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SIERRA VISTA - City officials and local
middle school students gathered behind The University of Arizona Sierra
Vista campus Thursday morning to celebrate the dedication of the city’s
new plant sciences center.
Chilly weather did not damage the
spirits of those who had worked hard over the last eight months to ensure
the project’s fruition.
The center – a 2-acre facility where
roadside salvaged plants will soon be arriving and hopefully thriving –
is the work of the Sierra Vista Task Force on Plant Sciences established
last January.
The land was donated by The University
of Arizona Sierra Vista. The facility will consist of a fenced, outdoor
plant storage area.
The original plan of the task force was
to work to save endangered plants.
However, after much discussion, the
group decided salvaging non-endangered species before they were lost to
highway expansion would be more reasonable venture, said Pat Bell, city
environmental services analyst.
As part of the dedication ceremony
Thursday, Sierra Vista Councilman Harold Vangilder, who is chairman of the
task force, dare to go where he once vowed never to set foot.
Wearing a pinstriped, navy blue suit and
brightly colored tie, Vangilder removed his conservative brown shoes in
front of the crowd and strapped on a pair of blue suede Birkenstocks.
Vangilder, who had previously said he
would never be photographed in the footwear which is popular among many
environmentalists, fastened the buckles of his new sandals while the
cameras flashed in all directions.
Another surprise at the dedication was
the debut of "Wettie the Waterdrop," who up until now had only
been a voice on the radio, giving helpful hints on water conservation.
Wettie is part of The University of
Arizona’s Cooperative Extension Water Wise program.
The program was inspired to create
Wettie after reading a composition written by Sierra Vista resident Abbie
Stewart when she was in the fourth grade.
Stewart, who is now a sixth-grader at
Sierra Vista Middle School, wrote a short story about a raindrop’s
journey through the water cycle. She was honored at the dedication with a
plaque.
The idea to start a group dedicated to
saving plants originally came from Vangilder’s wife, Carmelle. Mrs.
Vangilder is an assistant principal at Apache Middle School.
Construction on the plant center is
scheduled to start on December. It should be ready to receive plants
beginning in January, Bell said.
The Arizona Department of Transportation
has arranged with the state Department of Corrections to use prison labor
to remove native plants from alongside Highway 90 before the widening
project begins.
The uprooted plants will be transported
to the center, then eventually used to beautify areas along city and state
highways.
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