AUSTIN — Today, released the names of the winners of the annual Awards, who will be honored during a luncheon in Austin next spring hosted by and APP Texas, the state office of the APP.
“One would be hard-pressed to find another group of women who have gotten better conservation results in Texas,” said Suzanne Langley, executive director of APP Texas.
“For decades, women have been at the forefront of protecting the land, air and waters that Texans, birds and other wildlife depend on. I couldn’t be prouder of these leaders. Many thanks go to the ladies on our wonderful Steering Committee, especially co-chairs Blair Fitzsimons and Claire Caudill, who helped us pick such a winning class of honorees.”
Winners include:
Honorable Valarie Bristol, Conservationist
As a Travis County Commissioner, Valarie’s proudest achievement was her work as the main conservationist for the Balcones Canyonlands Conservation Plan. This Habitat Conservation Plan was authorized under the Endangered Species Act to protect two endangered species, the Golden-cheeked Warbler and the Black-capped Vireo. This large community project took over six years to put in place. She listened carefully to many options, then championed a finance plan that allowed for mitigation properties to be purchased through a tax increment system. The innovative plan was the first multi-species habitat conservation plan in the United States and became a national model. Today the plan is almost complete with 30,000 acres conserved. Valarie continued her land conservation work with the Trust for Public Land and later with the Nature Conservancy. After retirement, she dedicated time to Travis APP and led efforts to add land to one preserve and endow another.
Carolyn Chipman Evans, Cibolo Nature Center
As the founding director of the Cibolo Nature Center & Farm (CNC&F), Carolyn has made nature the nature her life’s work. She has a deep love for the Cibolo that her great, great, great grandparents settled on in the 1850’s. Her work began with a handful of friends cleaning up the creek, marshland and prairie. They became the “Friends of the Cibolo Wilderness” and for 30 years Carolyn has worked to build community, inspire care and create positive action for the environment.
Currently, the CNC&F’s conservation includes developing the adjacent historic 60-acre Herff Farm into a Center for Sustainable Living to further connect the Hill Country community to its past, present, and future through nature. Plans for expanding the Nature School Preschool to be built on the Herff Farm are underway. The Friends of the Cibolo Wilderness has grown from a handful of caring citizens to over 30,000 volunteer hours and over 100,000 visitors a year. The Cibolo Nature Center & Farm has become a national model.
Susan Kaderka, National Wildlife Federation
As the Regional Executive Director of the National Wildlife Federation's South Central Regional Center in Austin, TX since 1999, Kaderka developed and launched the Texas Living Waters project, which has reformed Texas water law to better protect instream flows, improve groundwater management and foster aggressive water conservation. She has also been a vocal advocate for the restoration of Louisiana’s deteriorating coastal wetlands, serving since 2003 on the Louisiana Governor’s Advisory Commission for Coastal Restoration and Conservation. More recently she has been involved in educating river advocates and watershed groups on how our changing APP is expected to impact river ecosystems in the U.S.
Dianne Wassenich, San Marcos River Foundation
In the 33 years since joining the San Marcos River Foundation (SMRF)—first as a volunteer, then as a board member and now as executive director—Dianne has done just about every kind of work possible to protect the river, clean it, advocate for it, and improve the habitat for the endangered species. In recent years, SMRF has focused on permanent land conservation to keep the river flowing and clear by preserving recharge zone lands above the San Marcos Springs. Major progress includes a 210-acre ranch preserved with a conservation easement, a 250-acre ranch purchased and then sold to the city of San Marcos for water quality protection of major recharge features, and a 75-acre ranch purchased and now being surveyed for a conservation easement. In addition, 31 acres of riverside land, including a half-mile of San Marcos River frontage and a half-mile of spring-fed creek frontage immediately adjoining IH 35, was donated to SMRF last December and many volunteers have worked to clean out debris in the river and creek from the 2015 floods, plus care for the heritage trees on the property. SMRF has become a land trust and will apply for accreditation in 2019.
Proceeds from the event support both , which provides opportunities for girls to become more involved in environmental science, and Travis APP Society’s education and conservation initiatives.
The Terry Hershey Award is named after a longtime champion of wildlife conservation in Texas. Terry Hershey was a former member of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission and a founding board member of Buffalo Bayou Preservation Association, Houston APP Society, Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Research Center, The Park People, and Urban Harvest. She was also a past board member for APP Texas, the APP, National Recreation and Park Association, and The Trust for Public Land. She passed away in 2017 on her 94th birthday.
To learn more about APP Texas’ work to protect birds and the places they need in the Lone Star State, please visit and follow the state office on and .
The APP protects birds and the places they need, today and tomorrow, throughout the Americas using science, advocacy, education and on-the-ground conservation. APP's state programs, nature centers, chapters and partners have an unparalleled wingspan that reaches millions of people each year to inform, inspire and unite diverse communities in conservation action. Since 1905, APP's vision has been a world in which people and wildlife thrive. APP is a nonprofit conservation organization. Learn more how to help at and follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @audubonsociety.
Contact: Nicolas Gonzalez, ngonzalez@audubon.org, (212) 979-3068.
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