2023 Winners

Congratulations to the winners of the 2023 Governor’s Environmental Excellence Awards!
Special thanks to our sponsors, the New Jersey Infrastructure Bank and the New Jersey Corporation for Advanced Technology.

The awards were announced on December 18 at an awards ceremony at the Historic Masonic Temple in Trenton.

View the 2023 Award Ceremony Photo Gallery

 


 

Richard J. Sullivan Award: Walter Mugdan

Named for New Jersey’s first DEP Commissioner and pioneering leader in environmental protection, the Richard J. Sullivan Award was given to Walter Mugdan, who served the public through a decades-long career with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency working the last seven years of his career as Deputy Regional Administrator for Region 2.

In his final role with the EPA, Mugdan worked with the DEP as an adviser and advocate to address groundwater and mine water contamination at the Ringwood Mines/Landfill Superfund site, and to add the Lower Hackensack River  to the National Priorities List. Mugdan retired in September.

The Sullivan Award honors a New Jersey resident who demonstrates exceptional leadership and outstanding accomplishment in safeguarding public health, protecting and enhancing New Jersey’s diverse natural resources, and creating vibrant, sustainable communities that provide economic opportunity for all.

 


 

2023 Governor’s Environmental Excellence Award Winners

James J. Florio Emerging Environmental Leader: Julia Totora
Totora participated in projects such as making leaf packs for school groups to investigate macroinvertebrates and creating a petition and letter-writing campaign seeking to eliminate plastic foam trays from her school district’s lunchrooms. On Earth Day 2023, she provided hands-on water quality education to residents of her town by leading a water testing project at a local creek and taught residents how water quality is related to their health and the health of the lake, stream and local wildlife.

Clean Air: Anna Grossman
A member of Sustainable Montclair, Grossman supported local advocates and Quiet Montclair in efforts to eliminate the local use of gas-powered leaf blowers. Grossman  organized workshops and electric lawncare demonstration days, spoke at town council meetings and arranged expert testimony at public comment sessions, and coordinated a webinar with health and electric lawn care experts. As of Sept. 4, gas-powered blowers and sprayers are banned year-round in Montclair.

Climate: Pari Patel
Pari, a high school student, designed a series of upcycling events in her community  to reduce waste and greenhouse gas emissions. Pari’s classmates traded apparel and learned how to use a sewing machine, fabric glue and paint to repurpose old clothing. Pari also organized clothing drives and assemblies, and distributed flyers at her high school, other township schools and public arenas such as the local library. Pari addressed the issue with her town council and used social media to teach about mass-produced apparel and other, sustainable clothing choices.

Watershed Management and Water Resources: Veolia New Jersey Watershed Team  
Veolia created a Watershed Team to ensure clean, safe drinking water for more than 1.3 million residents across New Jersey. The team, headed by Matt Cerami and including Tyler Arnold and Ron Farr, created a dashboard that combines satellite imagery, continuous monitoring equipment, lab samples and meteorological data to form predictions about when and where Harmful Algal Blooms could form in reservoirs. This allows the team to accurately target areas that need treatment and reduce the amount of HAB treatment chemicals applied to the water.

Healthy Ecosystems and Habitats: Neptune Township/American Littoral Society 
Neptune Township, the American Littoral Society and several partners worked together to restore 2,050 linear feet of shoreline at the Shark River Inlet. The project created beach, reef sill, marsh and berm habitat that improved resilience for natural and built communities, spawning habitat for horseshoe crabs, marsh habitat for juvenile fish and crabs, dune habitat for avian species and reef habitat for shellfish. Additionally, stormwater outfalls were replaced and affixed with tide valves to reduce periodicity of flooding and to better treat stormwater runoff.

Healthy Communities: Team Wilderness
The Jersey City-based organization offers excursions to foster teamwork and leadership and build character in youth. In 2022, Team Wilderness served 450 youth who engaged in 6,000 hours outdoors. In addition to physical activity, each excursion is integrated with social and emotional reflection on self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills and responsible decision-making. In 2023, the organization added Compass Project, an academic coaching program that guides students from grade 10 through their first two years of college. North Star Project, also added in 2023, offers a free short-term youth counseling program that emphasizes wilderness and adventure therapy.

Environmental Justice: Dr. Nicky Sheats
Sheats is director of the Center for the Urban Environment at the John S. Watson Institute for Urban Policy and Research at Kean University and played an instrumental role in the development and passage of New Jersey’s landmark environmental justice law. His recent efforts seek to integrate environmental justice in climate mitigation policies called Mandatory Emissions Reductions (MER) that target reductions of associated co-pollutants, along with greenhouse gas emissions, and which impact overburdened communities. Dr. Sheats convened the state’s first MER policy workgroup with the New Jersey Environmental Justice Alliance. Dr. Sheats is also the lead author of a recently published paper exploring the implementation of MER policies in New Jersey, Minnesota and Delaware.

Environmental Education (Student-Led): Anika and Divya Arora, Founders of Simply Green 
Parsippany Hills High School students Anika and Divya began working on a grassroots “Meatless Mondays” campaign in 2020 to raise awareness of the adverse effects of meat consumption on the climate. They did presentations at the town library, to the local Environmental Advisory Committee, school principals, the superintendent of schools and the Town Council, as well as other locations. They have attended the Columbia Climate School Eco-Ambassador programs, CCS K-12 Live Classes and are certified in climate change leadership. Anika and Divya started simply-green.org, dedicated to rallying youth to reverse climate change.

Environmental Education (Educator-Led): Ron Smith
Smith, of Merchantville, is a science educator who leads community science adventures for children and adults. For more than two decades, Smith has led the environmental education program of the Haddonfield School District. With the Pinelands Preservation Alliance, he established the Life Science Field Training Institute, a weeklong program that trains teachers on field study techniques. Smith also is director of the Drexel University Environmental Science Leadership Academy for high school students, a program where students study field-based environmental science in preparation for careers in science.

Sustainability (Community): Ocean County Department of Solid Waste Management
The Ocean County Department of Solid Waste Management, in conjunction with the county’s Board of Commissioners, established a pilot program to safely collect and dispose of expired marine flares after determining there was a lack of disposal outlets nationwide. Through a partnership with the Ocean County Fire and First Aid Training Center, more than 1,200 flares collected during a one-day event were incinerated onsite via a custom burn box. Due to the program’s success, the county plans to hold annual spring and fall flare collection events.

Sustainability (Business): Stanley Greberis, Upward LLC 
Greberis invented the Eco Pool Drain Waste Water Fountain, which discharges swimming pool wastewater onsite. The fountain reduces water consumption, recycles pool water, reduces chlorine levels and prevents soil erosion. The fountain’s aeration process lowers chlorine content of discharged pool water by spraying it up several feet and overall covers about 100 square feet. The process eliminates point source of water pollution and excess stormwater sewer load. These types of fountains are estimated to help the average pool owner recycle/repurpose thousands of gallons of pool water annually.

Note: The winner descriptions are compiled from information provided by the award applicants and/or third-party nominators.