Published: February 05, 2010
Secretary Salazar Honors Youth in the Environment

On Monday, February 8, Secretary of the
Interior Ken Salazar will celebrate a group that exemplifies his youth
initiative -- a team of recent college graduates who have been volunteering
with community improvement/watershed groups throughout Appalachian coal
country and the hardrock west. These volunteers are members of the Office
of Surface Mining's two teams of AmeriCorps Volunteers in Service To
America [OSM/VISTAs] coordinated by Dr. T Allan Comp.
Secretary Salazar has already commended the Watershed Teams by saying, "I
am proud of the OSM/VISTA teams, Allan Comp, and the young people working
daily to tackle issues facing rural mining communities. They are restoring
the natural world and will be the next generation of conservation leaders."
Comp's work won him the ultimate peer-nominated honor in September when he
was awarded the Service to America Medal: Environment. Now, on February 8
Secretary Salazar will celebrate Comp and his Watershed Teams [OSM/VISTA
Teams], which were created through unique partnerships between the Office
of Surface Mining, AmeriCorps*VISTA, and grassroots community groups. On
the 8th, Salazar will speak at a reception held in Allan Comp's honor in
Washington, DC's Department of the Interior Building.
The Service to America Medal is the highest award put out by the
Partnership for Public Service, often referred to as the "Oscar of public
service." When Comp was honored with this medal, it was the first time that
the Partnership recognized a Department of the Interior employee for
service to the environment.
"I am honored to have been awarded this medal; it recognizes the challenges
being met by these OSM/VISTA Volunteers, their community sponsors and the
many hours of service they all put in," said Comp in September. "I'm proud
of the community and environmental work that the OSM/VISTA teams do. I know
that Secretary Salazar is too."
Not only is Secretary Salazar impressed that Comp was awarded this medal,
he is also celebrating the OSM/VISTA Teams because they exemplify his youth
initiative. Secretary Salazar created a new Interior office, the Office of
Youth in Natural Resources, in June. Dr. Comp's work was recognized by the
Partnership for Public Service largely because of the complexity of the
partnerships he assembles to assist these rural mining communities across
the nation, bringing young college graduates to serve their community and
the environment.
Dr. Comp's OSM/VISTA teams, the Appalachian Coal Country Watershed Team and
the Western Hardrock Watershed Team, are coalitions of grassroots-level
watershed improvement groups. These local watershed groups are determined
to help heal land scarred by pre-regulatory mining practices while creating
economic stability needed in the rural communities where they serve.
OSM/VISTA volunteers, all college graduates willing to commit a year of
their time to national service, function like a domestic equivalent of the
Peace Corps, serving rural mining communities impoverished by environmental
degradation.
Together the teams include 83 OSM/VISTAs that serve in ten different
states. OSM/VISTAs tackle a wide range of issues. They deal with acid mine
drainage, straight-pipes, fecal coliform bacteria, and other chemicals in
the water. They create environmental education programs, train volunteers
in water quality monitoring, and teach people how to construct rain
barrels, create Web sites, write the grants needed to support these
activities and organize all kinds of events. Visit www.accwt.org or
www.hardrockteam.org for more information about the teams.
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