PLACES WE PROTECT
Alaska Wilderness League remained busy throughout 2022. Working with our partners, members and supporters in Washington, D.C. and beyond, the League demonstrated broad support for durable protections across Alaska. Together, we watched films and heard from researchers, storytellers, and community members that remind us why these places are so special, and in November 2022, we celebrated the inaugural recipient of the Adam Kolton Alaska Storytelling Grant Award.
We are deeply grateful for the generosity of our members that made this work possible.
Read on for details related to specific campaigns.
TONGASS NATIONAL FOREST
In 2022, we continued to press for protections to mature and old-growth trees that provide invaluable habitat, cultural resources, and climate mitigation through carbon removal and storage. The Biden administration continued to review the Tongass Roadless Rule exemption, which not only put us on track for an 2023 full restoration of the Roadless Rule in Alaska, but also included an immediate phase out of old-growth logging with very limited exceptions across the forest, a new commitment to Tribal consultation, and a $25-million investment in alternative economic development for the region. Alaska Wilderness League rallied support for Tongass Roadless comments, generating more than 10,000 public comments from our supporters that were delivered to federal agencies. We also helped to organize a webinar highlighting the importance of the Tongass under a changing climate, which included Indigenous, agency, and conservation voices. We look forward to working with our partners in Southeast Alaska and around the country as we work to make durable, holistic protections a reality for the Tongass, and support the ongoing work of the Southeast Alaska Sustainability Strategy (SASS).
Photo credit: Alaska Wilderness League Staff
OTHER WINS FOR ALASKA
In fall 2022, the League helped our supporters participate in public scoping periods regarding ocean energy policy, “D1” land withdrawals throughout Alaska – impacting vast swaths of BLM-managed lands— and the EIS for an industrial access road to the Ambler mining district, during which we collected over 11,000 signatures on our No Road to Ambler petition. Outside of administrative engagement, efforts to stop the proposed Pebble Mine project in Bristol Bay from moving forward continued, ensuring that the world’s largest sockeye salmon fishery – that is critical for subsistence and commercial uses – remains intact.
Photo credit: © Florian Schulz Productions
Photo credit: © Florian Schulz Productions
Photo credit: Daniel Dietrich Photography / www.danieldietrichphotography.com
You've helped us so much on this journey, now help us forge the path ahead
Photo credit: © Florian Schulz Productions
OUR BOARD
Former President Jimmy Carter,
Honorary Co-Chair
The Honorable Robert Mrazek,
Honorary Co-Chair
Tom Campion,
Chair Emeritus
Pat Pourchot,
President of the Board
Kit DesLauriers,
Vice President of the Board
Yvonne Besvold,
Treasurer
Midy Aponte,
Secretary
Toni Armstrong
Steve Barker
Chad Brown
Ellen Ferguson
Debbie S. Miller
Greg Moga
Brian O'Donnell
Jody Juneby Potts-Joseph
Amy Roberts
John Sterling
OUR TEAM
In 2022 we welcomed to the team Ashley Davis as our climate and justice partnerships organizer, Aileo Weinmann as our communications director and Marley Hatfield as our development associate. The team continued to grow in 2023 with the additions of Anja Semanco as our communications manager, Alex Cohen as our government affairs director and Lindsay Crowder as our Arctic campaigns director.
Learn more about the dedicated and supportive volunteers on our board, and meet the dedicated staff working at Alaska Wilderness League by visiting our staff page here.
OUR COMMITMENT TO JUSTICE, EQUITY, DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION
At Alaska Wilderness League, we work to keep Alaska’s wildest places protected now and for generations to come. We recognize that threats to the environment have disproportionate effects on marginalized communities, and until the conservation movement is more just, equitable and inclusive of all people, we cannot truly secure a safer, healthier and more sustainable environment for future generations. We recognize the need to expand our understanding of the systems of power and oppression at play in today’s world.
A commitment to centering our work in justice, equity, diversity and inclusion (JEDI) is critical to our mission and effectiveness. It is imperative to build and maintain transformational relationships with our partners, broadening our base of support and making our organization an even better home for its employees.
Alaska Wilderness League had a strong year of progress in 2022 on the work we are doing to become the organization we envision – one that is more inclusive and committed to justice and lives up to our commitment to be an example for the conservation and environmental community. In 2022 this has been done through multiple actions supporting our Indigenous partners, continued staff training and uplifting partners’ voices and events.
Our commitment to JEDI includes a focus on confronting our own biases and privileges — both organizational and personal — and actively working to dismantle them. One of the opportunities is to better align Alaska conservation with the cause of Indigenous rights and social justice. Indeed, many of our Indigenous partners and allies are among the most compelling and important leaders in the fight to transition away from fossil fuels, for respecting the land and for traditional Native knowledge and expertise.
This commitment to justice is inseparable from a commitment to developing more meaningful allyship with a diversity of partners and the communities most impacted by our work. It is a promise to listen, learn and grow. It is a promise to stand for, support and speak up for the broader causes of justice and equality. Continually expanding our awareness of systems of power and oppression will help us reimagine conservation as a tool for justice and advocate for Alaska’s public lands with a heightened focus on the intersectionality of climate change and human rights.
This is a journey and although we’ve made progress along this path, we do know that there is much more that needs to be done – we are committed to continuing to prioritize the work of becoming better allies.
This commitment to justice is inseparable from a commitment to developing more meaningful allyship with a diversity of partners and the communities most impacted by our work. It is a promise to listen, learn and grow. It is a promise to stand for, support and speak up for the broader causes of justice and equality. Continually expanding our awareness of systems of power and oppression will help us reimagine conservation as a tool for justice and advocate for Alaska’s public lands with a heightened focus on the intersectionality of climate change and human rights.
This is a journey and although we’ve made progress along this path, we do know that there is much more that needs to be done – we are committed to continuing to prioritize the work of becoming better allies.
Photo credit: Lincoln Else
FOUNDATION SUPPORT
Anonymous
444S Foundation
The Campion Foundation
The Conservation Alliance
Hugh & Jane Ferguson Foundation
Martin-Fabert Foundation
New-Land Foundation
Tortuga Foundation
True North Foundation
The Volgenau Foundation
Weeden Foundation
Wilburforce Foundation
LEADERSHIP COUNCIL
The Alaska Wilderness League Leadership Council is a group of Alaska lands advocates who meet as thought leaders to advise and assist in the planning and execution of League goals. For more information including how to get involved in the Council, please contact Chris@AlaskaWild.org.
Marta Chase •Ken Fabert • Bruce Gitlin • Dan Johnson • Susan Lubetkin • William Meadows • Drs. Joan and Sherman Silber • Judy and Jim Wagonfeld • Erin Younger
THANK YOU
Giving big for big landscapes helps protect Alaska’s irreplaceable treasures and unique wildlife.
Alaska Wilderness League is an independent 501(c)(3) organization (EIN: 52-1814742).