Friday, July 27, 2012

Police Departments Pump Gas to Raise Money for Special Olympics

(photo courtesy of specialolympics.org)

MANCHESTER -
Circle K, Irving Oil, and Special Olympics are teaming up to support more than 2,600 athletes in New Hampshire through the 2012 Fueling Dreams promotion. The annual fundraiser started on July 9 and will run through August 5 at Circle K stores and Irving dealer locations across the state. Throughout the three-week promotion, Circle K stores will sell window clings to their customers as a way to raise money for Special Olympics.
“Our continued partnership with Circle K and Irving, in addition to providing great awareness of our Movement, allows Special Olympics New Hampshire to continue to live out our mission through the dollars raised from their support,” said Mary Conroy, Special Olympics New Hampshire president.
In addition to the sale of window clings, local law enforcement officers will partner with local Special Olympics Programs and Circle K and Irving employees on Saturday, July 28 for “To Serve and Protect Day.” This day-long event partners law enforcement officers with Special Olympics athletes who pump gas and wash windows for donations at locations around the state.
The three-week promotion is the largest U.S. fundraiser for Circle K and Irving. The partnership with Special Olympics began in 1999 to benefit the Law Enforcement Torch Run, the largest fundraiser worldwide for Special Olympics. Since then, the event has grown throughout New England and has raised more than $2 million which supports over 28,000 Special Olympics athletes in New England each year.
Last year this partnership raised $297,632 for Special Olympics programs in New England with $131,343 of that raised in New Hampshire. The support of Circle K and Irving during this promotion and throughout the year helps Special Olympics New Hampshire provide year-round sport training and competition in twenty sports for children and adults with intellectual disabilities. In addition to sports programs Special Olympics New Hampshire also provides leadership training to their athletes, works with partners like the New Hampshire Interscholastic Athletic Association to help provide more inclusive school environments for all high school students, and every year Special Olympics New Hampshire offers free health screenings for their athletes at their annual Summer Games in Durham.
“Throughout the year Special Olympics New Hampshire unleashes the human spirit through the transformative power and joy of sport and because of these two great corporate partners we are able to hold more than 20 competitions a year for 2,669 Special Olympics athletes in our state, said Conroy.
Special Olympics New Hampshire is an accredited program of Special Olympics International (SOI) and is part of an international global movement that changes lives by encouraging and empowering people with intellectual disabilities, promoting acceptance for all, and fostering communities of understanding and respect worldwide. It was founded in 1970 with the first State Summer Games at Phillips Exeter Academy.

Red Sox Join Pease Greeters

(image courtesy of peasegreeters.org)

PORTSMOUTH -
The Boston Red Sox and the Red Sox Foundation announced that July is “Acts of Kindness” month, when the team and its philanthropic arm will embark on a month-long series of charitable initiatives as part of the “100 Acts of Kindness.” The program recognizes and supports the work of charitable organizations throughout New England during Fenway Park’s 100th anniversary season. Through volunteer service and donations, the two organizations will look to complete a total of 26 acts by the end of the month.
On Monday July 30, Red Sox staff members will be at Pease International Airport in Portsmouth at 11 a.m. to help support the Pease Greeters,  a Portsmouth-based organization who welcomes the men and women of our military that pass through Pease on their way to or from the War on Terrorism. Pease Greeters have been meeting flights from May, 2005.
Red Sox Staff have collected and will distribute calling cards for the troops and toys for their children.

Harbor Homes Awarded $1 Million Grant to Combat Homelessness among Veterans

NASHUA –
Harbor Homes in Nashua has been awarded a $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the U.S Department of Labor as part of the Supportive Services for Veterans Families Program, U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) announced. The funding will allow Harbor Homes to provide employment, housing and VA benefits assistance to approximately 300 New Hampshire veterans and their families. Shaheen wrote a letter to Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki this past February in support of Harbor Homes’ grant application.

