Guelph area man wins Ontario Land Trust Alliance award

Ontario Tril­lium Foundation has announ­ced a grant of $300,800 to the Ontario Land Trust Alliance (OLTA).

And a Guelph area man was honoured for his strong vision for land trusts at the annual con­ference held in London in late October, co-hosted by Ontario Land Trust Alliance and Carolinian Canada Coali­tion.

Ontario Trillium Founda­tion volunteer board member, Donna Passmore announced  the grant to support Ontario Land Trusts to implement best practices and meet standards of excellence in the highly tech­ni­cal field of land securement and stewardship. Over half of Ontario’s land trusts have no staff and rely exclusively on vol­unteers.

Fortunately many of those volunteers have a professional background that provides some of the needed expertise in land conservation.

The grant will support vol­unteer land trusts actions to meet legal requirements and reg­ulations, recruit and train ex­cellent board members, set priorities for organizational development, as well as effi­ciently and effectively secure land for conservation and pro­tection in their communities.

The wide range of training needed to operate a land trust was covered in over 20 work­shops, field trips, and sessions by experts in natural heritage inventory and mapping, fund-raising and fund management, real estate transactions and legal tools such as conservation agreements at the recent three day conference.

University of Guelph’s Professor Stew Hilts was also the first chairman of the OLTA and "wrote the book" on land trusts, Creative Conser­vation.  Hilts lives near Guelph and is a professor at the University of Guelph, where he is also the director of the centre for land and water stewardship.  Most recently, he has been working to save Ontario’s best places to grow food as chairman of Ontario Farmland Trust.

In recognition of the pas­sion and dedication of the land trust movement, OLTA ‘s Com­munity Engagement award recognized the achievements of Couchiching Conservancy. High­lights include:

– a series of community workshops involving quarry owners and ranchers;

– a partnership with the Orillia Packet and Times who print Couchiching’s full News­letter four times a year; and

– a corporate membership program involving 80 local businesses

The land trust’s vision award is given to an individual or organization who has dis­played extraordinary vision and exemplary leadership. The first recipient is ahead of the curve in identifying challenges and opportunities, and works hard to develop solutions.

 

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