AWARDS 2003 - PRESENT

     

grant round

grant recipient and project description

award

2007

Association to Preserve Cape Cod

Funds will be used to develop strategies to address some of the prime structural and technical impediments to improving zoning on Cape Cod. The strategies will be presented in a report of policy analysis and recommendations entitled: “Zoning Challenges: Reversing Impediments to Smart Growth Zoning on Cape Cod.” This will be the first in a series of journal quality papers. The complete series of articles will be published by APCC in a book entitled: “Cape Cod’s Bluebook: Growth Management for Cape Cod’s Quality of Life in the 21st Century.”

$18,750
2007

Housing Assistance Corporation

This project focuses on the hiring and support of a full-time coordinator to lead the implementation of the Cape Cod Workforce Housing Task Force's Call to Action: an outgrowth of a CCEDC-sponsored Workforce Housing Summit in April 2006. The action plan includes several short- and long-term steps that will lead to the creation of or access to housing that our workforce can afford. The coordinator will foster partnerships among employers, assist towns in the creation of public policies, identify revenue streams and educate voters, employers and policymakers on the need for and benefits of workforce housing in our communities.

$25,000
2007

AmeriCorps Cape Cod

In partnership with Cape Cod Community College, Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve, and Cape and Islands Self-Reliance Corporation, Barnstable County AmeriCorps Cape Cod will use it grant award to support the coordination and implementation of a Solar Thermal System Installation Workshop and Renewable Technology Community Education Program. The intent of the project is to utilize the installation of a solar thermal system as a training opportunity for municipal employees and emerging professionals in the renewable energy technology field. The installation and training will be followed by periodic public education programs offering an introduction to and viewing of the working system. The proposed system will be mounted on a County building. Matched by Barnstable County funds, the grant request will pay in part for the purchase of materials, contract of profesional labor and the production of educational materials.

$11,250
2007

CapeAbilities

The CapeAbilities hydroponics farm--three greenhouses and 8 acres--would like to provide over 3,000 hours of paid employment for adults with disabilities during its second season of operation. As a result of that employment, the farm will generate enough fresh produce and flowers to create a salad club, support commercial accounts, support an on-site vegetable/flower stand, and participate in at least one farmers' market. The farm is one of three entrepreneurial businesses that CapeAbilities operates to provide employment training and income opportunities for adults with disabilities. Funds would be used to create two new P/T positions for training personnel, and to double the P/T hours of the hydroponic specialist.

$21,818
2007

Hyannis Main Street Business Improvement District

To create a cooperative work and gallery space on Main Street Hyannis where local artists can create, market and sell their work. The space will be affordable, and the environment supportive for artists in all disciplines.

$10,720
2007

Arts Foundation of Cape Cod

A partnership of business organizations, arts organizations, and governmental agencies will collaborate to create a Creative Economy Action Plan for Cape Cod. With the support of this grant, AFCC will combine forces to position Cape Cod's creative economy for future growth in size, diversity and quality.

$18,750
2006

Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill

Funding will be used to complete the winterization of the existing ceramics studio to allow for extended use and programming.  This project will increase year round staff, access to studio space, collaborations with other art guilds, and workshops. The winterization will allow the studio to attract students and visitors to the Outer Cape on a year round basis.

$7,500
2006

Town of Provincetown

Grant funds would support the costs of a consultant to assist the town in the design of a master plan for the implementation of a Streetscape Path to Culture. The plan would incorporate historical and cultural assets, creative paving, streetprint designs, new light fixtures, banners, signs and interactive kiosks. The design will include the concept and infrastructure for a Virtual Cultural Center which will allow visitors to travel along the streetscape path and access hot-spots through an interactive wireless network. The overall purpose of the project is to physically and electronically draw and direct people to what Provincetown has to offer. Project is part of the implementation phase of a Strategic Economic Development Plan funded under an FY05 Massachusetts Cultural Council grant.

