Humanitarian Fund Will Increase Little Rock Presence.WINROCK INTERNATIONAL, the global humanitarian nonprofit based at Morrilton, plans to establish Little Rock headquarters in the near future, though no location or date had been selected, officials said last week. About 80 people will move to the new headquarters, said communications director Mary Laurie. About 20 people will continue to operate a conference facility on Petit Jean Mountain, where New York-born billionaire Winthrop Rockefeller This article is about the Governor of Arkansas (1967-1971). For his son, later Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas, see Winthrop Paul Rockefeller. Winthrop A. established a home 48 years ago in his adopted state. A board meeting later this month may decide the location and type of facility to be occupied in Little Rock, Laurie said. The $76 million organization currently runs other offices in Arlington, Va., along with operational centers in Asia, Africa, Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. and the former Soviet Union. Winrock has only six employees in Little Rock now, said Gregg Patterson, director of U.S. programs, the single Winrock division now located in the city. Patterson, 43, came to Winrock this year after a career spent in state government at the Game and Fish Commission and the Department of Pollution Control and Ecology (now the Department of Environmental Quality). In 1999, the latest year for which complete figures are available, Winrock International spent $45.8 million worldwide, on revenue of $49.4 million, only about 2 percent of which was directed to programs in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , Patterson said. Among the projects he oversees are an apprenticeship program with the Arkansas Wood Manufacturers Association and a partnership between utility companies and Delta farmers that ultimately aims to rebuild the great bottomland hardwood forests of the Mississippi Valley. "To have a strong economy, you've got to have strong environmental and natural resource management," Patterson said last week, and the two Arkansas projects emphasize Winrock's commitment to the philosophy. The Wood Manufacturers apprenticeship aims to increase rural employment in skilled trades. Specifically, members of the AWMA AWMA Air and Waste Management Association AWMA Asian World of Martial Arts AWMA American Working Malinois Association AWMA Arkansas Wood Manufacturers Association AWMA American Wholesale Marketers Association AWMA Australian Wound Management Association , mostly small businesses involved in making specialized wood products, need skilled workers to operate technologically complex machinery, Patterson said. "A lot of the machinery that is needed was basically being operated by folks in their late 40s and early 50s," he said. "There was literally a generation of workers out there that was being missed. We worked closely with them in developing an apprenticeship program." AWMA designed the training, which includes summer employment for high school students. The U.S. Department of Labor recently endorsed the program. Pollution Partnership East Arkansas farmers form an unlikely alliance with large utility companies in the Landowner Carbon Sequestration sequestration In law, a writ authorizing a law-enforcement official to take into custody the property of a defendant in order to enforce a judgment or to preserve the property until a judgment is rendered. Project. Designed to convert about 11,500 acres of treeless former soybean soybean, soya bean, or soy pea, leguminous plant (Glycine max, G. soja, or Soja max) of the family Leguminosae (pulse family), native to tropical and warm temperate regions of Asia, where it has been fields back to their original hardwood bottomland forest state, the program enables farmers to increase profits and helps utilities meet pollution control requirements economically. Simply put, "it's a tree-planting program," Patterson said. Utility companies are among the nation's heaviest polluters through electrical generation plants. By planting trees, Patterson said, the companies can offset some of the pollutants they discharge into the air, since trees absorb large amounts of carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure. . Winrock International facilitates partnerships between utilities looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. carbon "offsets" and farmers with unproductive farmland, usually formerly planted in soybeans. The farmer sells a permanent easement easement, in law, the right to use the land of another for a specified purpose, as distinguished from the right to possess that land. If the easement benefits the holder personally and is not associated with any land he owns, it is an easement in gross (e.g. to the land, while supplementing the farm income by leasing hunting rights and, possibly, harvesting timber at a sustainable rate. Eventually, the land may revert to its natural wetland state, decreasing sedimentation. "It's good P.R. for the utility companies," Patterson said. "One of the things that we always try to do is think of and develop alternative revenue sources," Patterson said. The foundation was formed in 1985 from the merger of three philanthropic agricultural organizations. Rockefeller, brother to former vice president and New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, moved to Arkansas in 1953. He served as head of the Arkansas Industrial Development Commission under former Gov. Orval Faubus. In 1966, Rockefeller became the first Republican to be elected governor since Reconstruction, defeating segregationist seg·re·ga·tion·ist n. One that advocates or practices a policy of racial segregation. seg re·ga Democrat Jim
Johnson. Rockefeller was re-elected in 1968 before losing to Democrat
Dale Bumpers in 1970. He died in 1973, leaving Winrock International as
a part of his legacy to the state.
The Winrock board includes Lt. Gov. Winthrop Paul Rockefeller Winthrop Paul Rockefeller (September 17, 1948 – July 16, 2006) was Republican lieutenant governor of the U.S. state of Arkansas from 1996 until his death. Early life , the former governor's son. |
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