Statement of Need

The Maine Conservation Alliance’s Mission: Maine’s Environmental Priorities Coalition (EPC) is a partnership of 34 environmental, conservation and public health organizations representing over 100,000 members who want to protect the good health, good jobs and quality of life that Maine’s environment provides. The Maine Conservation Alliance works to protect the environment and democracy through education, collaboration and advocacy by ensuring a livable and healthy future for us all by supporting policies that address climate change, social justice, and democracy.

Statement:

The Maine Conservation Alliance (MCA) is seeking funding to create a new summer fellowship program to create a team of workers to clean up beaches in Southern Maine. The state of Maine’s breathtaking coastline not only serves as a vital habitat for diverse marine life but also attracts millions of visitors annually. However, this natural treasure is increasingly threatened by the accumulation of marine debris, including plastics, fishing gear, and other waste, which not only degrades the aesthetic beauty of the beaches but also poses significant environmental and ecological risks.

Maine is renowned for its natural beauty that not only sustains diverse ecosystems but attracts millions of tourists every year. As of 2022, the Maine Office of Tourism reported 15,363,600 visitations and 151,000 jobs related to tourism. The neighboring state of New Hampshire reported only about 4.3 million visitors that year. It’s important to ensure continuous tourism to not only stimulate Maine’s economy but also maintain the jobs it provides. 

 Plastic debris is known to suffocate, entangle, and be eaten by marine animals which endangers their populations. Many seabirds, fish, and turtles mistake plastic for prey and end up starving as their stomach fills with debris. This can also lead to infections and internal injuries that affect their ability to swim and survive. If these organisms are ingested by another, the plastic will continue to cycle through the food chain. It’s crucial to prevent these pollutants by disposing of them before they can be brought out to sea. 

The residents and students here are fond of Maine and want to see it thrive during their lifetime and for future generations. Similarly, tourists share the interest of having access to clean, healthy beaches. Our efforts to have the people know that there is a funded active effort to keep the beaches clean, and putting in the effort to conserve the health and beauty of Maine’s beaches both to improve its quality and prevent any potential future harm and encourage the community to collaborate with this conservation effort. Maine will see a significant improvement in morale and a feeling of comfort knowing the beaches will still be in their best form when they come back to visit and will still be afterward. 

My Place In An Organization

When I think about how I would place myself in a non-profit organization, my mind instantly goes to oral communication and leadership. I find that I’m very comfortable in social settings, and therein feel very comfortable, or perhaps even compelled, to initiate and take-part in group discussion, and also speak to groups of people – outside of my own group, perhaps during presentations, interviews, or meetings. Along with this, I think one of my strengths is working with others: I enjoy the collaborative process, and find work to be richer, more rewarding and more fun when working as a team.

I am a decent writer, but still have a lot to work on. And I’m decently organized, but can often find it hard in a busy day to be accommodating to the schedules of others. I can, at times, be analytical, but I’m mostly driven by vision and goals. Therein, I like to work backwards: identifying the final goal, and determining/illuminating the necessary steps to get there.

As far as weaknesses go, I’m not very good with technology, and can sometimes find it frivolous and immaterial to get bogged down into the tech side of work. I would much rather do the work of brainstorming, writing, etc.

CPB #11 (11/27)

Looking at the involvement of women in Dracula, and the idea of “purity” and “polluted”. In doing so, I reviewed Sara Louise Fatemi Cristin’s Subversive Sexuality and the Decline of British Society: The Demonization of the Victorian New Woman in Lady Audley’s Secret, She, and Dracula; and Carol Senf’s “Dracula”: Stoker’s Response to the New Woman.

And from Senf’s piece:

CPB #7 (10/26)

With beauty reflecting class, culture, and (perhaps) virtue, it is easy to understand why one would be so obsessed with their outward appearance. It is, in other words, the most literal physical expression of character, ethics, and morals.

CPB #6 (10/19)

https://www.healthline.com/health/bipolar-disorder/history-bipolar#th-and-th-century

https://www.teenbookrecommendations.com/single-post/2020/04/14/the-strange-case-of-dr-jekyll-and-mr-hyde-critical-review#:~:text=Stevenson%20is%20showing%20that%20the,Jekyll%20is%20powerless%20against%20them.

It seems as though people possess both evil and good within. And to the extent they reveal themselves in society determine their sanity.

Perhaps, then, sanity is one’s ability to control [animal] urges, not so much one’s ability to be actually normal.

CPB #5 (10/12)

“Wild appearance and manner” from the Patient Certificates and Notices: Admission dates 1870-1871

While this patient’s “Facts indicating Insanity” differs from Bertha – or at least so far as I’m concerned – this one saddens me quite a bit more. To genuinely believe that your mother is still alive, and therein to be kept from her is deeply saddening. And to not be able to sleep because you hear voices of another family in the room during the night is also dejecting. While I couldn’t find the treatment outline, I hope she was not neglected and gaslighted. Because those convictions are true to her, and to be spurned would be pretty painful and lonely

Same patient as photo #2

CPB #4 (10/5)

“Idiots Act”

It seems as though disabled persons of a higher social status were accommodated accordingly.

A portrait of a blind shoeblack with his dogs, from Yorkshire, circa 1860. It was common for authorities at the time to segregate the disabled and mentally handicapped and many were put away in institutions on the grounds that it was for their own good and the good of society

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