$25,000
2006

Cape and Islands Self-Reliance

Funding will cover the cost of three workshops. Two workshops will instruct plumbers and builders on how to install solar hot water installations. A third workshop would enlist the help of students and tradespeople in the installation of a 10-kilowatt grid-tied land-based wind turbine on the grounds of the Upper Cape Cod Regional Technical School.

$10,500
2006

Association to Preserve Cape Cod/The Business Roundtable

APCC plans to develop and launch a Cape Cod Guide to Town Center Revitalization. The guide will contain specific strategies, methodologies, resources and models to promote economic development and new business investment in Cape Cod's town centers. It will be geared to local chambers of commerce, economic development committees, planning officials and property owners to help revitalize town centers.

$25,000
2006

Payomet Performing Arts Charitable Trust

Funds will support the move of Payomet's theatrical operation from Route 6 to Highlands Center for the summer 2006 season and the purchase of a new 50' by 50' frame tent. The new tent will seat 130 and will replace the current one that is 30 years old. This will mark the 8th season of Payment's operation and the first true occupation of the Highlands Center site by a Program Partner. The tent will also be used by AmeriCorps Cape Cod and the National Seashore for educational activities.

$15,000
2006

Highland Center

Funding will be used to execute two phases of the development of the Center.  The Implementation Plan and Financial Feasibility Study (Phase I) will explore the intended and potential uses for the Highland Center site, including programs, special needs, buildings, landscaping, natural systems analysis, technology potential and infrastructure needs along with a detailed financial feasibility analysis.  The Marketing Effort (Phase 2) will consist of a well funded and consistent effort to inform and educate key decision makers and communicate overall purpose, essential facts and availability of the center to approrpriate organizations.

$75,000

2006

Town of Provincetown

A partnership between the Town of Provincetown, the Provincetown Economic Development Council (PEDC), and the Cape Cod Economic Development Council of Barnstable County (CCEDC) is helping Provincetown take a closer look at its economy. With a Cape and Islands license plate grant for $49,950 awarded by the Barnstable County Commissioners and administered by the CCEDC, the town is working closely with the PEDC, CCEDC and other partners to collect and analyze selected local economic data.  The study will set the stage for the future development of a long-term economic development strategy. Mt. Auburn Associates of Somerville, Massachusetts has been hired to lead the study.  Mt. Auburn Associates will collect and analyze both primary and secondary data and conduct focus groups and individual interviews with selected participants in Provincetown's for-profit and non-profit communities. The study is designed to shed light on the economic opportunities and challenges facing Provincetown.  Six primary economic clusters—real estate, arts and culture, tourism, education, the working waterfront, and health care—will be the focus of the study.

(click here to view a PowerPoint presentation displaying preliminary results of the first half of the study)

$49,950

2006

OpenCape Collaborative

High-Speed Wireless Broadband Transport Network. A $50,000 grant to the OpenCape Collaborative will boost efforts to install a high-speed wireless broadband network from Bourne to Provincetown with links to Plymouth and Dartmouth.  The new network will provide an additional broadband access option for public and private users up and down the Cape, greatly reduce existing connectivity gaps, and create new economic development opportunities for the region's myriad businesses and institutions.  The collaborative is spearheaded by Cape Cod Community College, Cape Cod Technology Council, UMass-Dartmouth, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

$50,000

2006, 2007

Town of Barnstable
Economic Stimulus Plan. As part of the revitalization of Hyannis Main Street, the Town of Barnstable seeks to encourage mixed use development in accordance with design guidelines, implement streetscape improvements and year-round cultural events, and streamline and clarify the permitting process. The three-year plan represents a natural extension of revitalization efforts that the Town has been engaged in over the past five years. It also demonstrates the degree to which Town leaders have embraced the importance of diverse cultural and historic assets while at the same time recognizing the need to provide mixed use opportunities to invigorate Hyannis’ year-round economy. The Town has identified 11 project milestones for the first year of the project.

