Patrick Hayes Nominated
for Hagie Heritage Award
Patrick (Pat) Hayes of Dubuque has been nominated for the 2003 Lawrence and Eula Hagie Heritage Award, one of the largest conservation awards in the state of Iowa.
This award is given annually by the Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation
(INHF). It recognizes Iowans who have demonstrated an outstanding
commitment to conservation of the natural environment. This year's
Hagie Heritage Award winner will receive $1,000 and a hand-carved
acorn sculpture donated by Dennis and Linda Schlict of Center
Point, IA.
Hayes was nominated by Robert Walton, Executive Director of Dubuque
County Conservation Board (DCCB), Brian Preston, secretary of
Dubuque County Conservation Society (DCCS) and Chris Frommelt,
a Trees for Dubuque and DCCS member.
Hayes is the building services manager for Alverno Apartments,
a retirement and life care facility. According to his nominators,
he has shown his commitment to conservation by exceeding his job
duties. Hayes developed a recycling program for the apartment
complex years before Dubuque started its city-wide program. He
also aided the owners of the apartments in creating a composting
program to further reduce landfill waste. In addition to providing
resourceful means of protection, Hayes has also added native trees,
shrubs, birdhouses and feeders to the complex.
"It just seems like the right thing to do," Hayes said.
His concern for preserving Iowa's natural heritage reaches far
past his commitment at work. This past year, Hayes purchased a
parcel of land containing one of the largest fens in Dubuque County,
which had been slated for development. His purchase of the 16-acre
fen and surrounding wetlands will protect not only the land, but
the wildlife as well. According to Preston, Hayes is currently
working with an Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) biologist
to construct a management plan, which includes planting hundreds
of trees and shrubs around the fen.
In his spare time, Hayes has volunteered his time and knowledge
at public education programs to promote stewardship and protection.
He has also provided over 100 pre-cut birdhouses and feeders for
the Dubuque County 4-H program so that youth in the county will
become inspired to protect their natural heritage. According to
Preston, Hayes has built 500 bluebird houses and numerous kestrel
and wood duck houses. Hayes even goes as far as volunteering to
plant trees and shrubs on private landowners' property at his
own expense if they will maintain them.
"He has been successful in planting several hundred trees
each year for the past 10 to 15 years, which has established excellent
wildlife habitat," Walton wrote in his nomination letter.
"I guess I ran out of space in my own yard," Hayes said.
"I've taken a lot of classes, and I like to see if what I
learned actually works."
Hayes serves on the executive committee of the Dubuque County
Conservation Society (DCCS), a nonprofit conservation group and
is the chairperson of the Habitat and Birdhouse Committee. According
to Preston, as habitat chairperson Hayes has overseen the planting
of seven acres of prairie, 2000 trees and shrubs, the maintenance
of fencing on property boundaries and the maintenance of nesting
boxes on DCCS's property near Cascade.
Hayes has also served as a delegate to the Iowa REAP Congress,
served on the board of Trees for Dubuque and the Freeway Corridor
Committee and has been active in prairie restoration projects
in the tri-state area.
"He frequently attends educational programs to expand his
understanding of the natural world, often at this own expense,
and then applies the latest information on best practices to his
endeavors," Frommelt wrote in his nomination letter. "He
shares both his knowledge and his enthusiasm for the preservation
and enhancement of our natural resources." Hayes is a graduate
of the Master Woodland Manager Program and of the Master Conservationalist
Program.
For all of his efforts, Hayes received the "Outstanding Conservationist"
award by DCCS for "outstanding leadership and countless hours
of devotion to the cause of conservation."
Hayes is among seven Iowans nominated for the 2003 Hagie Heritage
Award. A committee of INHF board of directors will determine the
recipient of the award later this summer. Other 2003 Hagie nominees
include Kathy Dice of Wapello, Dan Harskamp of Orange City, Diana
Horton of Iowa City, Roger Heidt of Robins, Thomas Neenan of Center
Point and Loren Hayes of Independence.
The Hagie Heritage Award was established by Jan Hagie Shindel
of Florida and Ila Jeanne Hagie Logan of Moville, IA, in honor
of their parents, Lawrence and Eula Hagie. This is the fourteenth
year that INHF has presented the Hagie award.
INHF is a non-profit, member-supported organization that preserves,
protects and enhances Iowa's natural resources "for those
who follow." The group has protected nearly 75,000 acres
in Iowa since 1979.
For more information, e-mail Cathy
Engstrom, Director of Communications, or call (515) 288-1846.
© Copyright 2008 Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation
Comments? Suggestions? Email INHF Webmaster
|