“Harbor Homes has a 32-year history of excellent service to New Hampshire’s homeless veterans, helping them find good jobs, fight substance abuse and get back on their feet,” said Shaheen. “Their wide presence in the state and strong connections to veterans service providers make Harbor Homes a terrific recipient for this grant. The organization has made an impact on the lives of so many Granite State veterans and I’m glad that they will have the opportunity to help so many more.”
“Harbor Homes is thrilled for all of the veteran families in NH who will benefit from this much-needed initiative,” said Peter Kelleher, CEO of Harbor Homes, Inc. “Many veterans have unique challenges to overcome as a result of hardships experienced during their military service that make it more difficult to reintegrate into New Hampshire’s communities without targeted interventions and supportive services. The Supportive Service for Veteran Families program will prevent or end homelessness amongst up to 300 low-income veteran households, and help the state achieve its goal to be the first state in the country to effectively end veteran homelessness.”
In 2004, Harbor Homes launched the Veterans First initiative to provide housing and support services to homeless New Hampshire veterans, and 175 households have since transitioned from this program into independent living.  Harbor Homes has also worked with the VA to help 168 veterans obtain employment through the Homeless Veterans Reintegration program.
According to the Government Accountability Office, between 423 and 600 homeless veteran households are located in New Hampshire and an additional 7,175 such households in our state are at risk of homelessness.  New Hampshire also has the third highest percentage in the nation of low-income veteran renter households with moderate to severe housing affordability problems.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Young Girl & Grandfather Save Man, Dog from Piscataqua River

Terry Adams and his grand-daughter Hillary Adams-Wainwright, local heroes (photo by Michelle Kingston)
By Michelle Kingston
Staff Columnist

YORK -
As if running your own lobster boat at thirteen years old isn’t impressive enough, Hillary Adams-Wainwright, of York, is now considered a local Seacoast hero after saving two lives on Monday, July 11, from the Piscataqua River.
“Everyone kind of made it seem like it was (a big deal), but I don’t really think it was at all. It was just kind of like, it happened,” she said.
She had just finished dropping off a load of lobsters at Chrissy D. Lobster Company in Kittery with her grandfather, Terry Adams, 66, when she spotted Portsmouth Naval Shipyard workers whistling and motioning them to turn around.
As the pair began to rotate the boat, scanning the river for what they thought would be divers, Adams-Wainwright spotted a small, scared and struggling four-legged friend searching for help.
“We went and grabbed the dog, and we were heading back, and they were still telling us to go back,” she said.
A woman on Peirce Island was also frantically screaming for Adams-Wainwright and her grandfather to continue looking around.
“She was hysterical,” said Adams.
Penny, the small pup, who Adams-Wainwright believed was an English Terrier, was recovering on the boat when Adams spotted a hand pop up out of the river. Penny’s owner was also gasping for air, requiring assistance and hoping to be rescued.
“We found him, and we had him catch his breath on the side of the boat when we got up to him and then we pulled him in,” said Adams-Wainwright.
Penny and her owner, Chris Stephens, 27, of Haverhill, Massachusetts, were playing fetch on Peirce Island when a long toss took Penny out into the current. Stephens swam out to save Penny when he was caught up in the current as well.
They were both brought to safety very quickly. Adams feared that if he didn’t move away from the shore fast his boat was going to ground out.
“I just wanted to get out of there before we ruined the boat,” he said. “We got him out of the boat. We got the dog out of the boat. Then we got out of there. I was afraid I was getting hung up, and I would be in trouble. We just got out of there as soon as we could,” said Adams.
Steve Achilles, Portsmouth Deputy Fire Chief, said Stephens refused medical treatment from Portsmouth paramedics at the scene and chose not to be transported to Portsmouth Regional Hospital.
Both Stephens and his dog appeared to be okay at the scene. However, both Adams-Wainwright and Adams do not think they would have been if it weren’t for them being there.
“There were other boats,” said Adams-Wainwright. “But no one noticed.”
“They just kept right on going,” said Adams.
Adams believed the dog and her owner had been distressed in the water for at least fifteen minutes before he and his granddaughter saved them. They had drifted off land about 100-150 yards, according to Adams.
The owner and the dog are both safe, but have not contacted the Maine heroes who saved their lives last week.
“Haven’t heard from him,” said Adams, a bit surprised.
Adams-Wainwright and Adams have been fishing together for more than five years now and have never had to rescue anyone from the river before.
However, Adams did save a kayaker in the York River a few years ago.
“He was just exhausted. He was going out with the tide,” said Adams.
They both caution all swimmers, local and from away, to be cautious of the tides in our area.
Adams-Wainwright has spent her summer days since she was eight years old with her grandfather, pulling in traps, bonding, and making hard-earned cash as she gains experience for her dream job as a marine biologist.
“She’ll have up to 150 traps next year,” said Adams.
After all these years, she says she has never caught anyone quite like she did last week. Just lobsters.