REDPP funds will allow Barnstable to hire a design consultant to assist with the review of public and private projects, implement an education program for Town staff, property owners and community groups around smart growth principles, and develop visualizations of redevelopment opportunities. One of the main tasks of the consultant will be to review proposed projects for consistency with the recently created Design and Infrastructure Plan which lists development guidelines for mixed use buildings downtown and which conveys what the Town and its partners are looking for in terms of architecture and design of the public realm.

A second consultant will be hired to work with Barnstable’s Growth Management Department and the Hyannis Main Street BID to explore opportunities for using District Improvement Financing and Tax Increment Financing to help the Town finance public works, infrastructure and new development. And a community charrette will inform citizens about current revitalization efforts and solicit their ideas about future downtown projects to stimulate economic development and improve the streetscape.

2006    $75,000

2007    $75,000

2006 Town of Yarmouth
Route 28 Village Center Project. Working with outside consultants, the Town has developed recommendations for the location of several village or activity centers along the Route 28 corridor including a medical mixed use area, two retail-oriented centers, a mixed use marine village and park, a traditional village center and four activity centers where housing and /or motel redevelopment could be encouraged.

The REDPP grant will enable Yarmouth to conduct a market analysis on both commercial and residential properties in the prioritized areas. The analysis will describe the preferred mix of businesses and housing for each of the targeted locations and point the way to the creation of zoning bylaws that would be needed in advance of preferred development taking place.Yarmouth will also conduct a build-out analysis to better understand the implications of proposed zoning changes in each of the areas. A build-out analysis will show how much development could potentially occur under proposed zoning, inform decisions around the creation of development incentives, and help to estimate traffic and wastewater impacts as well as the costs associated with mitigation efforts.

Visualizations will be undertaken to help the Town garner public support for zoning changes recommended for the prioritized areas. The visualizations will depict commercial development possibilities as well as examples of what various housing densities would look like.

(Regional Economic Development Pilot Program)

2006    $50,250

2006, 2007

Town of Harwich
East Harwich Village Center Initiative. The initiative is a long-term program designed to enhance the safety, economic viability, community character and quality of life in and around an area that is experiencing rapid commercial development without the benefit of a village plan. Currently, development is not occurring in a fashion that promotes a village identity, provides meaningful pedestrian connections, or addresses the Town’s needs for workforce housing.

The East Harwich Village Center Initiative will afford the Town an opportunity to address the future of the commercial district and surrounding undeveloped lands through the design and implementation of a vision and land use and infrastructure plan that is developed through a public process.

Land use and infrastructure scenarios developed through public forums will include analyses of traffic management and pedestrian access, commercial build out and design guidelines, visualizations, proposed workforce housing locations, alternative strategies for wastewater management and opportunities for using renewable energy technologies. The scenario building process will culminate—in the second year of the project—in the selection of a preferred development scenario and the creation of a full development plan.
(Regional Economic Development Pilot Program)

2006    $50,250

2007    $75,000

2006, 2007

Town of Eastham
A grant to the Town of Eastham for $49,500 will be used to help fund the development of up to 40 deed restricted workforce housing units consisting of a mixture of first-time home buyer and rental units. One project involves a former gas station on Route 6 which was abandoned by its previous owner and has since been cleaned by the DEP. The Town is proposing to develop five one-bedroom units on the site. A second project involves a Town-owned parcel known as the Campbell-Purcell property located on Holmes Road. The Town has proposed building approximately 30 units on the site. Potential sites for building up to five additional scattered site units will also be identified. The Town projects that up to 80 low to moderate-income persons will benefit from the new housing and that approximately 60 of the individuals will work in the community. REDPP funds will be used to hire a housing consultant and to contract for related technical assistance to complete the planning, negotiations, RFP process, engineering, funding and implementation of these projects.
(Regional Economic Development Pilot Program)

2006    $49,500

2007    $40,000

2006

Cape and Islands Workforce Investment Board

To identify and train up to 30 individuals, who are 55+, for jobs as cstomer service representatives in the insurance industry.  Each individual will receive transitional career counseling and assessment, case management services, instruction in Microsoft Office, customer service training, and training with software specific to the insurance industry.  These individuals will then be placed in jobs at Insurance companies across Cape Cod.

