Cindy Adams Dunn, Secretary of DCNR, joins the Lancaster Conservancy at Clark Nature Preserve to announce an historic investment in projects across Pennsylvania that will create new recreational opportunities, conserve natural resources, and help revitalize local communities.
Hayden Mitman was born and raised in the Lehigh Valley. He’s a graduate of William Allen High School in Allentown and Moravian College in Bethlehem. He joined PBS39 in 2018 and has 15 years of experience as a reporter working in television, radio and newspapers. He’s a general assignment reporter, covering anything and everything in and around the Lehigh Valley. He’s also an avid fan of local sports, sci-fi movies, comic books and video games. But his favorite pastime is being a dad and spending time with his family.
Contact him at haydenm@wlvt.org.
Courtesy of Commonwealth Media Services
Cindy Adams Dunn, Secretary of DCNR, joins the Lancaster Conservancy at Clark Nature Preserve to announce an historic investment in projects across Pennsylvania that will create new recreational opportunities, conserve natural resources, and help revitalize local communities.
In announcing the grant program Tuesday, Cindy Adams Dunn, secretary of the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, said it’s the largest ever single investment into recreation and conservation.
“This is the largest grant round DCNR – the Bureau of Recreation and Conservation – has been able to roll out in history,” she said during a news conference in Lancaster County.
More than $3.5 million from this round of funds will be delivered to Lehigh Valley projects.
They include improvements to Jordan Skate Park in Allentown, development of a trail system at Trexler Nature Preserve in Lehigh County, and development of the Monocacy Way Trail in Bethlehem.
Statewide, the money is intended to create new recreational opportunities, conserve natural resources and revitalize communities.
Adams Dunn said the new money tops last year’s record-breaking grant investment of $70 million.
And, she said, the hope is it will help bring people closer to nature.
“We have a goal of having a trail within 10 minutes of every Pennsylvanian. And, that sounds like one of those lofty goals you never can reach, but, in fact, it is do-able,” she said.
The funding will be spent on a variety of initiatives such as an Americans with Disabilities Act [ADA]-accessible trail and parking lot at Clark Nature Preserve in Lancaster County, and to create a diversity and inclusion program at Franklin Delano Roosevelt Park in Philadelphia.
“It puts federal money to work in what it’s intended to do: restore the economy, restore hopefulness and restore quality of life,” Adams Dunn said.
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