First Responders Honored for Work Battling USS Miami Fire

New Hampshire’s U.S. Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D) and Kelly Ayotte (R) at ceremony honoring first responders at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard (courtesy photo)
KITTERY -
New Hampshire’s U.S. Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) were in Portsmouth Monday, July 16, to honor the emergency first responders responsible for containing the fire aboard the USS Miami this past May. Shaheen and Ayotte presented a Senate Resolution recognizing the responders, which they introduced along with U.S. Senators Olympia J. Snowe (R-ME), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Scott Brown (R-MA), Susan Collins (R-ME), John Kerry (D-MA) and Joe Lieberman (I-CT). The June 7 resolution commends the service of all those who responded to the fire, minimized damage to the submarine and ensured there was no loss of life.
Shaheen and Ayotte presented the Senate resolution they and other New England senators sponsored to commend the first responders at a ceremony at Prescott Park in Portsmouth.
Last week, the Navy convened a special panel to investigate the May 23 fire that damaged the USS Miami while it was in dry dock for an overhaul at the shipyard in Kittery, Maine. The investigation was ordered by U.S. Fleet Forces Command in Norfolk, Virginia. Early estimates put the fire damage at $400 million. It damaged the torpedo room, crew quarters, and command and control areas.
“Your swift response and commitment to containing the fire helped minimize damage to the submarine and more importantly, ensured that no one lost a life that day,” Senator Shaheen said. “The men and women who work at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard have an incredible track record of working together and getting the job done. To everyone who worked together to respond to May’s fire: thank you for your professionalism, your quick response, and your continued commitment to serving and protecting our country. The courage and cooperation we saw in May stands as inspiration for all of us.”

Rare Birds Sighted on New Hampshire Seacoast

A Mississippi Kite (courtesy of birdzilla.com)
GREENLAND –
Mississippi Kites in Newmarket and a European Mew Gull on the Squamscott: How often do rare birds appear on the Seacoast and in New Hampshire? What other birds are we seeing on our coast, in our forests and at our feeders? What are some of the rare birds seen in the past few years and why are they showing up? These questions and others will be answered by Steve Mirick, well-known local birder and author of “Birding the New Hampshire Seacoast,” at his free presentation on Wednesday, July 25, at 7 p.m. at the Hugh Gregg Coastal Conservation Center located on the grounds of the Great Bay Discovery Center at 89 Depot Road in Greenland.
Mirick has been birding for most of his life and leads special bird walks for New Hampshire Audubon and the Nature Conservancy. He has done presentations at the Discovery Center for Bay Views and even a bird watching kayak trip. The center is happy that he has agreed to return this summer for another Bay Views presentation. He is warm, witty and has wonderful photos to share with his audiences. If you are an experienced birder or just a novice, you will enjoy his presentation, have a chance to ask questions and also pick up some information about birding in New Hampshire. The grounds of the center have been designated as an “Important Bird Area” by New Hampshire Audubon with a population of warblers, osprey, pileated woodpeckers, waterfowl and more.
The presentation is free with light refreshments served. No registration is required. For more information, check out the website, wwwgreatbay.org, or call the Center at 603-778-0015. The Center is the educational facility for the Great Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve. It is free and open to the public Wednesdays through Sundays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and the grounds are open from dawn to dusk. The Center is funded by NOAA and administered by the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Sail Portsmouth Commemorates War of 1812 Bicentennial

