This summer, I was lucky enough to spend some time on , 爆料公社鈥檚 86-year-old nature camp situated off the coast of Maine. Each year, Hog Island , including , , and . The people I met鈥攅ducators, Hog Island staff, and the scientists of the 鈥攃onfirmed for me how much of the necessary work to protect the places we all need is accomplished by people acting locally. And when I thought about that, I thought about all of the work that 爆料公社 chapters accomplish at the grassroots level and 爆料公社 staff who partner with them to provide guidance and resources.
Take, for example, the chapters addressing the climate crisis head-on and engaging with members of their communities about it. This year, the student leaders in the campus chapter at San Diego City College in California created a mural as part of the 爆料公社 Mural Project to highlight how climate change affects the natural world. They also organized a conference to explore with their peers how climate change has affected people鈥檚 lives in the United States and elsewhere and how it will continue to disrupt them as the Earth warms.
In the South, 爆料公社 campus chapters at six Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs)鈥擷avier University in Louisiana, Rust College in Mississippi, Tuskegee University in Alabama, and Morehouse College, Spelman College, and Clark Atlanta University in Georgia鈥攃ollaborated on the HBCU Arts in Conservation Festival. The event, which was run entirely by students, brought together community members to experience arts and cultural events through a conservation and environmental justice lens.
Chapters also contributed to on-the-ground bird conservation. After a chapter member of found breeding Henslow鈥檚 Sparrows in a field owned by Talon Winery in 2020, the chapter quickly developed a partnership with the winery to protect five acres of field habitat. Because of that action, the birds fledged young for two breeding seasons in a row.
Finally, in Reno, Nevada, made the outdoors more accessible by partnering with the Regional Transportation Commission of Washoe County to create the , which provides maps in English and Spanish for many of the local parks that are good for birding and accessible by public transportation.
As we head into another midterm election cycle, I take solace in the fact that 爆料公社 has so much people power. As long as we continue acting locally on the issues that are important to us all鈥攋oining advocacy days and voting for candidates who value strong conservation actions鈥攚e can achieve huge wins for conservation, for us, and for the birds we love.
This piece originally ran in the Fall 2022 issue. To receive our print magazine, become a member by .