$25,000
     
2006 Cape Cod Regional Technical High School
Cape Cod Regional Technical High School is a partner with Cape Cod Community College in the college's effort to build an educational infrastructure around renewable energy. Basic funding for this initiative stems from a three-year National Science Foundation grant awarded to Cape Cod Community College in 2004. Building on this partnership, the Cape Cod Economic Development Council and the Cape Light Compact made a joint decision to use a portion of Cape and Islands license plate funds to support enhancements to the high school's renewable energy curriculum. The decision was seen as an effective way to leverage both NSF funds and capital investment in energy efficiency equipment for the school recently made by the Cape Light Compact. Licence plate funds will be used to purchase the following items:1) a wind turbine data logger system allowing the school to link its new 3.5 kilowatt wind turbine with the High Street Networks Internet Server System; 2) a solar thermal system for the plumbing shop; 3) equipment and materials pertaining to the investigation of electrical circuits for hands-on activities in physics, principles of technology, and environmental/earth science classes; and 5) curriculum development support for instructors during summer and fall 2005 leading to articulated Tech Prep agreements with Cape Cod Community College.

$15,097

2005 Arts Foundation of Cape Cod
To support the replication of a model economic development program involving entrepreneurial training for artists. Over the course of the next two years the Arts Foundation of Cape Cod (AFCC) will sponsor three training modules of the Smart Markets for Artists Program in the Mid- and Upper-Cape area benefiting up to 45 artists. The Smart Markets for
Artists Program will replicate and geographically expand a similar program founded by and administered by the Lower Cape Cod Community Development Corporation--within the eight towns of the Lower/Outer Cape--as part of their highly successful Business Builders Program. Participating artists will learn a variety of marketing skills and personal development tools to assist them in creating a business strategy that increases earning potential and provides greater financial stability. In the second year of the grant period, AFCC will present a regional conference to share lessons learned from the replication project.
$75,000 over two years
2005 Cape and Islands Community Development, Inc.
To support the development and production of an Artisan Heritage Trail Guide for Cape Cod using a 10-year old model successfully implemented by Handmade in America: a ten year old non-profit located in North Carolina. The guide will direct visitors, second homeowners and residents to studios and galleries outside the mainstream, off the beaten path and beyond the classic retail environment. The guide will be a small-format four-color publication that combines photographs of products with artist/product descriptions. The primary goal of the guide is to help artists and artisans increase their customer base and incomes. Funding partners include the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce and the Massachusetts Cultural Council.
$50,000
2005 Aquaculture Laboratory/MMA
To expand the role and ability of the Massachusetts Maritime Academy's shellfish aquaculture laboratory and hatchery so that it can assist current shellfish farmers improve production and profit on their farms.