The Pride of Baltimore II (courtesy photo)
 
PEIRCE ISLAND –
Sail Portsmouth 2012 is all about American history.  The Piscataqua Maritime Commission, which organizes the annual event, are thrilled to welcome the Pride of Baltimore II, a reproduction of an 1812-era topsail schooner privateer, and Providence, a replica of the first command of John Paul Jones.
“We are a totally non-profit, volunteer organization that exists to promote the maritime heritage of the region,” said Donald Coker, chairman of the PMC.
This year's festival is July 13-15. Once again it will be held at the Fish Pier at Peirce Island.
Pride of Baltimore II is Maryland’s working symbol of the great natural resources and spectacular beauty of the Chesapeake Bay region. She is a Baltimore Clipper, fast enough to evade the British battleships in 1812, while armed with cannon and crews willing to fight.  Since this replica was commissioned, this 157' vessel has sailed more than 200,000 miles and visited 200 ports.
In 1775, a year before the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the Colony of Rhode Island bought and refitted the schooner Katy. She was renamed Providence and in May, 1776, she was the first command of John Paul Jones. Providence participated in sixty engagements with British ships and sank or seized forty enemy vessels.
Portsmouth's own Gundalow Company has launched a new vessel this year, called Piscataqua. She will participate in Sail Portsmouth's Parade of Sail and be located near the pier where she will take passengers on day sails. Gundalows were the equivalent of today’s tractor-trailer rigs, carrying cargo between ocean going schooners and the growing towns in the region. The weekend features day sails, the popular Parade of Sail, deck tours, a Captains' reception, exhibits, food, music, and souvenirs.
The tall ships started coming to Portsmouth in the mid-1980’s.
“There were two generations,” Coker said of Sail Portsmouth’s history. “There was the Maritime Heritage Commission – it was called – that brought class-A tall ships. These are the big boys. They came from Germany, Bolivia, Brazil, Argentina – all over the world.” After three or four years, the MHC disbanded.
“We picked up in 1998,” Coker said. ‘And we’ve been doing it every year since then.”
Folks can relax and daydream on a two-hour day sail, or be a passenger in the thrilling Parade of Sail into Portsmouth harbor accompanied by tugs, fireboats, private boats, and cannon salutes.
For people who want to witness the majesty of the Parade of Sail on Friday morning, good viewing spots are Four Tree Island in Portsmouth, Great Island Common and Portsmouth Yacht Club in New Castle, and Fort Foster in Kittery.
Megan Lyman, Miss New Hampshire 2012, will visit Friday at 3 p.m. Under the tent, there are maritime exhibitors, fresh food from Seaport Fish, and souvenir merchandise.
The New England Brethern of Pirates will be roaming about as well. Dine and chat with the captains and crews at the Captains' Reception on Saturday evening. The Piscataqua River Brass performs at 3 p.m. on Sunday at Fish Pier.
Through a co-promotion with Strawbery Banke, the Sail Portsmouth ticket will also get you half-price admission to many historic sites.
To purchase tickets for a day sail or to ride in the Parade of Sail, please go to www.gundalow.org. For more information, visit pmcportsmouth.org.

