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ALMS and its members are active across Alberta in providing support to individuals, local communities, educational institutions, governments and industry that are interested in lake and watershed management. The Society organizes an annual workshop at a different Alberta lake community each fall. The workshop provides a forum to discuss water quality issues, technical aspects of lake and watershed management, and practical solutions to local problems. Each ALMS member receives our newsletter, The New Wave. ALMS is also widely recognized through its two community-based water quality sampling programs called Lakewatch and Alberta Water Quality Awareness (AWQA).
Sharing Together an Awareness of Nature and Heritage in Gatinenau Park, an exceptional park.
EHANS carries out a variety of activities to achieve these goals including - The popular on-line Guide to Less Toxic Products, www.lesstoxicguide.ca - Environmental health news, analysis and practical information published in our semi-annual publication, and on line at www.environmentalhealth.ca - Gathering and disseminating information addressing the special needs of people with chemical sensitivity - The E. Bruce Elliott Memorial Fund, which supports public lectures, book donations and other educational activities - The E. Bruce Elliott Scholarship in Environmental Medicine, which provides specialized training opportunities to physicians and other health professionals - Support for individuals through a 1-800 phone line - Collaboration with other community groups working to reduce environmental toxins
Field and Stream Rescue Team works with the community to clean, rehabilitate and maintain urban creeks and streams. Our goal is to provide sustainable, natural habitat for plants and animals in urban areas. We clean up area watercourses, pick up garbage and plant native trees and shrubs in an effort to return environmentally stressed areas to their natural state.
These business and professional people volunteer time, money and talents to help the less fortunate in our community and around the world with the ultimate goal of world understanding and peace.
Habitat for Humanity is an inclusive, non-profit, non-government organization dedicated to eliminating poverty housing by building homes in partnership with families in need. Habitat builds simple, decent, affordable houses and provides interest-free mortgages to families who would otherwise not be able to purchase their own home. The Habitat for Humanity program is about home ownership and providing a long-term solution designed to break the poverty cycle.
The National Farmers Foundation has a board of directors made up of five persons known for their commitment to education and research for the benefit of the family farm in Canada. The directors are in sympathy with the goals, objectives, and policy of the National Farmers Union. Representatives of various sectors in the country, such as family farmers, organic product marketers, new rural development groups, churches, rural youth and women, and urban consumers supported the establishment of the organization. Many of these have identified a vacuum with respect to accessible education and plain language research to help direct the crucial ventures in rural development which will mean not only survival, but the thriving of rural communities into the twenty - first century. A new awareness of the interdependence of rural and urban communities creates a challenge to promote action-oriented education and research which will create and enhance positive rural/urban cooperation.
The Wild Pacific Trail is a hiking and interpretive trail located in the village of Ucluelet. The trail skirts the rugged cliffs and shoreline along the West Coast of Vancouver Island. It overlooks Barkley Sound and the Broken Group Islands to the east and the open Pacific Ocean to the south and west. Our Vision is to create a spectacular trail system tracing scenic and cultural areas on the Ucluth Peninsula, especially the outer coast from Amphitrite lighthouse to the beaches of Pacific Rim National Park Reserve. The trail offers an outdoor hiking experience that is free and appropriate for all fitness levels, for many generations to come. Our goal is to maintain a trail corridor that preserves a natural setting and enhances the walking experience through interpretive signage about culture, history and nature.
A non-profit wildlife rehabilitation facility located in Seaforth, Nova Scotia specializing in the care of injured and orphaned wildlife.
Green Calgary staff and volunteers provide interactive environmental education, resources, and services to ten of thousands of Calgarians each year in schools, through businesses, in communities, through our products sales, in workshops & courses, through our website, by telephone and email. As a result, Calgarians are reducing their environmental impact at home, at work, and at school.
The L.M. Montgomery Land Trust works to preserve this land from development by: - Raising money to purchase “development rights” from land owners. - Seeking the donations of “development rights” from land owners. - Purchasing and then reselling land, with restrictive covenants attached.
Cape Jourimain Nature Centre makes connections for people, engaging and exciting them about environmental conservation. Through our programs, we make the link between the natural and human environments, between our actions and their consequences, and between the past, present and future. We also offer, as part of our mandate, tourism related services by acting as both a tourist destination and a brief stop over for tourists traveling within the Maritimes.