News Releases

Corps of Engineers Partners with Punahou JROTC to Clean Up Fort DeRussy Beach Area for Earth Month 2016

Published April 13, 2016
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Park Rangers Angela Jones (left center) and Samantha Vazquez welcome more than 50 volunteers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, local JROTC students and others, to the Corps' Earth Day 2016 clean up of the Fort DeRussy beach and berm area as part of Earth Month 2016.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Park Rangers Angela Jones (left center) and Samantha Vazquez welcome more than 50 volunteers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, local JROTC students and others, to the Corps' Earth Day 2016 clean up of the Fort DeRussy beach and berm area as part of Earth Month 2016.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Park Ranger Samantha Vazquez explains to Earth Day volunteers the process of placing name placards on tree trunks in Fort DeRussy Park area near the Corps'  Pacific Regional Visitor Center. More than 50 volunteers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers partnered with local JROTC students and others to clean up Waikiki Beach April 2 as part of Earth Month 2016.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Park Ranger Samantha Vazquez explains to Earth Day volunteers the process of placing name placards on tree trunks in Fort DeRussy Park area near the Corps' Pacific Regional Visitor Center. More than 50 volunteers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers partnered with local JROTC students and others to clean up Waikiki Beach April 2 as part of Earth Month 2016.

Student volunteers from Honolulu's Punahou School Junior ROTC program (which includes cadets from other area high schools and some home-schooled students) joined Corps employees, Soldiers from the 163rd Transportation Detachment, and local Boy and Cub Scouts and their friends and families, to clean up the beach and berm area behind the Corps' Pacific Regional Visitor Center in Waikiki.

Student volunteers from Honolulu's Punahou School Junior ROTC program (which includes cadets from other area high schools and some home-schooled students) joined Corps employees, Soldiers from the 163rd Transportation Detachment, and local Boy and Cub Scouts and their friends and families, to clean up the beach and berm area behind the Corps' Pacific Regional Visitor Center in Waikiki.

By Joseph Bonfiglio, Honolulu District Public Affairs

More than 50 volunteers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers partnered with local JROTC students and others to clean up Fort DeRussy beach and berm April 2 as part of Earth Month 2016.

Over 30 volunteers from the Punahou Junior ROTC program (which includes cadets from other area high schools and some home-schooled students) joined Corps employees, Soldiers from the 163rd Transportation Detachment, and local Boy and Cub Scouts and their friends and families, to clean up the beach and berm area at the Corps' Pacific Regional Visitor Center (RVC) at Fort DeRussy in Waikiki.

Earth Month and Earth Day increase awareness and support for ongoing education and efforts to build partnerships and grassroots involvement to keep the 'aina clean year-round.

Earth Day was established March 21, 1970 as an annual event to deepen reverence and care for life on the planet.

For more information about the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, visit the Honolulu District website: http://www.poh.usace.army.mil/; or call 438-2815 for information about the RVC.

The Corps' RVC first opened its doors at Battery Randolph in 1983. Its goal is to enhance the public's understanding of the multidimensional role of the U.S. Army and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Particular emphasis is on Civil Works and water resources development which affect the lives of all the residents of Hawaii and the people of the Pacific.

The RVC is located on the second floor of historic Battery Randolph at Fort DeRussy, Waikiki. Battery Randolph is listed on the National Register of Historic Sites and is one of 16 coastal fortifications built by the Corps between 1906 and 1917 for the protection of Honolulu and Pearl Harbors.


Contact

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Joseph Bonfiglio
808-835-4004

Release no. 16-004