Keep Dunedin Beautiful Awards
Keep Dunedin Beautiful
Awards
Dunedin (Monday, 3 March 2014) - Keep Dunedin Beautiful held its annual beautification awards ceremony at the Dunedin City Library at 4pm today.
The awards are an opportunity to recognise groups and individuals who have contributed to keeping the city beautiful. The awards were presented by Mayor of Dunedin Dave Cull and Keep Dunedin Beautiful Chair Jan Tucker.
The top four winners receive a nominal monetary prize of between $50 and $100. The two top awards are the Taylor Community Pride Award, given to a group, and the Pod award, for individuals or groups.
The award
winners are:
Merit – for Dunedin
clean-ups
Elmgrove School
Port Chalmers
Kindergarten
Richard Hudson Kindergarten
Wakari
Brownie Unit
Portobello School
Liberton Christian
School
St Francis Xavier School
Pine Hill
School
Balmacewan Intermediate School
Nerise
Barnes
Mornington School
Arthur Street
School
Mosgiel Abilities Resource Centre
St
Bernadette's School
Warrington Playcentre
Geo
Cache
Waikouaiti Playcentre
Tahuna Normal
School
Halfway Bush Kindergarten
Mosgiel
Pippins
Flipper's Daycare
Macandrew Bay
School
Roslyn Keas
This Way Ltd
Maori Hill
School
Parkinson's Otago
Bayfield High
School
Kaikorai Valley College
Pacific
Trust
Society of University of Otago Law Students
Commended
Gary Dixon cleaning
graffiti off Bank Street
St Joseph's School regularly
cleaning up Dunedin
Arthur Young regularly cleaning
Fairfield bus shelter
Broad Bay School planting trees at
Pilot's Beach
Rotary Club of Taieri cleaning war
memorials
Rotaract cleaning war memorials
East Taieri
School regularly cleaning up Dunedin
World Mission
Society Church of God large scale clean up
Annabel and
Malcolm Lowe regularly cleaning up Dunedin
Sherwood
Centre Charitable Trust regularly cleaning up
Dunedin
Puketai Residence regularly cleaning up
Dunedin
Adopt-a-spot
Rebecca
Croxen adopting Wallace St and Robert's Park
Barbara
Smith adopting Highcliff Rd and the monument
Meg
Davidson adopting neighbourhood area
Liz Angelo adopting
Arthur St Reserve and neighbouring area
Maryanne
Ashford adopting St Leonard's area
Judy
Turncliff adopting neighbourhood area
Community Care
Trust adopting Jacob's Ladder
James Hanan adopting
harbour front
Appreciation for supporting the KDB
Committee
DCC Events/Community Development -
support with KDB projects
Task Force Green/Activity in
the Community – support with KDB projects
Rotary
Dunedin - continued support with Trees for Babies
To Be
Advised Trust - continued support with the Theatre
Group
Highly Commended
Robert
George continued civic pride
Richard and Linda
Pickering continued civic pride
Contact Energy several
large scale clean-ups
Volunteering Otago continued civic
pride
Noel Jhinku continued civic pride
Fraser
Brown initiating a plastic bag take back
project
Purakaunui Amenities Society beautifying the area
with accessible tracks
Silverstream School making
articles out of reusable materials
Dive Otago continued
civic pride
Third place
AKO Childcare
Centre instilling sustainability into every day
Second place
Marcus and Maree
Johnstone beautifying Sligo Tce over many years
Beverley
and Tony Perry beautifying Sligo Tce over many
years
Taylor Community Pride
Award
Portobello Community Inc a multitude of
beautification projects
Pod
Brockville Community Development
Project instilling civic pride in the community
Award Details:
Robert George – highly commended
Robert has been an adopt-a-spot volunteer at Macandrew Bay for many years. He regularly cleans up his township, but does much more than that too. As he cleans he talks to people and makes them aware of how litter affects the community. He advocates for recycling bins for tourists and takes his rubbish concerns to his community board. The pride he shows in his community is to be commended, in fact highly commended.
Richard and Linda Pickering - highly commended
Richard and Linda are also adopt-a-spot volunteers. Their tenure is not as long as Robert’s but their input has been amazing. Not content to just pick up the litter as often as they can they regularly get in touch with our co-ordinator so she can follow up issues in a timely manner. Their proactiveness has enabled several issues to be brought to the attention of the right authorities.
Contact Energy – highly commended
Contact Energy is one of the businesses that gives back to our community. They allow staff to use a work day to do some good. We are very fortunate that each year this large group of diligent workers choose to help to keep Dunedin clean. They are an inspiration to other businesses and we thank them for their lead in this.
