Contacts
Georgia Parham 812-334-4261 x 203
Indiana Biologist Receives National Award for Work on
Grand Calumet River
For more than a decade, Bloomington, Indiana, resident Dan Sparks has worked
tirelessly to make the Grand Calumet River in northwestern Indiana a better
place for fish, wildlife, habitat and people. Sparks’ efforts as a
contaminants biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service were
acknowledged yesterday by Secretary of the Interior Gale Norton at a
ceremony in Washington, D.C.
“ Those being honored today have made all of us proud. They have gone beyond
the decision to serve. They have made their choice their calling,” Secretary
Norton said of Sparks and other honorees.
“ For some, the choice was made in a heartbeat. They stepped up into a
firestorm or jumped into a rescue. Others spent decades in service: Doing
more than required — or even desired — day after day, year after year.”
Sparks, who is stationed at the Service’s Bloomington Field Office, was
honored along with Interior Department solicitor John Carlucci with the
Interior Secretary’s “Four Cs” Award. The award is granted to an Interior
Department employee, group or team making exceptional contributions to
promote the Secretary’s initiatives embodying the 4 Cs: “Communication,
Consultation, and Cooperation, all in the service of Conservation.” The
award recognizes Sparks’ outstanding efforts working with stakeholders,
other federal agencies, state agencies, and private interests in
northwestern Indiana to improve the region’s natural resources.
Overall, an individual or group nominated for this award has demonstrated
excellent communicative relationships with all stakeholders involved in
decisions that concern our Nation’s natural resources, creating win-win
situations for stakeholders, as well as for the environment. The individuals
or groups also have balanced working relationships with all stakeholders,
including: Federal, State, Tribal, and local governments; private
landholders, and private sector businesses, enabling the Department to make
sustainable, environmentally and economically sound decisions concerning
natural resource conservation.
Sparks and Carlucci brought together a team of state and federal partners
and worked with private parties to reach an agreement to restore the natural
resources degraded by decades of contamination in the Grand Calumet River.
Sparks began looking at the resources of the river in 1989. Active efforts
to evaluate the impacts of contaminants began in 1996 and culminated in a
2004 settlement under which eight companies agreed to pay nearly $60 million
to restore natural resources injured by releases of hazardous substances and
oil in the Grand Calumet River and Indiana Harbor Canal.
“ Dan has shown all of us what it means to work for a great cause,” said
Charles Wooley, Deputy Director for the Service’s Midwest Region, which
includes Indiana. “His perseverance and dedication to restoring the health
of the Grand Calumet River and southern Lake Michigan are making this corner
of Indiana a better place for its residents and its resources.”
Amid the factories, refineries, and urban development in northwestern
Indiana are some of the most valuable ecological resources in the Midwest.
Globally rare dune and swale habitats, prairie wetland, savannas, marshes
and lakeshores support a number of important fish and wildlife species such
as the endangered Indiana bat and the Karner blue butterfly, and scores of
migratory bird species that stop to loaf, nest and feed during their
seasonal migrations.
Sparks’ efforts came under the Department’s Natural Resources Damage
Assessment (NRDA) program, which evaluates the impacts to fish and wildlife
resources when contaminants are released into the environment. The goal of
the NRDA process is to identify options to restore injured resources and
determine the extent of restoration needed.
A native of Mattoon, Illinois, Sparks earned Bachelor of Science degrees in
wildlife management and biology from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point in 1983. He attained a Master of Science degree from Purdue University
in wildlife science in 1986. Sparks’ career with the Interior Department’s
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service began in 1983 with a summer job in the
Service’s Columbia, Missouri, Field Office. In 1986, Sparks signed on with
the contaminants program in the Service’s New Jersey Field Office. He came
to Bloomington in 1989.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal Federal agency
responsible for conserving, protecting and enhancing fish, wildlife and
plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people.
The Service manages the 95-million-acre National Wildlife Refuge System,
which encompasses 544 national wildlife refuges, thousands of small wetlands
and other special management areas. It also operates 69 national fish
hatcheries, 64 fishery resources offices and 81 ecological services field
stations. The agency enforces federal wildlife laws, administers the
Endangered Species Act, manages migratory bird populations, restores
nationally significant fisheries, conserves and restores wildlife habitat
such as wetlands, and helps foreign and Native American tribal governments
with their conservation efforts. It also oversees the Federal Assistance
program, which distributes hundreds of millions of dollars in excise taxes
on fishing and hunting equipment to state fish and wildlife agencies.
-FWS-
Click Here To Return To The Previous Page