NATIONAL-NEWS-RELEASE: USDA Promotes Physical Activity Among Nation's Youth Through Expanded Programs

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USDA PROMOTES PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AMONG NATION'S YOUTH THROUGH EXPANDED
PROGRAMS

Secretary Vilsack Urges Kids to Get Outdoors and Get Active as part of
First Lady Michelle Obama's 'Let's Move!' Campaign

WASHINGTON, April 27, 2010 - Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today
announced that USDA's Forest Service will contribute $500,000 in 2010 to
the "More Kids in the Woods" program for projects that promote active
lifestyles and connect kids to nature.

"If we are going to put an end to childhood obesity, we must promote
healthy, active lifestyles and encourage our kids to get off the couch and
go outside," said Vilsack. "Our "More Kids in the Woods" challenge not
only promotes physical activity, it fosters environmental awareness and
stewardship among young people as we face critical environmental
challenges, such as the effects of climate change. "More Kids in the
Woods" helps kids make the connection between healthy forests, healthy
communities and their own healthy lifestyles."

The contribution will be leveraged with $1.5 million in donations and
in-kind services from partners. The "More Kids in the Woods" challenge is
a cost-share program in the Forest Service's long-standing Kids in the
Woods program that involves thousands of partners who contribute their
time, energy and resources to help us connect kids and families with our
natural world.

The Forest Service selected 21 projects for funding from more than 130
high-quality agency proposals created to promote environmental stewardship
through innovative, hands-on activities. All "More Kids in the Woods"
projects are designed to spark curiosity about nature and promote
understanding of the role of the nation's forests and grasslands in
providing clean, abundant water, clean air, wildlife habitat, and
recreation. Project partners are committed to helping children develop a
love for the land that will enable them to meet the conservation
challenges of the 21st century through healthy lifestyles choices and
natural resource careers.

Below is a list of the 21 projects:

