Kentucky Heartwood was thrilled to present the 6th Annual Stuart Butler Memorial Award to Johanna Camenisch of Louisville on November 5. Johanna’s generosity, compassion, and dedication to justice have left an indelible mark on generations of school children and their parents, peace activists, women’s rights advocates, war protesters, and environmental supporters. 

As a young teacher in Midway, Kentucky, Johanna and her class lowered the flag to honor Martin Luther King on the day that she believed should be established as a national day of remembrance. When the principal noticed, he went out and raised the flag. In response, Johanna marched out and lowered the flag again.

After learning about the environmental dangers of released helium balloons, Johanna’s third grade class at the Brown School successfully lobbied the city of Louisville to pass an ordinance banning balloon release.

Johanna’s tradition of passing out Arbor Day seedlings to her students have helped create an urban forest in Louisville. Former student Kristen Munro-Leighton described the towering tree in her yard that she planted in elementary school because of Johanna’s encouragement.

In the early 70s Johanna and Nancy Gall Clayton single-handedly provided abortion counseling and support to women before the passage of Roe v. Wade. After convincing the phone company to list her home phone as an emergency hotline number, Johanna fielded calls 24 hours a day.

From Cambodia and Vietnam to Iraq and Afghanistan, Johanna has advocated for peace and supported the community of pacifists. Her efforts with the Louisville Peace and Justice Committee protesting the Iraq War have been permanently archived by the Filson Society in Louisville. Speaker and long time friend Joyce Evans related a story about Johanna’s daughter Chrissy, whose elementary school class was asked if they had ever been to Washington D.C. Chrissy raised her hand and asked, “To visit or to protest?”

Born the eldest of 12 in the farming community of Stanford, Johanna was shaped by the faith, hard work, and love of her family, sister Carmy Jordan described.

Thanks go to many people for making the evening unforgettable. Karen Jones and Beverly Ferrell, award winners in their own right, provided the music.

People loved the food! Thanks to Wenchels for lip-smacking cole slaw; Alfalfa’s Restaurant and Mark Schimmoeller for the tasty chili; Bluegrass Bakery for the bags of bread; Connie Lemley for the delicious salad greens; Betsy Camenisch for the green beans; Johanna for the cranberries, funeral salad, sweet potato casserole; and Trina Peiffer and Laurie Schimmoeller for the cookies and chocolate. To all our amazing Kentucky Heartwood Council members who cooked the rest of the meal, cheers!

The gift certificate from Good Foods enabled us to get coffee, creamer, cider, and olives. Thank you!

Tona Barkley and Bluebird Whitehead and Levi Gordon loaned us the lovely tablecloths. Johanna and her sisters provided the pumpkin centerpieces for every table. Ella Lemley-Frye sent her miniature gourds and pumpkins as decorations. 

To our speakers Laurie Schimmoeller, Nancy Gall Clayton, Joyce Evans, Helen Roach Rench, Nancy Theiss, Anne Linden Steele, Don Pratt, Dorothy Converse, Carol & Harold Trainer, Judy Munro-Leighton, Trina Peiffer, Jim Chatham, Steve Leavell, Tiana French, Kristen Munro-Leighton, Carmy Jordan: you uplifted us all. Thank you for your stories, your memories, and your extraordinary work.

Stu’s family, Linda and Emily Collier and Debbie Monbeck, presented Johanna with the award of two birdhouses made by biologist Wayne Davis. The cash award of $500 was, at Johanna’s request, distributed among Kentucky Resources Council, Fellowship of Reconciliation, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, Smile Train, and Coalition of Immokalee Farm Workers. 

The event could not have happened without the coordination and work of Levi Gordon and Bluebird Whitehead and the rest of the Kentucky Heartwood Council.  And finally, thanks go to the Unitarian Universalist Church for welcoming us to their beautiful facility. Many people helped clean up, including Johanna, who stayed until the last fork was dried!

In all, the evening raised over $1,600. We will now be able to add a thousand dollars to our endowment fund for forest protection, bringing it to over $11,000! 


 
 
Hello everyone!

