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For Immediate Release: March 10, 2011

Five Leading Conservation Groups Launch Living Landscape Initiative for Silicon Valley Region
Collaboration to Create and Maintain Vibrant and Sustainable Natural Lands in the Heart of Coastal California
Moore and Packard Foundations Back Effort with Major Support
(Palo Alto, Calif.) A group of five leading conservation organizations are collaborating to achieve critical large-scale land protection goals in the heart of coastal California. The new effort, called the Living Landscape Initiative, includes the Land Trust of Santa Cruz County, The Nature Conservancy, Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST), Save the Redwoods League and Sempervirens Fund. Sacramento-based Resources Legacy Fund helped launch the effort using major support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. The goal of the Initiative is to preserve and protect 80,000 acres over the next 20 years in four key areas in and around Silicon Valley: Coastal Lands, the Redwood Heartland, the Pajaro River Corridor, and other Essential Links. To attract matching funds from both the public and private sectors, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation has put forth a $15 million 3-to-1 challenge grant for land acquisition and stewardship over the next three years. Were at a critical time for translating scientific knowledge into impact at a strategic, regional scaleensuring a human connection to our surroundings, creating linkages for wildlife, and conserving essential plant and animal habitats, said Steve McCormick, president of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. I am extremely pleased to direct the Foundations resources to this collaborative. "The time to act is now. We understand more than ever how important healthy living landscapes are to the social and economic future of the Bay Area, said Julie Packard, trustee of the David and Lucile Packard Foundation and executive director of

the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Strategic, science-based and collaborative land conservation will let ecosystems as well as local communities thrive in a connected and sustainable manner. The Living Landscape Initiative provides a powerful model to make immediate and significant progress." The vision of the Initiative is to create a sustainable living landscape for local communities. Such a landscape would provide ongoing natural benefits to residents such as clean air and clean water, dramatic beauty, broad biodiversity, productive agricultural and working lands, and recreational opportunities. For decades, these benefits have attracted an educated work force to Silicon Valley and enhanced quality of life in the region. Now, however, we risk losing these benefits due to increasingly significant threats to our surrounding landscape, including population growth and the accelerating effects of climate change. The Living Landscape Initiative is a strong example of how protecting key habitat and wildlife linkages can help both people and nature thrive, said Mike Sweeney, executive director of The Nature Conservancy, California. This is critical to the social, economic and natural prosperity of the region and to the plants and animals that rely on the land to survive. As our climate changes, protection of large, intact landscapes is essential for allowing human and natural communities to adapt. Four Critical Areas of Concern The Initiatives work will stretch from Mount Hamilton, along the ridgeline of the Santa Cruz Mountains and across rolling ranchlands out to ocean wetlands. The Initiative focuses on four areas of concern: Coastal Lands, which in our region comprise one of the only rural and accessible coastlines within a major metropolitan area; Redwood Heartland, including rare, lush forests set aside as both parks and working forest lands; Pajaro River Corridor, rich in wildlife, water, agriculture and ranching; Essential Links, providing much-needed connections between protected properties so they are part of a strong, resilient network of natural lands. Setting a large-scale vision for how nature can survive in the Silicon Valley region is the only way we can secure a viable, sustainable future for the diversity of life

here, said Audrey Rust, president of POST. There is a window of opportunity to get this work done now. We must do right by the land and seize that chance before its too late. Working Together to Accomplish More The organizations within the Initiative have worked together on previous occasions, but typically in a case-by-case fashion. By coordinating our efforts more closely, we can go much further than any one group acting alone, said Rust. We can leverage our individual strengths, bring all our resources to bear to meet urgent conservation goals, and ensure the permanence of our shared land-saving work so it delivers maximum benefits to the communities we serve. Reed Holderman, executive director of Sempervirens Fund, agreed. Big things happen when people and organizations work together. We are excited to participate in the Living Landscape Initiative with our land trust colleagues because we will do more land conservation and share more information as a result of this historic partnership. Other groups taking part were pleased that the Initiative puts a strong emphasis on lands and projects that connect directly to their existing missions. Save the Redwoods League is honored to be part of a prestigious group of conservation organizations committed to this Initiative, said Ruskin K. Hartley, executive director of Save the Redwoods League. The Initiative will protect the areas unique natural benefits and beauty, including 30,000 acres of magnificent redwood forests. With only five percent of old-growth redwoods still standing, we must work diligently to protect these forests into the future. "We joined the Initiative because we believe that a healthy natural world is critical to the economic health of Santa Cruz County," said Terry Corwin, executive director of the Land Trust for Santa Cruz County. "All of Santa Cruz County is included within the Initiatives area of interest, and as the local land trust in the county we are excited to be involved in how our countys land and water are protected." About the Living Landscape Initiative: The Living Landscape Initiative is a collaborative effort among five land conservation organizations in and around Silicon Valley to create and maintain a vibrant and sustainable living landscape in the heart of coastal California. Through the partners expertise and shared focus on a healthy ecosystem, the Living Landscape Initiative exists to protect landscapes and inspire a renewed connection to the land. The Initiative

seeks to benefit local communities with an environment that supports quality of life through clean air and water, landscape preservation, farms and working landscapes, habitat protection, biodiversity, natural aesthetics, recreational access and economic vibrancy in the region. To learn more, visit http://www.livinglandscapeinitiative.org. Press Contacts: Minna Jung, Communications Director The David and Lucile Packard Foundation Tel: (650) 917-7247 Email: mjung@packard.org URL: www.packard.org Genny Biggs, Communications Manager The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Tel: (650) 213-3021 Email: genny.biggs@moore.org URL: www.moore.org Stephen Slade, Deputy Director The Land Trust of Santa Cruz County Tel: (831) 429-6116 Email: stephen.slade@landtrustsantacruz.org URL: www.landtrustsantacruz.org Kathleen Goldstein The Nature Conservancy Tel: (202) 841-0295 Email: kgoldstein@greenfishcommunications.com URL: www.nature.org Nina Nowak, Director of Communications Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST) Tel: (650) 854-7696, x.306 Email: nnowak@openspacetrust.org URL: www.openspacetrust.org Jennifer Benito, Director of Outreach Save the Redwoods League Tel: (415) 820-5814 Email: jbenito@savetheredwoods.org URL: www.savetheredwoods.org Reed Holderman, Executive Director Sempervirens Fund Tel: (650) 949-1453 Email: rholderman@sempervirens.org URL: www.sempervirens.org

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