Offaly groups mark next development phase for Community Wetlands Forum
The Minister for Nature, Heritage and Electoral Reform, Malcolm Noonan, launched the Community Wetlands Forum (CWF) as an independent CLG (company limited by guarantee) recently. The member-based forum is dedicated to community-led conservation and the wise use of wetlands.
Members of Co. Offaly based groups, the Clara Heritage Society, Pollagh Heritage Group and renowned photographer Tina Claffey joined Minister Noonon and over 60 delegates at the historic launch of the forum in Athlone earlier this week.
Minister Noonan stated: "It’s great to see the Community Wetlands Forum go from strength to strength in its ambition for community-led wetland management. Communities have a vital role to play in protecting nature. Initiatives such as this Forum bring communities together and enable them to play a leading role in the protection and safeguarding of our wetland habitats.
“We are excited about the future, and launching this next phase couldn’t come at a more important time for wetlands, which play a vital role in fighting climate change and protecting biodiversity,” said CWF founding Director and longstanding member of Creative Rathangan Meitheal, Laurence Fullam.
Development Officer with the Forum, Mícheál Callaghan, explained: “The decade of growth could not have been achieved without the support of Irish Rural Link and various funding partners, now empowering the CWF to expand its reach, promote further capacity sharing among its members, and advocate for community engagement as a valued means of protecting and managing wetlands.”
Clara 's Community, along with groups in Pollagh, Tullamore and Lemanaghan have been to the fore in pioneering a new wave approach to bottom up sustainable management and conservation of the island's Wetlands under a special interest group of Irish Rural Link.
They along with community groups nationwide are part of the network of 2250 hectares of wetlands with 20 walking trails and 58 conservation measures making up some of Ireland’s most significant Wetlands on the first wave of this new departure.
Operating as a special interest group under the auspices of Irish Rural Link the forum now has a membership of over 40 community and not for profit groups across Ireland leading projects to promote and protect their local wetlands.
Focusing on promoting awareness, understanding, and collaborative action to empower communities to safeguard wetland habitats across Ireland, the CWF has actively engaged local communities, environmental organisations, government agencies, and academic institutions in its efforts to support the protection, management, and wise use of wetlands for a sustainable future.
Innovative projects across 23 protected or designated sites, covering over 2275 Hectares of wetlands are already underway supported in a cross-alliance manner from various state agencies. Voluntary members also engage in sustainable management and conservation, maintaining walkways on or near wetland sites using 58 conservation measures, with 20 walking trails at various sites, providing great physical and mental well-being benefits.
This is one of the most transformative and innovative policy changes in environmental management and landscape preservation, in enabling bottom of management and development of our wetlands in Europe.
The launch of the new CLG was attended by over 60 delegates, from the membership, the pioneer Project Steering Group, Enthusiasts and Environmentalists at the Hodson Bay Hotel, Athlone earlier this week.
The Community Wetlands Forum invites everyone with an interest in wetland conservation and rural community development to join in celebrating its establishment as a newly independent CLG. For more information about the Community Wetlands Forum and its initiatives visit www.communitywetlandsforum.ie.