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Nomination Letter from Katie Coffin
for Upstander!
Award
I would like to nominate Renata von Tscharner, the President
of the Charles River Conservancy, for a Facing History and Ourselves Upstander
award. Anyone
who has met Renata would agree that she is a charming, brilliant lady whose “nothing
is impossible” attitude and love of nature are truly inspiring. I am
lucky to work in the same building as this dynamic activist and through a few
brief conversations with Renata, I have great respect for her clear intelligence,
her contagious joie de vivre and her organization’s admirable mission.
I have no doubt her name will go down in history as someone we should thank
and admire for her devotion to a wonderful cause: someone who really is making
a difference.
With great energy and creative spirit, Renata founded the CRC in 2000, with
the mission of protecting and improving the riverside parklands between Watertown
and the harbor. This landscape instructor at Harvard’s Radcliffe Seminars
was ready to take action: to stop just teaching about the river and start acting
and getting others involved in conservancy projects. This Swiss native was
trained as an architect and city planner, skills which she has put to use in
various cities around the world, but luckily for us, these days, Boston is
her home and the Charles River parklands are her playground.
Renata has spear-headed the initiative for a swimmable Charles. Renata does
not hesitate to jump in for a swim now and then, which I learned at a CRC presentation
given to dispel myths that the river is too polluted for such a thing. Over
the past 10 years, the water quality has improved from F- to B+ quality!
The CRC aims to recreate beaches along the Charles, like those found years
ago, before people realized that you actually should have gotten a tetanus
shot if you fell in the water in those days! Now that the water quality has
so improved, Renata hopes to reinvent the Charles so that others find it as
inviting as she does, which would boost the quality of life in this city.
Renata cannot do it alone though, so thank goodness she has a way of inspiring
and including volunteers—from organizing them to pick up trash to empowering
them to speak with government officials. In a very democratic way, Renata inspires
donors, politicians, and citizens to take care of our environment.
A particularly interesting outreach effort is the connection between the CRC
and local skateboarders. Apparently Renata is known among the skater community
as someone who has really listened to find out their needs and wishes, which
the CRC will put to use in their creation of a state-of-the-art skate park
to be built along the river in East Cambridge. Fueled by ongoing pledges, donations,
and grants from the city, the CRC is bound to make a big impact on our awareness
of environmental issues, the quality of the Charles River and its parklands,
and our recreational abilities in this city.
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