Forest Fun and Native Arts Camp - Clearwater National Forest & Nez Perce
Tribe, Grangeville, Idaho; $39,300; This project will expand a successful
summer camp to three new locations across the Nez Perce Indian Reservation
and will integrate nature resource education with Nez Perce cultural arts.
Kids Take Flight Educational Program - White River National Forest & Rocky
Mountain Bird Observatory, Glenwood Springs, Colo., $38,000; This program
will reach 500 kids, age 6-12, with unique hands-on wildlife experiences
such as releasing rosy-finches, experiencing dragonfly metamorphosis and
investigating owls.
Four Mile Ranch Environmental Education - San Juan National Forest &
Audubon, Colorado Pagosa Springs, Colo. , $65,353; The Four Mile Ranch
Environmental Education program provides local elementary school students
with hands-on, experiential science education and outdoor learning
opportunities.
Aldo Adventures on the Gila - Gila National Forest & Various Partners,
Silver City, N.M., $62,100; Named after famed conservationist, Aldo
Leopold, this program expands a successful program and supports fishing
days, wilderness camping expeditions, outdoor labs and field days.
Science at the Station: Bringing Nature to Life in the Woods and on the
Range - Coronado National Forest & University of Arizona, Tucson, Ariz.,
$154,360; This project will help rejuvenate and reinvent the historic
Florida Station as an outdoor learning center, building strong
partnerships between federal, state, county and private partners to bring
diverse outdoor experiences to local children.
Forest Service Alliance with Environmental Educators to get More Kids into
the Woods - Caribou-Targhee National Forest & Various Partners, Idaho
Falls, Idaho, $130,085; This comprehensive project builds an alliance of
multi-sector partners to increase the opportunities, across all lands,
that local children have to learn outdoors and develop outdoor recreation
skills.
Nature Caching Camp - Manti-LaSal National Forest & Snow College, Price,
Utah, $47,704; This innovative project aims to get kids outside and
physically active, by using the high-tech gadgets kids love with the
wonder of nature, through nature caching and overnight campouts.
Natural Resources Science Camp - Pacific Southwest-Redwood Sciences Lab,
Six Rivers National Forest & Cities of Eureka and Arcata Recreation
Divisions, Arcata, Calif., $82,700; Fourteen, week-long summer day camps
will reach kids, 6-14, and focus on exploring local environments, and
learning about research and careers in natural resources.
Outdoor Experiences Program: "The mountains are calling and I must go." -
Inyo National Forest & Mono Lake Committee, Bishop, Calif., $111,600;
During five-day-long trips, this partnership-based program connects youth
from Los Angeles and the Eastern Sierra region to their watershed through
outdoor recreation, education and stewardship activities.
The Richmond Edible Forest Project - Pacific Southwest Research Station &
Urban Tilth, Albany, Calif., $136,200; This innovative project will build
a team of inner-city youth to design and install a pilot "edible forest"
in a city park, engage more than 700 youth in education, and share best
practices so the project can be replicated broadly.
Ryan Meadow Wetland Restoration and Conservation Education Project, Phase
1 - Deschutes National Forest & Discover Your Northwest, Bend, Ore.,
$214,400; Focused on a restored 60-acre wetland along the Deschutes River,
this project will develop a comprehensive ecosystem monitoring program
with standards-correlated curriculum, hands-on filled trips and community
outreach.
Canopy Connections - Pacific Northwest Research Station & HJ Andrews
Experimental Forest, Portland, Ore., $47,514; Quiet observation time,
creative writing, art and science inquiry projects are wrapped around each
participant's personal guided ascent seventy feet above the forest floor
into the canopy of an old-growth Douglas-fir tree.
Greenway Trust - Mt. Baker-Snolqualmie National Forest & The Mountains to
Sound Greenway Trust, Everett, Wash., $93,450; Partners will engage and
energize more than 2,500 youth through a year-round series of scaffolded
land stewardship and education projects in and adjacent to the Snoqulamie
Watershed.
24/7 Forest Stewardship Challenge - Ouachita National Forest & Audubon
Arkansas, Hot Springs, Ark., $57,200; This project will reach more than
250 youth through a variety of active, outdoor experiences to help them
learn 24 native plants and animals, and seven steps they can take to
protect natural resources.
Youth Taking Action Statewide Environmental Challenge - National Forests
in Alabama & Alabama Department of Public Health, Montgomery, Ala.,
$41,800; Partnering with the Alabama Department of Public Health, and
working through a series of 'youth challenges' this project encourages
youth to become active in the outdoors and care for the environment.
"Project Wild" for Florida Youth - National Forests in Florida & National
Wild Turkey Federation Tallahassee, Fla., $140,000; This project builds a
coalition of partners to coordinate and integrate outdoor learning
experiences within Florida school systems.
Project Venture North - Superior National Forest & Project Venture,
Duluth, Minn., $118,900; Working with local partners, this program will
enhance efforts to get Native American youth outside, working and learning
experientially, bridging gaps between schools and communities, and
building youth leadership skills.
Bronx River On-Water Education Program - Northern Research Station &
Rocking the Boat, New York City, N.Y., $492,278; Using boats built by
their peers, students explore and restore the Bronx River, implementing
eight environmental projects designed in collaboration with scientists.
* Studying Climate Change in the Chugach Children's Forest - Chugach
National Forest & Anchorage School District and Alaska Geographic Society,
Anchorage, Alaska $28,802; Six hundred underserved 5th Grade students from
Anchorage, Alaska will travel to Portage Glacier to learn about climate
change by investigating glaciers and studying climate and weather data.
Bear Smart - Chugach National Forest & Alaska Department of Fish & Game &
Cordova School District, Anchorage, Alaska $12,000; This uniquely Alaskan
project will help the community's 'walk or bike to school' initiative by
educating youth and their families about avoiding bear encounters.

This is the fourth year the Forest Service has matched funds and in-kind
contributions from partners for "More Kids in the Woods." Partners include
local, state, and federal agencies and American Indian tribes. Project
activities include summer camps, after-school programs, and wilderness
expeditions. The challenge-cost share will serve more than 15,000 children
throughout the nation, including under-served and urban youth.

Promoting active and healthy lifestyles is a priority of the Obama
Administration. First Lady Michelle Obama launched the Let's Move!
campaign to end childhood obesity within a generation so that children
born today will reach adulthood at a healthy weight. The campaign has four
primary tenets: helping parents make healthy food choices, serving
healthier food in schools; improving access to healthy, affordable food;
and increasing physical activity. The Administration has introduced its
plans to improve school meals, introduced a financing initiative to reduce
food deserts, implemented new research tools that detail local food
environments and health outcomes, including grocery store access and
disease and obesity prevalence, and announced a broad range of
public/private commitments to solve America's childhood obesity epidemic.
Learn more by visiting www.LetsMove.gov.

In order to combat the childhood obesity epidemic, the Obama
Administration is working to increase the opportunities for exercise and
physical activities through partnerships like "Fuel Up to Play 60" which
brings together the NFL, National Dairy Council and other partners to
encourage physical activity and eating nutritious food through sports
clinics, appearances, and public service announcements.

The mission of the USDA Forest Service is to sustain the health,
diversity, and productivity of the nation's forests and grasslands to meet
the needs of present and future generations. The agency manages 193
million acres of National Forest System land, provides stewardship
assistance to non-federal forest landowners and maintains the largest
forestry research organization in the world. For more information, visit:
www.fs.fed.us

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