Volunteering Otago – highly commended
Some recipients are repeat “offenders” and Volunteering Otago is one of those, particularly the youth division under Heather Moore’s guidance. Heather runs free holiday programmes several times a year for students and includes clean-ups as part of each programme. She is passionate about keeping our environment clean and through her holiday programmes passes on this passion and understanding to a large group of students.
Noel Jhinku – highly commended
Last year Noel’s group, called Our Seas our Future, won our supreme award for organising, advertising and holding many beach clean-ups. He continues to do this with events such as The Adopt a Coast project where he educates students on our marine system and either follows up or begins the session with a clean-up. Noel has just completed a beach clean-up as part of national Seaweek. It is great to do a clean-up, but Noel’s efforts in educating others about our need to care for our environment are to be applauded.
Fraser Brown – highly commended
Fraser has been known to KDB for years as he always attends and volunteers at our annual Trees for Babies planting. It is not for this reason, however, that he is being recognised. Fraser, like most of us, hates litter caused by one-use plastic bags. He hates it so much that he set up a stall at university where students could get a free environmentally friendly cloth bag in exchange for a used plastic one. During the exchange, and through his visual collection, he was able to educate many students on saying no to plastic bags. After this project Fraser agreed to join KDB as our youth representative. We took his great idea on board and during O week, with Fraser’s help, we managed to keep the topic of saying no to plastic bags on the minds of many students.
Purakaunui
Amenities Society – highly commended
Our co-ordinator first became aware of this group through an ad in the paper calling for volunteers to help beautify the area and erect a track. She became curious so went to take a look for herself and was really blown away by the amount of work that had been done. After many volunteer weekends and much behind-the-scenes work Purakaunui has a community asset to be proud of. They have built a walking track more than 300m long, planted native trees, cut back weeds and placed seats along the way to take in the amazing view.
Silverstream School – highly commended
Like Fraser, the students at Silverstream hate plastic bags. So what to do about it? Why not use something that is no longer being used and turn it into something useful. And so pillow case reusable bags were made. The students were learning that not all economic growth is positive and that we can grow, but still be sustainable. Each class was tasked to take a used product and turn it into something usable. They made items like photo frames out of magazines, pot plants out of milk bottles and turned bread bags into lunch bags. This was a great initiative that the children will no doubt carry into their adult years.
Dive Otago – highly commended
Like Noel, their passion is the ocean. They dive in it and do not like diving amongst rubbish. So rather than hope someone else will do something about it, they continually hold harbour clean-ups. Once again the co-ordinator was fortunate enough to witness last year’s clean-up. The divers didn’t just stay in one spot and dive for half an hour and say the job is done. Instead, they drove the entire length of the harbour dropping divers at various locations to dive for extended periods of time and then carried the huge amount of debris away.
AKO Childcare Centre – third place
The centre sent us a folder depicting all the improvements they had made in their centre over a three-year period. The transformation was indeed amazing from a basic piece of land to a well-manicured site. They took every care to transform the centre into one that includes native plants, vegetable gardens, water and rock gardens, herb gardens and a sensory garden. What the judges were most impressed with was the way the children were so involved in the process and that through this inclusion they have been, and continue to be, educated in the need to take care of their environment and make it into an even more beautiful place than when they found it.
Marcus and Maree Johnstone and Beverley and Tony Perry – second place
Second prize is shared between two neighbouring families who took it upon themselves to beautify Sligo Terrace over many years. Between them they cleared rubbish, pulled out invasive weeds, built rock walls, procured and planted natives, flowers and grasses all at no cost to ratepayers. Much dedication and hard work has gone into this large-scale, multi-year beautification project. We thank them for their work, but also in their role modelling for others to follow.
Portobello Community Inc - Taylor Community Pride Shield
This group has been around for many years. Each year they not only maintain beautification projects, but continue to make their community an even more beautiful place to live in and to visit. Some of the projects include creating a garden township adjacent to the public toilets. This project, and the planting next to the hotel, include low-growing native plants to allow for light and also used recycled timber from the old jetty. The group also regularly do clean-ups which include the wider community. Such is their dedication they even did one on Mother’s Day in preparation for the Peninsula challenge. They are an inspiring group led by Paul Pope who we are also very happy to welcome on board our Keep Dunedin Beautiful committee.
The Brockville Community Development Project - Pod
Over the years Keep Dunedin Beautiful has been fortunate to work with individuals and groups in the Brockville area. They have always been a proactive community and never more so than this year. When we discussed painting bus shelters in their area they were full of ideas to promote a sustainable future, as that is their long-term vision. When one of these shelters was vandalised a neighbour quickly adopted and protected it. They organised several large-scale community clean-ups and encouraged people to continue to keep the neighbourhood clean. Through the Brockville Ecological Sustainability team they built and planted out a community garden. This group is to be commended on their community pride and care for the environment.