Frank Dukes in the News

Friday, September 25, 2009

Virginia Natural Resources Institute Holds Annual Meeting (NBC-TV)+

[From WVIR-TV NBC) Environmental advocates from across Virginia and parts of the southeastern United States are meeting in Madison County this week for the Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Institute. They are working on different ways of looking at environmental issues, and how to enlighten local and state governments that make the development decisions impacting natural resources. Organizers hope institute students follow in institute alumni footsteps and find environmental solutions. "We can't solve these problems alone. And the cost to us as everyday citizens, the cost to local governments, to state and federal governments is too much. So we have to find ways to work through these problems together instead of always being at loggerheads and pointing fingers of blame," said Tanya Denckla Cobb with the UVA Institute for Environmental Negotiation. This is the 10th year of the institute. The Madison Leg Institute goes through Friday. Students will meet several times throughout the year to look at environmental issues in other parts of the state.

Monday, March 26, 2007

Plan for Money Point Wins Prestigious Planning Award

The Plan for Money Point, spear-headed by the Elizabeth River Project and facilitated by UVa Institute for Environmental Negotiation (IEN) Director Frank Dukes and IEN Associate Christine Gyovai, has won a prestigious 2007 Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA) Places, Planning Award. Asst. Professor of Architecture Phoebe Crisman and Michael Petrus's design firm Crisman+Petrus Architects provided the urban design for the project as well as prepared the final report. Others who contributed include: graduate student of urban and environmental planning, Clark Larson; the students in PLAC 524 during the 2004-05 academic year who developed a community history and did other work; and Margaret Kirby and Casey Williams who worked on the project as IEN interns. The plan calls for a host of environmental improvements in Money Point, an industrial area just west of I-464 in South Norfolk, Virginia. To be implemented over the next ten years, the work is timed to coincide with a $5.5 million cleanup of contaminated sediment at the bottom of the Elizabeth River. Other features of the plan include the creation of a 100-foot-wide buffer of vegetation designed to filter chemicals out of storm water running off Money Point into the river and the construction of a playground, sidewalks, and other civic improvements in the small Money Point residential community.

Also in the plan is the creation of a Learning Barge, a floating classroom, where school-aged children will learn about the revitalization process taking place on and along the Elizabeth River. The jury complimented "the design of a 'learning barge' that will allow schoolchildren to experience the life of the river." The team of students and faculty who are researching / designing / building / preparing curriculum for the barge form the Learning Barge Project, directed by Asst. Professor of Architecture Phoebe Crisman. According to EDRA: ?EDRA/Places Awards recognize projects whose significance extends beyond any one profession or field. The awards emphasize a link between research and practice. They demonstrate how a careful understanding of people and their interactions with places can inspire design.? The Plan for Money Point will be published in the journal Places, volume 19, issue 3. Jury members included:
- Buzz Yudell Principal, Moore Ruble Yudell
- Roberta Feldman Professor of Architecture, University of Illinois-Chicago
- Michael Pyatok Pyatok Associates, and Arizona State University
- Ann Forsyth Director, Metropolitan Design Center, University of Minnesota
- Anne Whiston Spirn Professor of Landscape Architecture, MIT

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

IEN Director Frank Dukes Leads+

Frank Dukes, director of the University of Virginia?s Institute for Environmental Negotiation, served as lead facilitator for ?National Dialogue on Children and Nature,? the largest-ever U.S. conference focusing on the decline of children?s connection to nature and the alarming effects on their health and educational and social development. Co-sponsored by the Conservation Fund, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and best-selling author and futurist Richard Louv, the recent conference brought together 350 health professionals, educators, conservationists, business leaders and elected officials at the National Conservation Training Center in West Virginia to discuss increases in childhood obesity, diabetes and attention disorders as effects of what Louv has dubbed ?nature deficit disorder.? - UVa News Services

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

IEN and Partners Host 7th Annual Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Institute+

Virginia?s environmental leaders are gathering in Madison County for a three-day workshop, Sept. 13-15, to kick off the seventh year of the Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Institute. VNRLI is a partnership with the University of Virginia?s Institute for Environmental Negotiation, Virginia Cooperative Extension and the Virginia Department of Forestry. Leaders from Virginia?s industry, businesses, local and state government, and the environmental community will begin their yearlong work together with a packed agenda covering important skills for conflict resolution, personal leadership, and collaborative dialogue. Leaders also will hear from guest speakers about a six-year dialogue between public health advocates and tobacco farmers, on the surface with nothing in common, who were able through dialogue to find common ground and to work together to help tobacco communities and public health. [From UVa News]

Thursday, July 6, 2006

IEN Director Appointed to Board of National Policy Consensus Initiative+

From UVa News Services: E. Franklin Dukes, director of the University of Virginia?s Institute for Environmental Negotiation, has been appointed to the board of the Policy Consensus Initiative, a national, nonprofit, bipartisan organization that works with state leaders throughout the United States to initiate and strengthen programs for collaborative governance and consensus building?.

Monday, August 22, 2005

IEN Partners to Create Problem Resolution Initiative+

In partnership with the Virginia Association for Community Conflict Resolution, the Institute for Environmental Negotiation (IEN) has created a new initiative to assist localities in resolving complex environmental issues. The initiative is featured in an article entitled, "UVa Group Paves Collaborative Way," published in the August 21 edition of the Daily Progress.