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Our Gifts to the Refuges: Friends in 2024

By Poppy Benson, Vice President for Outreach

How did we fulfill our mission of supporting the Alaska National Wildlife Refuges through 1) direct support both financial and with volunteer time, 2) outreach and education and 3) advocacy?  Our outreach and education programs were better than ever but budget uncertainty and staff loss made it difficult to develop volunteer projects.  Our advocacy efforts faced very stormy weather.

Fairbanks Friends member Gail Mayo (l) with refuge volunteer at the Arctic Interagency Visitor Center in Coldfoot.

Volunteering: 
More than 50 Friends volunteered on eight different refuges.  Selawik offered projects for the first time in memory – office and maintenance help and help with camps for village kids.  Also, significant this year was the amount of help refuges were requesting with visitor centers.  Friends went to Kodiak and Tetlin for month assignments as well as a few weeks for Arctic at the Interagency Visitor Center in Coldfoot.  Public events required the most volunteers with Friends helping at the Kachemak Bay Shorebird Festival, Kenai Riverfest, Kenai Sportsman Show, Migratory Bird Days at Creamer’s Field, Seabird Fest in Seward, Bethel Ducks Unlimited Banquet, and Walks for the Wild at Kenai, Alaska Maritime and Anchorage.   Numerous Friends volunteered at Kodiak, Kenai and Alaska Maritime refuges to staff visitor center desks and refuge special events.  Izembek and Tetlin needed biological help with brant surveys and duck banding.  With the exception of two volunteers that we had travel funding for, all other volunteers paid their own travel although refuges provided housing.  For three projects we were unable to help because no one applied.   Take a look at the project photos and stories on our volunteer activities page

In 2024 we had less volunteer requests than we could have because Congress failed to pass a budget until late into the year causing refuges to avoid committing to projects.  In addition, some refuges have lost so many staff that there is no one to plan or supervise a project.  These conditions are likely to persist in 2025.  To have any kind of a volunteer program, we need a volunteer coordinator to help develop opportunities and match members to jobs.  See the article below.  Interested?  Write us at volunteer@alaskarefugefriends.org.

Funding:  About $16,000 was approved by the Board to support refuge projects which includes half of our unrestricted funds plus some designated funds for specific refuges which come from bequests, donation boxes and other sources.  Some projects are annual such as interns at Arctic Refuge’s Canning River Research Camp, school bus reimbursements for Kenai Refuge field trips, and support for the Migratory Bird Calendar.   New this year was support to bring an Unangan artist to Homer for bentwood hat making workshops, support for a scoping meeting in Anchorage for the Alaska Maritime’s rat eradication proposal and for Koyukuk/Nowitna’s river management planning meeting, and a tablet for Innoko.  We paid travel for the Friends volunteer to Izembek, a very expensive place to get to, and used some of our funds and a small grant from the Fish & Wildlife Retirees Association to pay the way of an environmental educator to Kotzebue for Selawik Refuge’s art and science camp.  We contributed funds to a variety of refuge community events from Christmas bird count activities at Togiak, to the 20th Anniversaries of the Arctic Interagency Visitor Center and the Alaska Maritime Refuge’s Visitor Center and an art opening at Selawik Refuge. We received an additional Fish & Wildlife Service Retiree’s grant of $1600 which paid for seven urban youth to attend the Kachemak Bay Shorebird Festival. A $5000 grant from the Sam and Mary Lawrence Foundation partially paid for four Native student interns with the Kodiak Refuge and a student intern at Innoko.  A $6000 designated gift from the Safari Club is purchasing steel shot to trade out with lead shot and has paid for shipping lead shot off  the Yukon Delta Refuge. 

Friends has long supported the Migratory Bird Calendar contest with prizes for the many winners from refuge villages.  This charming calendar featuring the drawings and writings of village children can be picked up from refuge offices throughout Alaska.  If you are a member and not near a refuge office, contact us and we will send one.

Outreach and Education:
  This was a very successful year for our meetings with more attendees than ever.  Archaeology in the Aleutians with 200 people had the highest attendance ever and a new watch party in Dutch Harbor that attracted 18.  The three meetings this fall averaged 150 attendees between in person, watch parties and zoom.  We learned about the Koyukuk/Nowitna/Innoko Refuge complex, the Fish and Wildlife’s new initiative to save salmon – “Gravel to Gravel”, winter recreation on the Kenai Refuge, float hunting on interior refuges, migratory bird work on all the refuges and the Porcupine caribou herd of the Arctic Refuge.   Our programs are recorded and you can view those you missed here.  Speaker watch parties resumed in Anchorage for the first time since the pandemic.  We partnered for some meetings with Backcountry Hunters & Anglers for the Float hunting talk, Campbell Creek Science Center for Porcupine Caribou and REI for Flying Wild.

