July E-Newsletter
The July E-Newsletter covers:• Milkweed at Chino Hills State Park• Donate to Save Land• Loss of Roland vom Dorp• The Status of CEQA ➡️Read the E-Newsletter.
The July E-Newsletter covers:• Milkweed at Chino Hills State Park• Donate to Save Land• Loss of Roland vom Dorp• The Status of CEQA ➡️Read the E-Newsletter.
Your support has been vital to Hills For Everyone’s conservation mission. We’re thrilled to share an exciting opportunity: we’re working with California State Parks and partners to secure 800 acres of precious habitat, including walnut woodlands, along Chino Hills State Park’s eastern ridgelines. To make this vision a reality, we must purchase one crucial acre—home to rare habitat—for $11,500. Thanks to Friends of the Whittier Hills, every donation will be matched up to $2,500, doubling your impact! Why does this … Read More
Help us protect Chino Hills State Park’s ridgelines! We’re working to secure 800 acres of habitat, including walnut woodlands—and we need your help to buy one vital acre for $11,500. Every donation is matched up to $2,500, so your gift goes twice as far! 🦉 Saving this land means protecting wildlife, water, and scenic views from development. If 90 people give $100, we’ll reach our goal! Donate today to keep these hills wild for generations: HillsForEveryone.org/Donate Thank you for supporting … Read More
Thanks to a wonderful partnership with Friends of Harbors, Beaches & Parks (FHBP), a joint Opinion Editorial was written by our (and FHBP) consultant Melanie Schlotterbeck about opportunities that exist in and around Orange County for conservation acquisitions. Through a thorough mapping exercise we now know more than 30,000 acres are potentially available for conservation. Read the Opinion Editorial.
The answer is B. 23.1 million acres have already been permanently protected in California. This means the collective “we” need to still conserve eight million acres by 2030 to reach the 30×30 goal. Hills For Everyone has identified around 9,000 acres of immediate importance for conservation for the Puente-Chino Hills Wildlife Corridor to ensure the landscape is protected and connected for the future.