$12,643
2005 Cape Cod Collaborative
To provide support for a new initiative, Advanced Studies & Leadership Program, that will provide four weeks of summer academic study in science, technology, engineering and math to students from school districts comprising the Cape Cod Collaborative.
$11,781
2005 Castle Hill/Truro Center of the Arts
To winterize the existing ceramics studio to allow for extended year-round use and off-season programming which will attract recognized ceramics artists and visitors to this one-of-a-kind facility and to establish the Cape's first Ceramics Cooperative.
$6,120
2005 CHAMP House/Housing for All Corp.
To fund a new initiative of their business group to combine waste glass products, the Cape's unemployed workers, and specific technology to create a new sustainable business in recycling glass that will be produced and distributed locally to homeowners and contractors.
$24,000
2005 Cooperative Extension - Wind Energy for Agriculture
To investigate the feasibility of using wind energy-powered greenhouse technology for year-round small agricultural operations on Cape Cod for the purpose of launching a new winter market for locally grown produce.
$25,000
2005 Mashpee Chamber of Commerce
To host a series of Growth Forums to discuss and educate the community on sustainable economic development at a time when the Town of Mashpee faces a confluence of strategic decisions on growth management.
$9,180
2005 Upper Cape Cod Regional Technical School
To provide AutoCAD and Surveying training to students as well as follow-up internship opportunities at local civil engineering and survey businesses.
$14,875
2005 UMass Donahue Institute
In support of a comprehensive economic study of the Marine Science and Technology Industry in Massachusetts. Marine Science and Technology businesses on Cape Cod and throughout Massachusetts are part of an emerging and growing industry cluster. The study will quantify the value that marine science and technology adds to the Commonwealth, develop a detailed profile of the industry with regard to number of firms, employment and geographic distribution, and assess product development and industry trends. Funds were leveraged with $61,000 in funding committed from outside sources.
$10,000
2005 School to Careers Partnership
In support of a major expansion of the Diploma Plus Program, a program of the Cape Cod, Nantucket & Martha’s Vineyard School to Careers Partnership. Now in its sixth year, the program is expanding from 15 students to 45 and from three schools to seven. The Diploma Plus Program gives high school seniors the option to earn a traditional high school diploma and college credits by spending their entire senior year on the campus of Cape Cod Community College. During their year on campus, students enroll in college-level courses, internships and community service. The two-part program begins in the spring of the junior year developing an Entry Portfolio in an after-school course at the community college. Students enrolled in the program have a 98% graduation rate and a 90% retention rate at post-secondary education and training programs.
$25,000
2004 Buzzards Bay Village Association
An international design competition for the Main Street/Buzzards Bay area to create a vision and a goal for rehabilitating downtown land area abutting the Cape Cod Canal and for restoring it as a smart village growth center. The competition will be developed along the lines of similar competitions run by Greeport, NY and those for Boston City Hall and the World Trade Center complex in NYC.
$5,000
2004 Cape Cod Children's Place
The Outer Cape Childcare Project will create a small, center-based childcare program to meet the needs of working parents in the towns of Provincetown, Truro and Wellfleet. The program will be licensed to serve children aged birth to three years. It will be established with the support of Seamen's Bank and sustained through federal tax credits available to employers in the community who sponsor program slots for their employees.
$23,600
2004 JML Care Center (Future Care)
A home sharing program designed to place entry-level healthcare workers, who are enrolled in a healthcare education or training program leading to an accredited certificate, license or degree, in local homes. A collaboration with Cape Cod Healthcare.
$13,400
2004 Smart Planning and Growth Coalition
An economic research project to determine the level of economic sustainability within various sectors. Project will measure the dollars that come into the economy, the "action and retention" of these dollars in the community, the dollars that are exported, and define how much remains for reinvestment within Cape communities. Project to consist of three phases: research and definition, quantification, education/information sharing.
$15,000
2004 Cape and Islands Self-Reliance
Green Citizens Energy Project involving: 1) installation of remaining 60Kw of photovoltaics to achieve goal of 100 Kw by January 2005; 2) install two 2.5Kw systems at the regional technical schools with student participation; 3) provide hands-on training for electricians and tradespeople; and 4) continue educational outreach to students, teachers and the general public.