Mark Wentworth Home Celebrates a Century of Caregiving

Deborah Rodier, executive director of the Mark Wentworth Home, speaks at the 100th annual meeting (courtesy photo)

 PORTSMOUTH –
The Mark Wentworth Home, a non-profit assisted living community in the heart of Portsmouth’s historic south-end, recently celebrated its 100th year of operation with the 100th annual meeting of the board of incorporators.
The board of incorporators is a 120-member board of local citizens who have an interest in the home and who provide oversight for the formation of the board of trustees.  At its recent annual meeting, attended by ninety of the home’s incorporators, the following new incorporators were inducted: Glenn Costigan, Maura Fleming, Ronald Furst, Cynthia Harvell, Daniel Lajoie, Alan Lincoln Linda Pasakarnis, John Randall and Joan Sweeney. The following board of trustees and officers were voted in for another term: president  Ray Ambrogi; vice president Cynthia Knapp; treasurer Susan Tober; secretary Karen Freda; trustees: Donald Bliss, Lis Connors, Joseph Diament, Jay Gibson, Ruth Griffin, John Hebert, Joan Nickell, and Diane Share.
Executive director Deborah Rodier addressed the group, saying “The mission of the Mark Wentworth Home remains the same as it was one hundred years ago, and that includes continually contributing to the community around us. With the support of the many members of the home’s corporation, we are poised to provide opportunities for our residents and staff to grow and to meet the needs of the Seacoast senior population for another one hundred years.”
The Mark Wentworth Home is a senior living community designed to create a culture of successful aging through age-in-place assisted living and state-of-the-art dementia care. A welcoming landmark to seacoast and New Hampshire seniors since 1911, the Home has a deeply-rooted tradition of providing a nurturing environment and personalized service for its residents.

6th Annual Americana Festival Held in Portsmouth

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Slaid Cleaves, who will perform at the Americana Festival (courtesy photo)



PORTSMOUTH –
The 6th Annual Americana Festival at Prescott Park will place the spotlight on an eclectic group of performers with a varying degree of ties to the Granite State. Slaid Cleaves, the Makem & Spain Brothers, the Hanneke Cassel Trio, and Dan Walker will perform on Saturday, July 14, from 1 to 5 p.m.
Always a favorite of fans and staff alike, the Americana Festival showcases the broad lines and rousing remedies that run thickly through the lifeblood of roots-laden music. The festival also coincides with the Portsmouth Tall Ships, held at the pier adjacent to Prescott Park.
Festival goers will gather in abundance to welcome home Seacoast staple Slaid Cleaves, who moved from Maine, to Austin, Texas a number of years ago. His returns are very limited, and performances coveted amongst the scene. Cleaves, who headlines this year's Americana festival is a troubadour with serious credentials.
"I'm glad I found Slaid Cleaves, because my life would have been poorer without him. You'll feel the same, I think, when you listen to this beautifully crafted album (“Everything You Love will be Taken Away”). Listen, go to one of Slaid's shows, take a friend, and pass on the news: not all the good guys wear hats," says Stephen King. The Maine author writes the liner notes for the album.
And speaking of local favorites: several pieces of the Makem & Spain Brothers take residence in Dover. Playing acoustic instruments and singing tales that may be heard sitting 'round the fire, the Makem and Spain Brothers are continuing on the Celtic folk traditions of their famous forefathers. Every generation has a few acts that define where a musical genre is going, performers so confident in their chosen field that they are able to completely embrace the genre and yet introduce something new to it. In Irish folk music today, that act is the Makem and Spain Brothers.
Hanneke Cassel captured her 1997 U.S. National Scottish Jr. Fiddle Championship here in the Granite State and went on to study the instrument on scholarship at the Berklee College of Music down in Boston. She is a decorated performer and songwriter with other prestigious credentials including the 2008 USA Songwriting Contest.
Rounding out the Americana Festival's lineup is one of the most incendiary and playful singer/songwriter/guitarist's on the Seacoast today - Dan Walker. Walker's playing is of the highest quality in both musicianship and entertainment value.
“The Americana Festival lineup is stacked from top to bottom this year,” says executive director Ben Anderson. “I couldn't be happier with the way it looks on paper, and I know I'll only add to that happiness when I see it on our stage. We're all in for a treat.”
All events offered at the Prescott Park Arts Festival are presented free of charge with a suggested donation of $5 - $10. Audience members are permitted to bring chairs, or rent those offered by the festival. For more information on the festival, or to see a full schedule of events, visit www.prescottpark.org or call 603-436-2848.

