Environmental Round Table 2003:
Thinking like a Watershed
November 12-14 , 2003
Lake Lawn Resort, Delevan, Wisconsin
This is an invitation to attend the 2003 Midwest Natural Resources Environmental Round Table. The Environmental Round Table will be held November 12-14, at Lake Lawn Resort in Delevan Wisconsin. As you know, the Round Table is the annual Midwest Natural Resources Group (MNRG) membership gathering to advocate better coordination in Federal activities "bringing focus and excellence to federal activities supporting the vitality and sustainability of natural resources and the environment".
The theme of this event is "Thinking Like A Watershed" and will focus on processes and tools that will help us all in our work in and between our agencies and with our various partners. The enclosed agenda outlines the activities for this meeting. Please note that Dr. Mike Dombeck, former Chief of the Forest Service, will be our luncheon speaker on Thursday, November 13. Mr. David Ullrich, Director of the Great Lakes Cities Initiative, a project of the Northeast-Midwest Institute, will speak at our dinner session. There will be a "Meet and Greet" reception with hors d'oeuvres and a cash bar on Wednesday evening, November 12.
The meeting site, the Lake Lawn Resort, 2400 E. Geneva Street in Delavan, Wisconsin, is the same site we held the November 2001 Environmental Round Table meeting in. It is a great site for our meeting with 275 lush green and wooded acres along the shores of Delavan Lake, and is just minutes from Lake Geneva in Southeastern Wisconsin. Their website is www.lakelawnresort.com and their phone number is (800) 338-5253. They are holding rooms for our group at the government rate until October 7, so please make your reservations by that date. There will be a registration charge of approximately $50 to cover the reception, coffee breaks and lunch on the 13th, and an additional charge for the dinner on the 13th.
If you have any questions or need more information, please contact Tom Doane
at
(414) 297-4030 or tdoane@fs.fed.us
Sincerely,
Randy Moore
Regional Forester