Grants worth $600,000+ for environment projects
Grants worth $600,000+ for environment projects in Auckland and Northland
ASB Community Trust has this month approved more than $632,000 worth of grants for environmental projects in Auckland and Northland.
The community trust’s monthly board meeting approved grants including $79,799 to the Puketi Forest Trust to help with pest control in 15,000 hectares of Northland kauri forest. Meanwhile, the Motuihe Trust was awarded $74,000 to help with its work to restore Motuihe Island, in the Hauraki Gulf.
ASB Community Trust CEO Jennifer Gill said the work of both groups was seen as being strongly aligned to the Trust’s strategic objective for the environment sector and priority areas for funding.
Under ASBCT’s pilot
cultivation fund, the Hauraki Gulf Charitable Trust was
granted $60,000.
The cultivation fund helps umbrella
organisations to support local volunteer organisations who
would be otherwise ineligible to apply to the Trust for
funding as they do not have audited accounts.
The grant to Hauraki Gulf Charitable Trust will allow volunteer work to continue on a number of environmental projects on Waiheke Island, including the replanting of native trees on the McKenzie Reserve, restoration of a wetland at Waiheke School and restoration of the Te Toki Reserve on Waiheke’s Ostend causeway.
Other environment grants announced
include:
$30,000 for the Windy Hill and Rosalie Bay
Catchment Trust’s forest restoration work on Great Barrier
Island;
$12,350 for Friends of Te Atawhai Whenua
Trust for its work protecting the Waiheke Island
reserve;
$50,000 to help with Shakespeare Open
Sanctuary’s pest-proof fence project in Whangaparaoa;
$50,180 for the Mountains to Sea Conservation
Trust’s education programmes;
$32,400 to help
Weedfree Waitakere with its restoration and weed eradication
work in West Auckland;
$27,695 for Pointways Pony
Club’s fencing of native trees and wetland at its Manurewa
base;
$30,000 to the Guardians of the Bay of Islands
for the Project Island Song restoration
project;
$10,000 for Hua Rakau Trust ki Omamari’s
work protecting land and marine habitats at Omamari, near
Dargaville;
$30,000 for Friends of Rangikapiti
Reserve Society for weed control in the Far North, Mangonui,
Rangikapiti Reserve;
$11,710 for Whangarei Quarry
Gardens Trust’s for native bush restoration work at
Whangarei Quarry Garden;
$28,700 for the Waste
Resource Trust’s to improve the sustainability of
community organisations on Waiheke Island;
$20,000
for Worldwide Fund for Nature’s for an environmental
education programme to protect the Maui’s Dolphin
population.
“The Trust supports projects and organisations that protect and enhance the environment in which we live,” says ASB Community Trust CEO Jennifer Gill. “Funding details are on our website and we encourage any organisations that fit our eligibility criteria to apply.”
The full list of grants is online at: http://asbcommunitytrust.org.nz/funding/latest-grants
ENDS