$10,000
2004 Cape Cod Community College (ACCESS)/First Parish Brewster/Chatham Public Schools
A joint venture to provide ESOL services to limited English proficient residents and workers on the Lower/Outer Cape. The program will build on the existing model used by ACCESS and will be supplemented by Computer-Assisted Language Learning for adults allowing students to benefit from both classroom instruction and computer interaction. Chatham Public Schools will provide classroom and computer lab time and will also administer and maintain the software and hardware. Tutor training will be provided by the Cape Cod Literacy Council and First Parish Brewster.
$33,000
2004 Campus Provincetown
Campus Provincetown is a consortium of organizations and institutions offering off-season arts, cultural, and scientific courses held at numerous facilities throughout Provincetown. Funding support will allow the organization to expand its marketing activities, promote the program to new program partner candidates, develop collaborations with local businesses, and begin planning for the creation of a long-term business plan.
$50,000
2004 Arts Foundation of Cape Cod
In support of the ninth annual Making Art and Making a Living conference/program sponsored by the Arts Foundation of Cape Cod. The program provides business and professional development opportunities for artists and artisans, the goals of which are to help make artists and craftspeople become competent managers of their own businesses. Funds will help the Arts Foundation to offer entrepreneurial training geared specifically to art- and craft-based businesses, link and support an array of existing resources for artists and artisans, and coordinate collective and regional marketing events and programs.
$26,000
2004 Association to Preserve Cape Cod
$75,000 in support of three areas of activity: (1) supporting local zoning changes through the actions of town meetings and town councils; (2) developing forums and publications that foster a regional perspective and shared information concerning growth management; and (3) promoting public awareness of growth management objectives and the need for local zoning changes to meet those objectives. A portion of funds will be also be used for three conferences that will have the EDC as co-sponsor. This program of work is a multi-year effort of The Business Roundtable.
$75,000 over two years
2004 Cape Cod Community College
Cape Cod Community College, Cape Cod Healthcare, the Lower/Outer Cape Community Coalition, Barnstable County Department of Human Services and other members of an Area Health Education Center sponsored Health Alliance will use this award to cover a portion of the cost of a Healthcare Career Pathways Summit in Fall 2003. The summit will gather together stakeholders from healthcare organizations, educational institutions, regional planning and workforce organizations to develop solutions to healthcare workforce and education issues for the region.
$3,500
2004 Cape Cod Community College
Funding support for equipment and technology for a new renewable energy technologies curriculum at Cape Cod Community College. The program will be a broad-based renewable energy education and training program in collaboration with nearby four-year educational institutions and the Cape’s two regional technical high schools leading to a certificate in renewable energy technologies. Major funding for the program is being provided by a grant from the National Science Foundation. License plate funds provide 50% of the local match l(for equipment) required by the National Science Foundation. The eight-course curriculum is being designed by the College in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Energy, Cape-based industry and education advisory groups convened by the College, and the non-profit Partners in Environmental Technology Education.
$35,000
2004 Cape Cod Regional Technical High School
In support of a new practical license nursing (LPN) program at the school beginning fall ’04. The LPN Program will result in 20 adult learners acquiring their LPN degrees after 10 months of study in nursing theory, laboratory skills and clinical experience. Graduates of the program will be able to obtain employment in acute, chronic or long-term facilities, private duty nursing, rehabilitation nursing, public or mental health facilities, and physicians offices. Students interested in advancing further will be able to continue their nursing education by pursuing a Registered Nursing Degree at Cape Cod Community College.
$24,804
2003 Campus Provincetown
Campus Provincetown (CP) is a consortium of non-profit arts and science organizations who believe that educational offerings in the off-season can stimulate the local economy by increasing direct spending in the town and providing employment opportunities to Cape-based artists, writers and scientists. Off-season economic, cultural, and educational development are promoted through a combination of credit and non-credit classes. Partners in CP involve most of the arts, environmental, and civic organizations in Provincetown.
$15,000
2003 Cape & Islands Self-Reliance Corporation
