By Beth Sullivan
Last year, 2017, was a
huge year for Avalonia Land Conservancy. The organization achieved
Land Trust Alliance accreditation, becoming one of an elite group of
land trusts deemed worthy of such a designation by adhering to and
upholding a rigorous set of standards and practices. It was a huge
amount of work to get to that place, and the challenge continues on a
ramped up level for the organization to prove that it can maintain
this status in 2018 and beyond.
With the Alliance
Standards and Practices as our Bible to follow, we must also
make some changes in how we do business. Our Board of
Directors (BOD) has been enlarged with some great new depth and
talent, creating newer committee designations and formal charters.
Learn more about the BOD here. We have changed our fiscal year to
correspond to the calendar year which makes a huge amount of sense,
and we are updating and revamping our data bases and membership
lists.
Your membership goes toward helping us support land and wildlife. Photograph by Rick Newton. |
Teamwork pulled us through to accreditation. |
Common mission
Does all this sound
boring to a nature lover? It is not what I enjoy thinking about. But
what I am getting at is that while those administrators, committee
chairs, and BOD members are busy tending to details, they are
creating a path for an organization that can better carry out its
mission-one that we all believe in.
Underlying everything
we do, though, are our members. You are the heart and soul of the
organization as well as the backbone. It is our members who give the
organization its strength. What good is structure without people
willing to fill in the empty places? We rely on members to be our
volunteers in so many areas. But not everyone can take the time to
give hours and energy. This is where membership demonstrates its
strength in numbers.
By being a member, you
become part of something bigger. Numbers prove support, numbers
attract others, numbers are noticed. When we apply for grant funding
for acquisitions, we can cite our strong, supportive membership base.
It matters. When donors of land are looking for a recipient
organization, they look to see the strength of its resources and
membership base that they know will keep the organization alive in
perpetuity. When foundations and corporate donors are looking for
solid investments, they look for member support.
This kind of support
allows us to acquire, protect and steward the land that so many of us
have come to love. When we protect the land, we protect habitats,
wildlife and groundwater. We create greenways and blueways. We
protect the land for our children, grandchildren and generations far
in the future.
There are many ways
you, as an individual, can help support Avalonia, but the easiest way
is with your membership. We do not get any public funding for
operating expenses. With a bare bones operating budget, we need our
members to help keep us running.
Already the next generation is learning the significance of open space on Fennerswood Preserve. |
When we asked the State DEEP for help, they knew we have a strong membership that backs us up. |
Members, old and new, mingle and share Avalonia spirit. |
Membership Drive
We will be embarking on
our annual membership drive this month.
If you are an active
member, we THANK YOU! Please make sure we have all your current
information, including email address when you get your renewal
request.
In the future, all
memberships will be renewable in January, not May as in the past. If
your membership is due to be renewed after May, you will get an
extension until Jan of 2018. If your membership has lapsed, you may
get a request to join us again.
We have a lot to
celebrate as an organization: the Accreditation and our 50th
Anniversary Celebration next month. Please join us as members in
being part of something bigger. Come celebrate with us.
Making scarce resources available to those who may have limited access is an important part of educating our youngest members. |
We all know that many hands make work lighter; there is strength in numbers when it comes to membership also. |
Photographs by Avalonia
Land Conservancy members.
No comments:
Post a Comment