The Jaliigirr Biodiversity Alliance won the 2016 Regional Sustainability Award at the NSW Green Globe Awards held last night (Thursday, October 27).
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During the evening, CEO of the Dorrigo Local Aboriginal Land Council and member of the Alliance, Robin Heath said working together benefits everyone.
“The Alliance is a great collaborative approach - we get more done to protect and restore country, and we raise awareness of cultural heritage values in the landscape,” Robin said.
The NSW Government’s Green Globe Awards celebrate excellence, success and innovation in environment and sustainability. This award recognises our leadership action to protect and restore our natural landscapes – through the connections we have made with our partners and our community, and the results of working together to improve local biodiversity.
Over the past five years the 20 partner organisations of Jaliigirr have together; delivered on-ground results – growing and planting more than 50,000 trees, regenerating over 500 hectares of bushland and protecting native animals in 1500 hectares of habitat; supported local community aims and ideas for reconnecting and restoring their land and waterways; provided employment for professional bush regenerators, working on country teams, landcare officers and other natural resource managers
The Alliance was established in 2012. It is a voluntary partnership encompassing Gumbaynggirr country from the Coffs Coast and Orara hinterland, through the Bellinger Valley and onto the Dorrigo Plateau, New England NP and the Upper Nymboida.
The Alliance seeks to include the whole community through its partnership approach and recognises Aboriginal cultural attachment to our landscape as a key principle of its work.
The alliance shares leadership and equity between its partners. It works through its partners to ensure that long-term conservation goals help people reconnect to each other and to the land.
Jaliigirr project officer, Craig Stehn, said he too agrees that working together benefits everyone.
”Threats to biodiversity such as weeds and pests, don’t stop at property boundaries,” Mr Stehn said.
“The only way we can have a positive and lasting impact is by working together. The Alliance provides us with the framework for doing this and individual landholders can feel assured that they are part of a bigger team.”
Jaliigirr is also part of the bigger picture as a member of the Great Eastern Ranges, a national alliance that seeks to protect 3600 kilometres of Australia’s Great Dividing Range from the Grampians in Victoria to Cape York through “connecting people – connecting nature”.