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The Environmental Leadership Dinner
The Long Island Sound Campaign
The Long Island Sound- A National Treasure
Since 1985, when the Long Island Sound was one of the
first estuaries to be designated by Congress as an Estuary
of National Significance, the National Audubon Society has
been at the forefront of the efforts to restore and protect
this amazing resource. The Sound contributes $5.5 billion
annually to the region’s economy and, with more than
28 million people living with within 50 miles of its shores;
it impacts more Americans than any other estuary in the country.
Utilizing the grassroots strength of our
Audubon Chapters and membership, Audubon has been the leading
organization building the necessary support for State and
Congressional action. And today, the Sound is cleaner and
healthier than it has been for many years.
However, the Sound’s viability hangs
in the balance. Its “Dead Zone”—an area
plagued by hypoxia, where oxygen levels are too low to support
life—is at record proportions. It still suffers from
dwindling shellfish populations, pollution from sewage treatment
plant discharges, contaminated storm water runoff, and accelerated
shoreline development.
An Audubon National Priority
In 2004 Audubon made its Long Island Sound (LIS) Campaign
not just a regional priority but also a full scale national
one. The goal of this Campaign is to restore, protect and
maintain LIS so that it can permanently support birds, marine
species, and other wildlife. The Campaign addresses the fundamental
challenges of water quality restoration and habitat protection
- - two key areas where improvements will result in the most
significant benefits to people and wildlife.
A Historic Opportunity
We envision a healthy Long Island Sound—its waters
supporting a thriving ecosystem, its coastal habitats protected,
its beaches open for swimming, and its fisheries safe for
human consumption. To realize this, the actions we take over
the next decade will be decisive. As the convener of a broad
coalition of partners including federal, state, and local
entities, as well as other private groups, Audubon brings
a vast array of resources and leadership skills to the table:
- 62,000 New York and Connecticut members
whose voices and political will can reach into every community
that relies on a healthy Sound;
- 125 years of combined staff experience
in protecting the Sound, bolstered by the organizational
expertise gained through other estuary restoration efforts,
such as our work in the Chesapeake Bay, Everglades, Mississippi
River, and San Francisco Bay.
- Vast experience in coalition building
as exemplified by its partnership with the construction
industry and labor in the creation of the Clean Water/Jobs
Coalition that recognizes the regional economic benefits
of clean water related jobs and the long-term health of
the region.
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