Friday, July 6, 2012

End-of-War Parade Offers Jobs for Veterans

PORTSMOUTH –

New England’s 1st “Welcome Home” End of the Iraq War Parade is on Sunday, July 8, at 2 p.m. The parade is to celebrate the return of military personnel and the end of the Iraq War by thanking the recently returned veterans (from Iraq and Afghanistan) and everyone who supported them during deployment. New Hampshire’s Governor John Lynch is expected to co-grand marshal the parade with several Gold Star families.
The parade will coincide with a Job & Services Fair that will be attended by the Veteran’s Administration, the New Hampshire Employment Security, and private businesses looking to hire veterans. This New England Parade is co-sponsored by the Parade Committee and the City of Portsmouth.
These two major activities are occurring for one main objective, organizers say, to pay tribute to all veterans and active military for protecting the United States, here at home and abroad, and to welcome them home. The parade participants include military and veteran’s organization representing New England. A partial list of these organizations participating in the parade include:
A contingent of Afghanistan and Iraq Veterans; American Legion Posts; Veterans for Peace; Gold/Blue Star Families; Pease Greeters; NH Fire Fighters Pipes & Drums; Bektash Shriners Mini- Kars; Leftist Marching Band; FairPoint Communications; Portsmouth Democrats; Bektash Shriners Drum & Bugle Corp., Shriners; Patrol C; Seacoast Peace Response; Portsmouth Brassworks; Bektash Cycle Patrol; and, Vintage Cars.
“The Iraq war has officially ended, and this generation of veterans deserves to be welcomed home with the same fanfare as generations in the past. That is why we welcome everyone to participate and make this a positive New England wide event,” says Josh Denton, steering committee president and Iraq war veteran. The Leftist Marching Band, a liberal group, was hesitant about joining the parade, Denton said, but they joined in, as did several veterans for peace groups. “There are no high school bands available in July,” Denton said. “So this is really good for us.” The parade will begin at 1 Junkins Avenue, at the tennis court parking lot, and will make a 1.3 mile loop around the city, ending where it began.

SNHU Co-Sponsors Summit on Environmental Sustainability

 
Scott Chamberlain, Bri Stockley, Kaitlin Sampson, Grace Findlen-Golden and Kyle Coumas at the Halki Summit on Environmental Sustainability held outside Istanbul, Turkey (courtesy photo)