We Friends were the only ones representing Alaska Refuges at the Migratory Bird Day Festival in Fairbanks.  No refuge staff were available due to budget cuts.  This is likely to get worse making our role in refuge outreach more critical.  Tom Chard, Fairbanks Friends Board member, helping a child with a wildlife game.

Advocacy:  This has been an extraordinarily challenging year for advocacy.  Although we signed on with a number of other Alaska conservation groups to letters opposing bad Congressional legislation and continued to intervene in Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority’s (AIDEA) lawsuit to reinstate their Arctic Refuge leases, we have lost some major battles to protect refuges.  We commented on the Arctic Refuge’s Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) on an oil and gas leasing program in the Refuge and signed on to extensive comments by the Arctic Coalition spearheaded by Trustees for Alaska. The No Action alternative was, unfortunately, not a legal alternative because the 2017 Tax Act requires this lease sale.  We supported the alternative with the greatest, but still inadequate protective measures for the Refuge resources and the original purposes for which the Refuge was created. The final SEIS was issued on November 8 and selected this alternative. These protections will guide the second oil and gas lease sale scheduled for January 9.   

 As I write, the Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) for Izembek Refuge is out for review with a preferred alternative selected by the Fish and Wildlife Service of trading away high-quality refuge wetlands and designated Wilderness to provide for a road through the heart of the refuge.  This was a huge blow after the years we have been fighting this through lawsuits and letter writing.  See the advocacy section for more on this and how to comment.

In November the Fish and Wildlife Service proposed a land exchange to accomodate a road through the wetlands and designated Wilderness of the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge.  PC Cindy Mom, Seldovia Friends volunteer on Izembek Brant Project.

Friends leadership met with the FWS Alaska Regional Director in May to discuss our concerns about reduced staffing at refuges. Unfortunately, things got even worse as more budget cuts were applied. By the end of January there will be only seven refuge managers left for 16 refuges.  Kodiak has lost three out of four of its outreach staff and the visitor center has closed for the winter for the first time in my memory. We have also recently heard that none of these positions will be filled in the foreseeable future.  The last Trump administration instituted a six-month hiring freeze. The three refuges in Fairbanks have dropped all their public programs except fulfilling their obligation to partner with BLM and NPS on the Coldfoot Interagency Visitor Center during the summer.  The 19-million-acre Yukon Delta Refuge lacks a pilot or a public use person.  This is a thorny problem at the Washington and state level and I don’t see that we have made any progress advocating for budgets. 

All this reminds us of the quote by noted author and conservationist Rachel Carson, “Conservation is a cause that has no end. There is no point at which we will say our work is finished.”  Details and numerous other issues which caught our attention in 2024 are described in our Advocacy Reports here.

This was only our second Friends sponsored Discovery trip this time to the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge.  Eight Friends got to see for themselves how special this refuge is.  Refuge staff spent a full day with us at headquarters in Bethel outlining their programs and challenges and exploring ideas for Friends help. Our first trip was in 2023 to the Arctic Refuge.

Thank you all for your support that allowed us to accomplish these things.  Sixteen refuges and 75 million acres requires all of us pulling together to give refuges the help they need.  It is hard to be hopeful looking at 2025 and the change in administration.  We need to up our game.




Board Comings and Goings We Lose Two of the Best but Welcome Kim Zook

By Poppy Benson, Vice President for Outreach

In July when Board terms were up, we lost invaluable Board Members Jason Sodergren and Jerry Hupp.  Jason was a Friends founder and driving force in his 18 years on the Board.  He was treasurer, chief of tech, all things Shorebird Festival and more. Our “go to guy”.   Jerry was Volunteer Coordinator and Liaison Coordinator and added science credentials to our Board.  A sad day when those two resigned. We are so grateful for all they did for refuges and wildlife.

Recently retired Homer businessman Kim Zook hit the ground running joining the Board in July only a year after discovering Friends.  Kim joined at a Walk for the Wild last fall and decided we were a “cool group” after reading our newsletter and attending member meetings.  Kim has considerable experience on Rotary Club Boards including as President of several Rotary Clubs and enjoyed the experience because boards are where “the interesting stuff happens, and I like that.”  Kim has a life long interest in hiking, fishing and watching animals after growing up in eastern Washington.   He said, “I was always interested in wildlife preservation.”  Kim is on the Friends’ finance committee and is a natural at outreach volunteering many hours at Friends’ outreach tables at the Shorebird Festival and the Kenai Sports and Recreation show this past year. When not volunteering, Kim, who wanted to be a fisheries biologist as a youth, can be found fishing in Kachemak Bay on his boat, the Tufted Puffin.  Welcome Kim! 

