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ELA’s 29th Conference & Eco-Marketplace

Join us online on February 22 & 23, 2023 for the 29th Conference & Eco-Marketplace. 

 

Remember all presentations will be recorded and made available to registrants after the conference. You can enjoy the event live, and then revisit presentations at your leisure.

Click here to Purchase Tickets

 

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Choose from two tracks exploring pollinator corridors and pathways – the ribbons of land designed and maintained in support of the many species performing the vital work of pollination. Gain insights from a number of projects or explore the unique challenges of providing connected habitat in urban areas.

Wednesday, February 23 – Track 1 – Ecological Lessons from Pollinator Habitat (click for details)

Time (EST) Presenter Title
9:00-10:00am Nick Haddad, Michigan State University Landscape Corridors for Nature and for People
10:15-11:15am Annika T.H. Keeley, Center for Large Landscape Conservation Corridor Ecology: Linking Landscapes for Biodiversity Conservation and Climate Change Adaptation
11:30am-12:30pm Luncheon Keynote with Linda Hwang, Trust for Public Land ParkScore Index: Closing the Park Equity Divide
12:45-1:45pm Anthony Fettes, University of New Mexico Promoting Pollinators through Landscape Architecture: Six Key Strategies to Improve Habitat Value and Landscape Performance
2:00-3:00pm Heather McCargo, Wild Seed Project Urban Pollinator Corridors: Creating Native Habitat to Support Pollinators and Other Wild Life
3:00-3:30pm All Rooms Networking and CEUs

 

Wednesday, February 23 – Track 2 – Strategies for Supporting Urban Pollinators (click for details)*

Time (EST) Presenter Title
9:00-10:00am Sandra Albro, Holden Forests & Gardens Vacant to Vibrant: Creating Successful Green Infrastructure Networks
10:15-11:15am Devanshi Purohit, Associate Principal CBT; Kishore Varanasi, Principal and Director of Urban Design CBT; Rasmus Astrup, Design Principal SLA Strategies for Mitigating Urban Heat Island Effect
11:30am-12:30pm Luncheon Keynote with Linda Hwang, Trust for Public Land ParkScore Index: Closing the Park Equity Divide
12:45-1:45pm Vincent Verweij, Department of Parks and Recreation Arlington, VA Rebuilding Urban Soils for Trees
2:00-3:00pm Susannah Lerman, USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station Let’s Talk About the Birds and the Bees: Backyard Habitats in Suburban Yards
3:00-3:30pm All Rooms Networking and CEUs

*LA CES CEU credits have been approved for the Strategies for Supporting Urban Pollinators track of presentations. Applicants must attend all 4 presentations (not the Keynote) and pass a Distance Learning Quiz.

Wednesday Luncheon Keynote

ParkScore Index: Closing the Park Equity Divide

Join Linda Hwang to learn the highlights of key park equity findings from The Trust for Public Land’s ParkScore® index and learn about the The Trust for Public Land’s approach for evolving the metric over time.

This year marks The Trust for Public Land’s 10th annual release of its ParkScore® index, the national gold-standard comparison of park systems across the largest 100 cities in the United States. As part of the organization’s deep commitment to closing the park equity divide, and after a year of dramatically increased use of parks, dramatic budget cuts in an economic recession, a climate crisis, and critically important questions in the equitable distribution of benefits across race and income, they adapted the ParkScore® index to meet the moment in some key ways.

The 2021 release saw the addition of new equity measures to the index and now provides a more complete sense of the racial and economic disparities driving who does and doesn’t have access to quality parks nationwide. These new measures of park equity improve the index, showing differences not only between cities but also differences between population groups within the same city.

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Three tracks of presentations on Thursday provide insightful explorations of landscape design, land care practices, and current hot topics. Enjoy a broad range of practitioners and researchers who dig into their experiences in the landscape to offer new insights into design and practice. Alternatively, join an Idea Exchange to explore a thought-provoking topic.