               We had a great dance!  Many thanks go to the Capital City Orchestra (Diane Simmons, Don Coffey, Jim Eaton, Joan Adrian, Karen Friley, Kay Kennedy, Lara Panayatoff, Laura Lee Cundiff, Lee Creech, Lisa Hicks, Paul Andis, Roger Holden, and Trent Ripley) for the fine music. Our expert callers were Sylvia Coffey, Beth Brokaw, Peter and Phyllis Rogers, and Steve Bennett – thank you for leading us through the dances!  The tasty food was cooked by Caroline Taylor-Webb, Clay Goebeler, Lyn Akers, Jane Marie Watts, Laurie Schimmoeller, Stone & Ember Bakery, Doug & Samantha Osborne, and Chris Schimmoeller.  Flowers and cilantro (not to mention two great boys!) provided by Trina Peiffer.  Our kitchen and break down crew included the amazing students from Frankfort High, Jeri, Maya, Michael, Audrey, as well as Caroline and Mrs. Fleck. 

               Thanks to Jon and Lyn Akers for running the registration table and to Clay for handling the Kentucky Heartwood table.  Betty Beshoar provided the reusable dishware.  John & Velda Watts, Sean, and the Millville Sportsmen have an awesome facility – thank you for letting us dance in such a fun space!

               Jessie Bessinger and Tina Marie made trips to deliver supplies, and Joel Dufour sponsored the event and was support crew in lots of ways.  Thanks to the State Journal and Tricia Spalding for taking photos.

               The fundraiser could not have taken place without the work of Sylvia Coffey.

               Thanks to everyone, we raised just over $500 for the forest protection work of Kentucky Heartwood, plus we had a fabulous time!

              

For the Forest!  Chris Schimmoeller


 
 
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Kentucky Heartwood was privileged to present a plaque to John Walker of the Daniel Boone National Forest in recognition of his work to protect and restore the lands of Cromer Ridge in the Daniel Boone National Forest. Along with the plaque, which was presented to John at the DBNF headquarters in Winchester, Kentucky Heartwood presented a letter stating:

"Kentucky Heartwood is honored to present John Walker of the Daniel Boone National Forest with a placard to express our appreciation for his tenacity and creativity in the efforts to protect and restore the lands and surrounding waters of Cromer Ridge. The efforts of John Walker and fellow Daniel Boone National Forest personnel in this undertaking exemplify an ethic of land stewardship harkening to the roots of the U.S. Forest Service, and offer a heartening look forward to an agency with a renewed focus on mending the damage of past transgressions on the landscape."

Cromer Ridge is an area in the Rockcastle River watershed that has been degraded almost unimaginably by decades of illegal off-road vehicle use. The Forest Service has been working to remove the off-roaders and rehabilitate this area, in large part to control the vast amount of sediment flowing into the Rockcastle River and Woods Creek Reservoir. Kentucky Heartwood visited the site as part of our Spring Hike and was so impressed by the work being done that we felt acknowledgement of the important work being done there was more than appropriate.

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As some of you may remember, last year Kentucky Heartwood asked our supporters to send in comments opposing the expansion of strip mining operations bordering the south end of Robinson Forest. The mining would have eaten up some of the last intact forest surrounding Robinson. 


Well, we just got news yesterday that Frasure Creek, the company that had sought the permits to mine there, has withdrawn their 404 application for "economic reasons." If they want to seek a permit again they'll have to start at the beginning of the process, incur more costs, and face more opposition.


A big thanks to all of you who took the time to send in letters opposing this mine! With national pressure for investors to pull their support from MTR, legislative traction in D.C., and federal agencies beginning to show interest in actually regulating and enforcing the law, coal companies are on the defensive. Let's all keep up the good work!
 