Want to be “where the interesting stuff happens”?  Talk to us about a two- year term on the Board.  We could use three more members.  We need a Volunteer Coordinator (very fun job you get to talk to all the refuges about their needs) a liaison coordinator, more members for our Advocacy Committee and additional Fairbanks, Anchorage and outstate members for the Outreach Committee, someone interested in the newsletter and a refuge liaison for Alaska Peninsula-Becharof.  Contact us and let’s talk.  It is a good feeling to feel useful and needed.




Board News! transitions…

By: Friends Board
At our June 6 Friends’ Board meeting, Marilyn Sigman was appointed as President. replacing long time President, David Raskin. Marilyn joined the Board in 2022. She is a retired wildlife biologist and science and environmental educator who has previously chaired the Boards of Alaska Geographic (under its previous name, the Alaska Natural History Association), the Alaska Conservation Foundation, and the Alaska Natural Resources and Outdoor Education Association.

Caroline Brouwer was appointed to a new position of a second Vice-President which we amended our bylaws to include. Caroline has served on the Board since 2020 and has been involved in advocacy for the National Wildlife Refuge System since 2008, lobbying on behalf of funding increases for the Refuge System and policy changes. She spent 14 years working in Washington, DC on behalf of public lands advocacy and national wildlife refuges with Ducks Unlimited and the National Wildlife Refuge Association.  


In other actions, Tara Schmidt was reappointed as Board Secretary, a position she has served in for six years. Since being appointed to the board in 2017, Tara has served as a liaison, first with the Kenai Refuge and is now working with the Innoko, Nowitna, Koyukuk Refuge Complex. She is active with the Outreach and Education Committee and the Shorebird Festival Committee.

Tara, Poppy Benson, and Jason Sodergren were reappointed as Board members, with Poppy continuing in her role as a Vice-President and Jason as Treasurer. Elections for these positions will be held in February next year.

We thank David Raskin for his long and dedicated service as a founding Board member, Board President, and tireless advocate for Alaska’s National Wildlife Refuges.   



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Founder David Raskin, Retires

By: Friends Board

After nearly two decades of service as a founder, President for 16 years, and Advocacy Chair, David Raskin has retired from the Board of Friends of Alaska National Wildlife Refuges.  We thank David for his many years of dedicated service, and his passionate advocacy for Alaska’s wildlife refuges. This organization would not be what it is today without his tireless efforts to support and to protect refuges from the coastal plains of the Arctic Refuge to the rich wetlands of the Izembek Refuge and everything in between.  

David was there when Friends was created at a meeting at the Kenai Refuge in 2005.  He volunteered to be the first president and has been the only president for all but two years of our history.  During his tenure, Friends grew from an organization of a few dozen people to the 315 members we have today.  Our volunteer, advocacy and education programs have increased exponentially under his leadership.  

    
David (on left) at the founding of Friends in 2005 at the Environmental Education Center at the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge.  pc.USFWS    

In his advocacy work, David has attended many meetings with the Alaska Congressional delegation, testified before Congress and at public meetings in Alaska, submitted many beautifully written and persuasive comment letters on refuge planning documents and issues under review  and formed alliances with other conservation partners. He was the author of advocacy column in this newsletter which sought to keep all of us up to date on refuge issues. Principal issues he was engaged in included proposed oil and gas development in the Arctic Refuge, the proposed road through Izembek Refuge and a proposed gutting of Kenai Refuge regulations.  He made a point of visiting many of Alaska’s 16 refuges and cultivated relationships with Fish and Wildlife staff in the Anchorage regional office and on individual refuges. David’s first-hand knowledge of refuge lands and the people responsible for managing them, increased our effectiveness in advocacy and support of the Refuges. 


David (on left) receiving the Outstanding Friends Group of the Year Award in 2010 in Washington D.C. from  the National Wildlife Refuge Association.   David’s wife Marga is next to him and founding “mothers” Sharon Baur, Ginny Harris, Betty Siegel and Patricia Wood.  Then Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar is behind Ginny. pc:USFWS

In recent years, he was honored as the recipient of two prestigious awards in recognition of his work—the 2022 Refuge Advocate of the Year from the National Wildlife Refuge Association and the 2021 Celia Hunter Award for Outstanding Volunteer Contributions from the Alaska Conservation Foundation. Read more about how David got into conservation work, what drew him to Alaska and why he embraced  the National Wildlife Refuge System HERE.
David came to conservation work through his love of fishing.  Here David  is leading a “fishing meeting” in 2020  on the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge where he and Board Vice President Poppy Benson sought to convince Mike Schantz (left) to join our board.  It worked!  pc: Friends

We as a Board will miss the wise counsel and deep knowledge that David has contributed to our work for the last 18 years. His passion for wildlife refuges and the success of the System in Alaska has been an inspiration to us all.
 

Thank you David!