’s flouting of the public trust principle which obligates institutions and municipalities to preserve and protect public lands.

Visit the Save Knowland Park web site for visual gifts of the Park’s beauty along with the history and current news on the fight to preserve the parkland.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

Read the latest issue of RRI’s Field Notes

Field Notes: Evidence Grows-Extreme Weather More Frequent and Intense

view the PDF

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