 
Kentucky Heartwood is now working to assist former residents of what is now known as Land Between the Lakes, but known as Between the Rivers to the people forcibly removed from their community and land in western Kentucky. The Forest Service is burning much of the peninsula, and now has plans to log and clearcut 1850 acres of forest in the Demumbers Creek watershed. You can download and read our comments.
demumbers_creek_scoping_comments.docx.pdf
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Kentucky Heartwood learned last month of a proposed landfill in Tennessee just a few miles upstream from the Kentucky line and the Big South Fork. The landfill would impact Bear Creek and the successful work already done to restore this stream, as well as the McCreary County water supply and the waters of Big South Fork National Recreation Area. You can read our comments below.
solid_waste_comment_letter_khw.pdf
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Kentucky Heartwood submitted comments to the Forest Service regarding the 7,000 acre Redbird Midstory Removal Project. The project documents can be seen here. The Forest Service used faulty information to justify the project, which they plan to implement with a Categorical Exclusion, circumventing the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and its standards of review. The project would force an unnatural one- and two-aged structure on this recovering forest to simplify future timber harvests and regeneration, rather than helping the forest to recover its native range of structures and functions. You can download and read our comments below.
rb_midstoryremoval.pdf
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In March, Kentucky Heartwood submitted comments regarding the Kentucky Statewide Assessment of Forest Resources. The report is available on the  Kentucky Division of Forestry's website, and our comments can be downloaded from the icon below.
ky_forestassessment_comments_edited.pdf
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The following are comments were delivered to the House Tourism, Development, and Energy Committee on February 11 during a hearing on HB312. 



Dear Members of the Committee,

My name is Jim Scheff, and I am the Director of Kentucky Heartwood. I hold a Masters Degree in Environmental Science and am currently a graduate student researching the ecology of Kentucky’s forests at Eastern Kentucky University.

To be clear, neither Kentucky Heartwood nor myself are opposed to the responsible use of horses in the enjoyment Kentucky’s public lands. However, we strongly oppose House Bill 312 in its current form.

To begin with, this overreaching bill elevates one interest group’s prerogatives above all others, including the agencies and professional land managers tasked with the responsibility of managing Kentucky’s natural resources for current and future generations. Horses are an important part of Kentucky’s cultural identity and deserving of recognition and a certain level of access to recreational land, but this does not mean that the Kentucky Horse Council should be allowed dictate land management policy in Kentucky.

Horses can have significant impacts on the environment, including the spread of invasive species and substantial amounts of erosion - both significant and costly environmental challenges in Kentucky. As such it is critical that access to public lands by horse be evaluated carefully by land managers, and take into account conflicting uses, mandates, and the condition of the resource. This bill is startlingly deficient in that it puts the burden on land managers to prove harm rather than on user groups to show that they can access the area without degrading the lands in question.

We are adamantly opposed to language in the bill allowing horses in State Nature Preserves. Suggesting that State Nature Preserves be open to horses indicates either an ignorance of the fragility and importance of these areas or an arrogance that one group’s preferred recreation should be allowed to degrade the rare and endangered species and natural communities protected by statute in these special places. We hope it’s the former, and that with education the Kentucky Horse Council and its advocates will see fit to withdraw these lands from the current legislation.

Regarding State Wildlife Management Areas, we know that there is great concern among hunting groups that recreational horse use in Wildlife Management Areas will disrupt hunting opportunities and effectively drive these areas out of the small pool of public lands open to the hunters. While we can’t speak for a majority of hunters, we know that many are particularly upset that lands bought with their hunting license fees, as if to add insult to injury, may be for practical purposes taken away from their use.

Last week, Tom Fitzgerald of the Kentucky Resources Council offered alternative language to assist the equestrian community in finding greater access on Kentucky State Lands while protecting the most sensitive of places and allowing deference to the agencies tasked with their management. We find his proposed language to be reasonable, and hope that this committee will consider it as an alternative to the current bill.

We understand that most horse enthusiasts love Kentucky’s natural beauty. What is unfortunate is that this legislation, as proposed, has left conservation advocates, hikers, hunters, and other user groups feeling like the Kentucky Horse Council is using their association with First Lady Jane Beshear and the upcoming World Equestrian Games to force a narrow agenda on the rest of us.

Part of the long-term solution in Kentucky must be the acquisition of new lands for the myriad and often conflicting uses enjoyed by the public. House Bill 310, introduced last month, will accomplish this with a 3/8 cent sales and use tax to fund a Land Stewardship program in Kentucky. Despite the current economic downturn and budget crisis, we feel that such a fund would be embraced by Kentuckians and add nothing to the state’s financial woes. We hope that the Kentucky Horse Council and First Lady Beshear will join the conservation community in promoting this excellent opportunity to both protect Kentucky’s natural heritage and to grow the outdoor recreational opportunities so desired by the public.

 
 
Someone on Facebook asked if we were against invasive species removal. We're not. Here's our response:
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