 

Thursday, February 24 – Focus on Design (click for details)* 

Time (EST) Presenter Title
9:00-10:00am Benjamin Vogt, Monarch Gardens A New Garden Ethic
10:15-11:15am Pamela Berstler, G3, Green Gardens Group The Watershed Approach: Land Management Like the Earth Depends on It
11:30am-12:30pm Luncheon Keynote with Robert Kourik, Organic Gardening Consultant Dismantling the Myths of Forest Garden Guilds in Permaculture
12:45-1:45pm Nahal Sohbati, Topophyla – Santa Barbara Ridge Lane: From Wasteland to Safe Urban Community Park 
2:00-3:00pm Margie Ruddick, Margie Ruddick Landscape Wild by Design: Designed Landscapes that Promote Life
3:00-3:30pm All Rooms Networking and CEUs

*LA CES CEU credits have been approved for the Focus on Design track of presentations. Applicants must attend all 4 presentations (not the Keynote) and pass a Distance Learning Quiz.

Thursday, February 24 – Focus on Practice (click for details)

Time (EST) Presenter Title
9:00-10:00am Ted Elliman, author of Grasses, Sedges, Rushes: An Identification Guide Grasses, Sedges, and Rushes
10:15-11:15am Chris Roddick, Brooklyn Botanical Garden Arborists Are from Mars; Garden Designers Are from Venus
11:30am-12:30pm Luncheon Keynote with Robert Kourik, Organic Gardening Consultant Dismantling the Myths of Forest Garden Guilds in Permaculture
12:45-1:45pm Kate Cholakis, Penn State University; Eliza Pennypacker, Penn State University Not in My Front Yard: Social-Aesthetic Barriers to Green Infrastructure in the Public Realm
2:00-3:00pm Dr. Christopher Neill, Woodwell Climate Research Center The Science Behind Yard Management to Increase Plant, Insect, and Bird Biodiversity
3:00-3:30pm All Rooms Networking and CEUs

Thursday, February 24 – Idea Exchanges (click for details)

Time (EST) Presenter Title
9:00-10:00am Dr. Susan Pell, United States Botanic Garden Poisonous Anacardiaceae: Poison Ivy and Beyond
10:15-11:15am Stephanie Frischie, Xerces Society 100 Plants to Feed the Monarch Butterfly
11:30am-12:30pm Luncheon Keynote with Robert Kourik, Organic Gardening Consultant Dismantling the Myths of Forest Garden Guilds in Permaculture
12:45-1:45pm Moderator: Mark Richardson, Tower Hill Botanic Garden
Panelists: Josef Gorres,
University of Vermont; Angela Gupta, University of Minnesota; Christopher Evans, University of Illinois
Panel Discussion: Understanding the Jumping Worm Problem
2:00-3:00pm Dan Jaffe Wilder, Norcross Wildlife Foundation Taking on the Big Places: How to Build and Maintain Self-Sufficient Landscapes
3:00-3:30pm All Rooms Networking and CEUs

Thursday Luncheon Keynote

Dismantling the Myths of Forest Garden Guilds in Permaculture
with Robert Kourik

Guilds are groupings of beneficial plants, fruit trees, herbs, and other components that work together to help guarantee their mutual health and productivity. They are an element of forest gardens in the home landscape, and are deeply rooted in indigenous practices and wisdom. An honored model for an American guild is the Native American triad of corn, beans, and squash – also known as the Three Sisters Guild. Learn how the environment and soils of the temperate garden can be adjusted to grow better guilds of all kinds. This session will dive into the science and benefits behind the Three Sisters approach to growing.

Continuing Education Credits:

CEUs have been granted by APLD (4/day), *ASLA LA CES (4/day for specific tracks), NOFA OLCP (4/day), SER (2/day), MALP MCLP (2/day), and MCH (1).

Links to Additional Conference Information:

Purchase tickets here.

Find all the Speaker Biographies here.

Find Exhibitor/Sponsorship Opportunities here.

 

 

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