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EP 38: Recreating in Color: Promoting Ethnic Diversity in Public Lands

EP 38: Recreating in Color: Promoting Ethnic Diversity in Public Lands

FromBreaking Green Ceilings


EP 38: Recreating in Color: Promoting Ethnic Diversity in Public Lands

FromBreaking Green Ceilings

ratings:
Length:
73 minutes
Released:
Nov 10, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Francisco, recently retired from his position as the director of recreation tourism, heritage and wilderness resources for more than 22 million acres of national forests and grasslands and national monuments in the Forest Service’s Southwestern Region. He served at the U.S. Forest service for more than 35 years. Valenzuela helped guide the development of over $500 million in infrastructure at the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument. It is the largest comprehensively planned investment in recreation infrastructure and services in Forest Service history. Francisco has contributed creating a sustainable relationship between human communities and the rest of the living world around the globe. He is now the Board Chair of PUP Global Heritage Consortium, which works to unite people and organizations dedicated to emerging paradigms in heritage management for a more holistic sustainable and vital future.

Show Notes: https://watersavvysolutions.com/recreating-in-color
Topics Discussed:

Recreation Equity
Ecology is White Man's Problem
Recognizing our Racist Environmental History

Follow Breaking Green Ceilings:

Instagram - @Breaking_Green_Ceilings
Facebook- @breaking green ceilings
Twitter- @sapnamulki

Follow Francisco Valenzuela:

LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/francisco-valenzuela-01770710
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/francisco.valenzuela.942
Instagram- @franciscovalenzuela2027
Twitter - @franciscov1960
Released:
Nov 10, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (63)

Breaking Green Ceilings spotlights passionate environmentalists we don’t often hear from or hear enough from including those from underrepresented groups - Disabled, Queer, Trans, Black, Indigenous and People of Color. Join eco-nerd, Sapna Mulki, for your weekly installment of Breaking Green Ceilings and learn about the journeys of success, failure, challenges overcome, and aspirations of our eco-warriors. Breaking Green Ceilings features interviews with inspiring environmentalists like Bill Tripp Director of Natural Resources and Environmental Policy at Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources, Dr. Ingrid Waldron, author of There's Something in the Water, Isaias Hernandez of QueerBrownVegan, and Dr. Mariaelena Huambachano, a native Peruvian Indigenous scholar, and more!