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Maryland Department of Natural Resources
Environmentally Active Groups Encouraged to Apply for Keep Maryland Beautiful Awards
ANNAPOLIS – The Maryland Environmental Trust (MET) is now accepting applications for the Margaret Rosch Jones Award and the Bill James Environmental Grants, offered through the Keep Maryland Beautiful program. The awards recognize nonprofit groups or communities that advance environmental issues or address environmental problems and are funded by the State Highway Administration, a division of the Maryland Department of Transportation.

The Margaret Rosch Jones Award of up to $2,000 is awarded in memory of Margaret Jones, the former executive director of the Keep Maryland Beautiful program. The award is presented annually to nonprofit organizations or volunteer groups that make continuing plans for a project that has already demonstrated a basic understanding and resolution of an environmental issue.

Applicants must meet one or both of the following criteria:

The Bill James Environmental Grants of up to $1,000 are awarded to school groups, science and ecology clubs and other nonprofit youth groups for proposed environmental education projects. The Bill James Environmental Grants are given in memory of William S. James, who drafted the legislation to create MET, incorporating the activities of the Governor's Committee to Keep Maryland Beautiful.

The objectives of the grants are to:

Applications may be downloaded from our website: www.dnr.state.md.us/met/keepmd or obtained from the Maryland Environmental Trust, First Floor, 100 Community Place, Crownsville, MD, 21032-2023. Completed applications must be received by March 31.


February 16, 2006

The Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is the state agency responsible for providing natural and living resource-related services to citizens and visitors. DNR manages more than 446,000 acres of public lands and 18,000 miles of waterways, along with Maryland's forests, fisheries and wildlife for maximum environmental, economic and quality of life benefits. A national leader in land conservation, DNR-managed parks and natural, historic and cultural resources attract 11 million visitors annually. DNR is the lead agency in Maryland's effort to restore the Chesapeake Bay, the state's number one environmental priority. Learn more at www.dnr.maryland.gov