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June 3, 2020 by Kathy Parish

Working in tandem, The East Texas Food Bank and T.L.L. Temple Foundation launch the Deep East Texas Food Security Initiative.

Starting on July 1, 2020, the DET Initiative consists of four key focus areas:

Agency Development and Capacity Building:  Food insecurity is a major public health problem. Family members in food insecure households are more likely to report poorer health and have higher risks for chronic diseases like obesity, hypertension and diabetes. Together, the foundation and food bank want to eliminate these barriers to health by making significant investments in ETFB’s partner network infrastructure. Capital investments for partner food pantries may include land acquisition, new equipment such as forklifts, pallet jacks, and refrigerators, additional shelving and technology upgrades such as new computers. 

Increased Fresh Produce Distribution:  For low-income East Texans, lack of nutritious food options is a barrier to health and development. Eating a diet rich in fruits and vegetables can reduce the risk of stroke, cardiovascular diseases, type 2 Diabetes, and other diet-related health problems. ETFB’s Fresh Produce Program helps meet this need by providing fruits and vegetables throughout East Texas. In 2019, the food bank distributed more than 8.5 million pounds of produce. Through this initiative, the goal is to ensure fresh produce access to 100% of ETFB’s partner food pantry network. 

Social Benefits Application Assistance:  In addition to distributing food to East Texans in need, ETFB connects clients with available benefits, including SNAP, Medicaid, TANF and others. The Benefits Assistance Program is an important strategy for achieving overall meal goals. The cost per meal per person reduces dramatically with SNAP application assistance. However, not enough counties are offering this service. Only one of 56 partner food pantries in the 11 county focus area for this initiative currently offers benefits application assistance.  With funding from this grant, ETFB will bring their benefits application assistance process to more rural residents in the foundation’s service area.

Development of Deep East Texas Resource Center:  Lufkin is the most densely populated area within Angelina County, and is home to the region’s largest ETFB partner food pantry. However, resources are limited for low-income families in the Lufkin and the surrounding area. Through this partnership, ETFB will have the resources to develop a new multi-service branch – the Deep East Texas Resource Center at 105 Lofton Street. This new center will expand and increase the accessibility of food assistance and wrap-around services to community members in need. Some services that will be offered include a Healthy Pantry Program, Fresh Produce Distribution, and SNAP Application Assistance.

 

Click for full additional information.

Filed Under: Projects, Slider

March 11, 2019 by Wynn Rosser

Optimizing Rural Health: A Community Healthcare Blueprint

The T.L.L. Temple Foundation, along with the Episcopal Health Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, sponsored the Texas A&M University Rural & Community Health Institute to develop a blueprint for rural healthcare in light of the rural hospital closure crisis. The full report is available at this link.

Three rural Texas communities were the focus, and the report includes a blueprint for each. Additionally, ARCHI prepared presentations to share with stakeholders in each community. Although each community is unique, the commonalities discovered in this research are “lessons learned” for rural communities in Texas and across America.

 

 

Filed Under: Health, Projects, Slider Tagged With: Health

October 13, 2018 by Wynn Rosser

Dr. Steve Jack to be Founding Executive Director of Boggy Slough Conservation Area

After an extensive national search, the board of directors of T.L.L. Temple Foundation is pleased to announce that Dr. Steve Jack has been named the founding executive director of Boggy Slough Conservation Area. Dr. Jack comes to east Texas after working over two decades at the Jones Ecological Research Center in Newton, Georgia. He will assume his new role at the foundation in January 2019.

Foundation President and Chief Executive Officer Dr. Wynn Rosser states, “Our board and staff could not be more thrilled to have Dr. Jack join our team. Beginning with the first timber harvested in the second half of the nineteenth century, the Temple family has had a special bond with the forests, wetlands, and open spaces across this region.” Dr. Rosser continues, “Because of that, conservation is a part of our Foundation’s values. We look forward to Steve’s leadership in developing the Boggy Slough Conservation Area.”

In this new position, Dr. Jack will lead the foundation’s mission of establishing and using Boggy Slough as a touchstone of excellence in East Texas through three programs that will be developed in multiple phases – research, conservation, and outreach. The research program will focus on elucidating many of the gaps in scientific knowledge that exist with respect to forest, wildlife, and water conservation in East Texas. The conservation program will leverage management operations at Boggy Slough with innovative research to inform regional land management and policy. The outreach program will integrate scientific research, applied management, and conservation and restoration efforts. The Foundation’s long-term impact on the environment in East Texas will be maximized through the nexus of these programs, positively affecting land management, ecosystem conservation, and environmentally sustainable policies in the future.

Dr. Jack has more than 25 years of experience in conservation and the environment. Since 2000, he has served as conservation ecologist at the J.W. Jones Ecological Research Center where he works to integrate the center’s research and resource management activities. Dr. Jack’s research interests include forest stand dynamics and silvicultural manipulations to achieve multiple objectives. His recent work focused on interactions between forest canopy characteristics and regeneration dynamics and developing better understanding for the ecological basis of uneven-aged silvicultural practices. In addition, he co-edited a book on the management and restoration of longleaf pine forests, has served as one of the primary instructors for the Ecological Forestry Training Workshop, and advises agencies and landowners in Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina. His previous professional experience includes serving as an assistant professor in the Department of Forest Science at Texas A&M University. He graduated summa cum laude with a degree in Physics and Mathematics from Erskine College (1982), received his Master’s degree in Forest Resources and Conservation from the University of Florida (1986) and a Ph.D. in Forest Ecology and Silviculture from Utah State University (1990).