A proactive approach to energy efficiency and community electricity aggregation led Self-Reliance to found the Green Citizens Energy Project in 1999. This program has become active in a variety of areas relating to renewable energy education. With recent funding from the Massachusetts’s Renewable energy Trust to fund the installation of up to 100 one-kilowatt grid-tied photovoltaic systems, Self-Reliance is expanding its education and outreach component.
$25,000
2003 Barnstable High School
Students as Technology Leaders (SaTL) trains students in the area of computer technology. Students are directly involved in the implementation and utilization of technology by Barnstable Schools and non-profit partners. Students equip and train administrative and teaching staff, students and employees. Students engage in community service projects involving wiring and networking, computer building, and technology training for Barnstable schools and for partner non-profits such as the Duffy Medical Clinic, Chabat Jewish Center School, Barnstable Senior Center, Child Care of Cape Cod and Nauset, Inc.. Students also work towards certification in A+, Windows NT, CCNA, Microsoft Networking Essentials, and EMC.
$16,000
2003 Academy of Performing Arts
Access to the Arts Initiative (AAI) is a multifaceted regional program connecting art to the task of learning in grades K-12 across all disciplines. Arts methods and arts programs are integrated into core academic programs to impact multiple intelligence learning. AAI has four programs: school community programs, after-school on-site options, young artist scholarships, and professional development services for teachers. These programs provide standards-based educational opportunities for connecting the arts to student successes, and providing educational resources for teachers.
$20,000
2003 Cape Cod Astronomical Foundation
Dennis-Yarmouth High School and the Cape Cod Astronomical Foundation are collaborating to construct an obsersvatory on the grounds of D-Y High School. The observatory will be owned and maintained by D-Y High School. CCAF will own, maintain and upgrade the observatory’s equipment. Funding is in support of the purchase of an electronic image-sensing camera. Images will be converted into digital format and transmitted to computer monitors in a nearby viewing room for student viewing. Images thus obtained can be archived for use later as part of daytime school studies. Observatory will provide students an enhanced learning experience and the opportunity to acquire new technology skills involving sophisticated instrumentation, and data acquisition, analysis and interpretation.
$5,600
2003 Cape Cod Cooperative Extension
Nitrogen loading to our estuaries from sources on land is one of the most important environmental problems on Cape Cod. The broad objective of the study is to identify the sources and sinks of nitrogen in local estuaries and to compare areas with and without significant shellfish populations. This analysis will serve as the basis for an estimated nitrogen budget for a local estuary that will characterize the distribution and fate of nitrogen associated with bivalve metabolism under different growing conditions. Information derived from the study can help towns manage shellfish resources not only to optimize shellfish stocks but also to maintain shellfish resources to assist in mitigating nitrogen loading from land-based sources.
$18,400
2003 Association to Preserve Cape Cod
Funds were awarded to The Business Roundtable of APCC to hire a consultant/community organizer to work with town officials, civic groups and concerned citizens to identify and advocate for needed bylaw changes in Cape Cod towns to help towns deal with growth management issues. To protect natural resource areas and offset growth in activity centers, bylaws will be examined to see how they might be adapted to promote downzoning and clustering of residential subdivisions and also reduce commercial sprawl.
$30,000
2003 Association to Preserve Cape Cod
To address the critical lack of wastewater infrastructure on Cape Cod The Business Roundtable intends to hire a consultant to analyze the potential structure and functions of a regional entity charged with overseeing wasterwater infrastructure and to evaluate funding strategies for infrastructure projects.
$12,500
2003 Wastewater Implementation Committee
The Wastewater Implementation Committee (WIC) is an advisory committee to Barnstable County. The WIC serves as a regional forum on wastewater issues and promotes the sharing of information. It also helps coordinate how towns, the county and the state interact on wastewater issues. Funds will be used to develop wastewater management district case studies with “on the ground” examples of how districts might be managed.
$30,000
2003 Cape Cod Community College
Funds will be used to purchase equipment and technology for a renovated eight-bed nursing laboratory. The Nursing Learning Resource Center will expand the college’s capacity to prepare nurses for the workplace and will strengthen partnerships the college has with healthcare providers. The funds will help the college to bring more individuals into the nursing profession and allow others to enhance their present careers through professional advancement.
$100,000