By SYDNEY JARRARD
Staff Columnist

MANCHESTER - From June 18 through June 20, Southern New Hampshire University co-sponsored the Halki Summit, a forum on global environmental responsibility and sustainability, which took place outside of Istanbul, Turkey.
The symposium aimed to highlight the ways values and belief systems can influence conserving the earth’s resources and proactively reversing climate change, with the intent of having participants leave with new ethics and principles to implement toward environmental sustainability in daily life. The items on the agenda covered biodiversity and conservation, energy and climate change, and corporate responsibility and sustainability.
Southern New Hampshire University is not new to the idea of environmental responsibility. As the first carbon-neutral campus in the state, the college’s initiatives have extended into daily life for students and faculty. Programs include the “One Earth. One Bottle.” campaign, which gives students a free stainless-steel SNHU bottle in exchange for committing to no longer buying bottled water. A community garden has been developed for those who don’t have easy access to yard space, a bike sign-out program for students is available, and the school has made a fifty-year commitment to using wind and water energy. For SNHU President Paul LeBlanc, the summit was a clear next step for the college.
More than a year in the making, the forum was an invitation-only event, gathering seventy world-renowned theologists, journalists, scientists, educators, business people, and attendees on a small island in the Sea of Marmara. “It was meant to be in intimate conversation. That’s what made it special,” said LeBlanc.
Four students accompanied the college’s president and several staff to the Holy Theological School of Halki and Halki Palace Hotel on the island of Heybeliada to facilitate and attend the conference. Students Scott Chamberlain, Kyle Coumas, Kaitlin Sampson, and Bri Stockley were accompanied by Provost Patricia Lynott, professor Michele Goldsmith, and President Paul LeBlanc, as well as LeBlanc’s wife Pat Finland, daughter Hannah, and niece Grace.
The four students chosen to attend come from the student ambassador program at SNHU, an elite group of just 12 students who attend school events, alumni events, and act as the face of the school. LeBlanc knew that they would be an asset to the conference, both in organizing and executing it, but also by learning what they could from the speakers and bringing that knowledge and insight back to SNHU.
In Turkey, the summit was co-sponsored by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, who is the spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Church, and has been labeled “The Green Patriarch” for incorporating environmental concerns and ethics into his spiritual views. The nickname was made permanent by Time Magazine in 2008, when they declared him one of the world’s most influential people for joining environmental concerns with spirituality. Over the past two decades, the Ecumenical Patriarchate has facilitated more than ten educational events, and was eager to work with SNHU for the Halki Summit. LeBlanc was introduced to the Patriarchate through local contacts and began the process of organizing the summit fourteen months ago.
In addition to the presence of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, several important keynote speakers and panelists attended the conference, including primatologist and conservationist Jane Goodall, journalist and environmentalist Bill McKibben, chairman and co-founder of Stonyfield Farm Gary Hirshberg, and Jim Hansen from the NASA institute for Climate change. The speakers were very involved with attendees at the summit, with Jane Goodall even having breakfast with two of the (somewhat star-struck) SNHU students. “These luminaries sought out our students,” said LeBlanc.
The students weren't just there to enjoy the conference, but were deemed the “live coverage team” and sent to work, taking photos, blogging, Tweeting, videotaping, and doing interviews throughout the sessions. Prior to the start of the conference, two of the students, Chamberlain and Coumas, were sent to the airport to help welcome attendees and get them to the ferry to the island, and Sampson and Stockley were checking guests in to the conference and setting things up.
At the conclusion of the summit, the SNHU team spent three days exploring Istanbul, visiting the big sights – Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, the Basilica Cistern, and the Grand Bazaar – and finding family in a place so far from home. Having put four of their children through college at SNHU, the Alagoz family welcomed the ten New Hampshirites into their home for an evening of food and celebration. “It gave the students a window into Turkish life that tourists wouldn’t get,” said LeBlanc.
The response to the summit, from both attendees and presenters, speaks toward its effectiveness.
Student Kaitlin Sampson was already interested in environmental sustainability, but the opportunity to see new parts of the world has influenced her course. Majoring in hospitality and tourism, she hopes to focus more on the environmental hazards that tourism has on our valuable earth. Bill McKibben’s comments especially struck home with Sampson. “The world can’t put all of the responsibilities on the youth, but at the same time, we need to start educating the youth,” she said.
LeBlanc was thrilled with the progress made at the summit. “It exceeded our expectations,” he explained. “The richness of the cross segment of conversation and the presence of our young people made it very special.”
LeBlanc is hopeful to coordinate another version of this symposium within the next couple of years. In the meantime, SNHU continues with its green initiatives, including installing a 4.5-acre solar field for the school’s use. Based on conversations with Jane Goodall, the students and LeBlanc are actively working to get the Roots and Shoots program started on campus, which teaches young people about environmental responsibility.
And the conversation from the Halki Summit isn’t quite over. Videos and photos are becoming available on the Halki Summit website, as well as SNHU’s site. With the Summit having been broadcast online, comments are still rolling in. Finally, from the articles and feedback from the panelists and attendees, a publication will be printed to document this important step in the conservation effort.