Located west of Lufkin, the Boggy Slough Conservation Area contains some of the oldest and most ecologically significant hardwood forest habitats in East Texas and spans 18 miles of river frontage along the Neches River. It is made up of 19,055 acres in Houston and Trinity Counties. For decades the area has been managed as a wildlife and forest management research and demonstration area, providing habitat for white-tailed deer and eastern wild turkey, as well as numerous ducks, songbirds, and fish.

T.L.L. Temple, founder of Southern Pine Lumber Company, first purchased land in what is now the Boggy Slough Conservation Area in 1902. The Temple family has more than a century’s connection to the place and its people. Boggy Slough belonged to the Temple family until the late 1960s when it became a corporate asset of Temple Industries, Temple-Eastex and Temple-Inland, Inc. After 1940, Boggy Slough operated as a wildlife and forest management research and demonstration area with special attention paid to conservation and sustainability. Ownership of Boggy Slough was briefly transferred to International Paper in 2012 with a corporate sale, and the foundation acquired Boggy Slough in 2013. In 2015, the foundation entered into an agreement with The Conservation Fund to place a conservation easement over the entire 19,000+ acres, which ensures the land will be protected and managed sustainably as a working forest in perpetuity.

Filed Under: Projects, Slider

February 1, 2018 by Wynn Rosser

T.L.L. Temple Foundation Establishes Grant Program for the Benefit of North Lufkin

The T. L. L. Temple Foundation has established a new $50,000 grants program created specifically to benefit Wards 1 and 2 of North Lufkin. Interested applicants may apply for grants ranging from $500 to $5,000 beginning February 1, 2018. Grant awards will be announced in early March of this year. Application information is available through the grants program manager Legacy Institute for Financial Education (L.I.F.E.). Interested applicants are encouraged to visit www.LegacyforYouth.org.

The North Lufkin Community Small Grants Program was approved by the T. L. L. Temple Foundation Board of Trustees based upon the “Listening to the Voice of the Community” report. The report culminated an appreciative inquiry study of North Lufkin by the Stephen F. Austin State University’s School of Social Work Center for Rural Work Research and Development. The study was funded and made possible by the T.L.L. Temple Foundation.

Wynn Rosser, president and CEO of the foundation states, “This program illustrates the foundation’s commitment to be present and invested in North Lufkin as we work toward longer-term outcomes.” Rosser continues, “We believe these small grants will support resident engagement and promote equity and inclusion. We hope the program will serve as one way for North Lufkin residents to be creative, take risks, and build a range of skills.”

An initial allocation of $50,000 has been approved for the program. Small grants will range from $500 to $5,000 and will fund group projects that foster civic engagement and collaboration. Small grants are a means to fund and support placed-based grassroots groups to ensure the $50,000 is invested into projects that have meaning to the residents of Wards 1 and 2 in North Lufkin.

Joseph Ceasar, Executive Director of L.I.F.E. states, “We’re proud to be a part of a program that will transform how grants are funded. Once the community realizes the simplicity and speed of the overall process, we believe the perceived difficulty of applying for a grant will begin to diminish. We’re expecting to see an increase in the number of funded projects that are in line with the recommendations outlined in the report.”

As the program’s administrator, LIFE will oversee the operation of the program. The a 501(c)(3) organization will manage the program, coordinate the review committee and be responsible for small grant distributions and reporting.

Filed Under: Projects Tagged With: initiatives, North Lufkin

September 15, 2017 by Luke Sweeney

Boggy Slough Conservation Area

The foundation supports efforts to protect the unique forests, wetlands and open spaces across the Deep East Texas region for future generations.

Filed Under: Projects Tagged With: initiatives

September 15, 2017 by Luke Sweeney

Temple Theater – Angelina College

The foundation recognizes the value of the arts in enriching lives and contributing to healthy and thriving communities.

Filed Under: Projects Tagged With: initiatives

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Recent Posts

  • Working in tandem, The East Texas Food Bank and T.L.L. Temple Foundation launch the Deep East Texas Food Security Initiative.
  • Optimizing Rural Health: A Community Healthcare Blueprint
  • A Call for Philanthropy to Invest in Rural America
  • Dr. Steve Jack to be Founding Executive Director of Boggy Slough Conservation Area
  • Grant to Establish Lufkin Early College High School

Recent Posts

  • Working in tandem, The East Texas Food Bank and T.L.L. Temple Foundation launch the Deep East Texas Food Security Initiative.
  • Optimizing Rural Health: A Community Healthcare Blueprint
  • A Call for Philanthropy to Invest in Rural America
  • Dr. Steve Jack to be Founding Executive Director of Boggy Slough Conservation Area
  • Grant to Establish Lufkin Early College High School

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TLL Temple Foundation

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