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Resourceful Communities Program Awarded a $500,000 Grant by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation

This generous funding will support RCP’s program efforts.

 

January 12, 2010

Contact:

Vanessa Vaughan, The Conservation Fund
(703) 908-5809 / vvaughan@conservationfund.org

Mikki Sager, (919)967-2223, X126 or msagerR@conservationfund.org

 

Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, NC — Mikki Sager, Conservation Fund vice president, announced that its Resourceful Communities Program (RCP) has been awarded a $500,000 grant by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation. This generous funding will support RCP’s program efforts, including its Creating New Economies Fund and partner workshops which reach community leaders throughout the state.

The Conservation Fund is a national nonprofit established in 1985 to work with public, private and nonprofit partners to protect land and water resources through land acquisition, sustainable community and economic development and leadership training, emphasizing the integration of economic and environmental goals.The Resourceful Communities Program was established in 1991 to serve NC’s natural resource-rich, and socially and economically distressed communities. RCP works with partners to build local capacity to implement “triple bottom line” approaches with balanced outcomes of environmental stewardship, community-based economic development and social justice.

The Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation was established in 1936 as a memorial to the youngest child of R.J. Reynolds and Katharine Smith Reynolds. The Foundation has made grants totaling more than $452 million to recipients in all of North Carolina’s 100 counties. Although it makes grants for a wide range of projects, it now gives special attention to five focus areas: community economic development, the environment, democracy and civic engagement, pre-collegiate education, and social justice and equity. For more information, please visit www.zsr.org.

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Working for more than 18 years in distressed communities throughout North Carolina, Resourceful Communities follows the lead and wisdom of local leaders. Learn more about our partners.

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Project Spotlight
Resourceful Communities is working with partners to establish NC's first community forest on a 532-acre parcel in Hoke County.

Community forestry engages local partners in planning, management and stewardship. Adjacent to forestlands with the second largest US population of the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, this community forest will restore habitat, provide economic opportunities and more.