March 9, 2020

CDC Info and Superintendent's Letter re: Coronavirus

Dear RSU # 71 Parents and Guardians, 

There has been a lot of news of late about the importance of preparing for the coronavirus (known as COVID-19). The Center for Disease Control (CDC) recommends that individuals and families follow everyday preventive measures below:

  • Voluntary Home Isolation: Students, staff, families, and community members should stay home when sick with respiratory disease symptoms. At the present time, these symptoms are more likely due to influenza or other respiratory viruses than to the COVID-19-related virus.
  • Respiratory Etiquette: Cover coughs and sneezes with a tissue, then throw it in the trash can.
  • Hand Hygiene: Wash hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds; especially after going to the bathroom; before eating; and after blowing your nose, coughing, or sneezing.
  • When Out and About - If soap and water are not readily available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer with 60%-95% alcohol.
  • Environmental Health Action: Routinely clean frequently touched surfaces and objects
Routine use of these measures by individuals and their families will increase community resilience and readiness for responding to an outbreak.

We will continue to teach and practicing handwashing in our schools. (There is more involved in doing it well than one would think!) Below please find a link to some videos showing best practices in handwashing.


Please feel free to be in touch if you have any questions.


Belfast students to study marine life, ocean floor with underwater robot

By George Harvey
Sun, 03/08/2020 - 10:30pm
Belfast Area High School teacher Chip Lagerbom, standing, gives a presentation at the Jan. 13 RSU 71 school board meeting on the underwater robot (pictured) that will be purchased.
Belfast Area High School teachers Chip Lagerbom, front, and David Thomas. (Courtesy Chip Lagerbom)
The QYSEA FIFISH V6 underwater robot. (Courtesy Chip Lagerbom)

BELFAST — Students attending Belfast Area High School will be able to receive a more hands-on marine science education thanks, in part, to a generous grant and the ingenious thinking of two teachers. 
Belfast Area High School teachers Chip Lagerbom, who teaches social studies and U.S. history, and David Thomas, who teaches science, received a $1,500 STEM4ME grant from the Perloff Family Foundation to purchase a QYSEA FIFISH V6 underwater robot to study Belfast Harbor, monitor bio-growth and study native and invasive crab species. 
The robot first came to attention of Lagerbom when he saw a flyer for a demonstration of the robot at the University of Maine. “It’s going to provide opportunities for kids to engage in cutting edge technology,” said Thomas at a Jan. 13 school board meeting. 
Though the event date had passed, Lagerbom was intrigued by the concept and did research to find out more about the robot and its capabilities. 
From there, he approached Thomas about building a case for making the purchase from their respective school department budgets. 
The duo approached the school’s technology coordinator, Liz Small, in an effort to be able to split the cost three-ways across a trio of departments. 
Small encouraged the two men to submit a proposal for a grant to the Perloff Family Foundation. 
“We were very excited when the grant was funded and really appreciate the Perloff people helping us in this endeavor,” said Lagerbom. 
After receiving the funds to make the purchase, the underwater robot was purchased and the teachers have been learning how to properly operate, manage and maintain the robot since its arrival. 
“Using the school pool, we recently did test runs to see how it maneuvered and to practice handling the control console,” said Lagerbom. “Pretty much like a video game controller, this should prove to be little problem for our students.” 
The underwater robot, weighing six pounds, will include toggle controls, cameras, temperature and light sensors and virtual reality goggles, and the ability to go under the surface of the water 328 feet. A smart phone operates as the view screen and HDMI capabilities will allow users to the stream the video images onto laptops, ipads and big screens. 
The robot carries a battery life of about four-and-a-half hours and can travel at a speed of three knots, with the VR component allowing users to turn their head which results in the robot turning in the identical direction. 
With high resolution video and two powerful lights, the robot features an attachable mount Lagerbom believes could be used to connect accessories including a scoop, fork, trowel or small net. 
“In fact, using the school's 3-D printers, students involved in the school's engineering projects class might be able to conceptualize, design and fashion our own unique attachments,” said Lagerbom. 
With the robot, teachers and students will be able to do surveys of marine life at Belfast Harbor and build a catalog of the flora and fauna of the harbor. 
The students could also use the equipment to conduct surveys of the harbor’s moorings every spring, which are moved quite a bit by the ice, and obtain better visuals of shipwrecks lying underneath the harbor’s waters. 
“There are a lot of great projects, we’re pretty excited about this opportunity, and really appreciate the Perloff family and the funds that allow us to do something like this,” said Lagerbom during the school board meeting. 
The device will primary be used with the marine studies class at Belfast Area High School, with possible use by students at the middle and elementary schools. 
Thomas also noted the device could be used by Belfast’s climate crisis committee in conjunction with the Gulf of Maine Research Institute and high school students for sea level monitoring projects at the harbor to monitor bio-growth on water pressure sensors to determine when and how often the sensors needs to be cleaned. 
The device could also be used to monitor and study native and invasive crab species in the harbor, including where crabs go in the offseason, and lobster distribution. 
The teachers are also excited to see what the students themselves are interested in using the robot for. 

Reach George Harvey at: sports@penbaypilot.com

Two Waldo County students head to state GeoBee


Mount View Middle School sixth-grader Ruben Widmer, left, will compete at the state National Geographic GeoBee at University of Maine Farmington March 27 along with seventh-grade Troy Howard Middle School student Reilly Newton, shown here March 3.

MONTVILLE — “I didn’t think I would win, exactly,” said Ruben Widmer, a sixth-grade student at Mount View Middle School, after becoming the school’s National Geographic Bee Champion.

In Waldo County, Ruben is one of two students heading to the state competition March 27 at University Maine Farmington, where the top prize is $1,000 and a trip to Washington, D.C., for the national competition. Reilly Newton, a seventh-grade student at Troy Howard Middle School in Belfast, also qualified.

In an interview with The Republican Journal March 2, Ruben said modestly that the accomplishment is a “fairly large (deal), but not too big. It is not a monumental degree.”

In December 2019, Ruben said, he learned about the competition through a history club he belongs to, headed up by Faith Campbell, social studies teacher and GeoBee coordinator at the school.

According to Campbell, a total of 90 students participated in the Mount View Middle School Geography Bee, either, through classes or as members of the history club.

The contest includes three levels of competition — school, state, and national. Schools conduct a GeoBee and name a school champion. The school champion takes an online qualifying test and the 100 top-ranked students in the state compete at the state level. State champions are then invited to compete in the national championship in May.

The preliminary round at Mount View consisted of seven geography questions with the 10 students with the highest scores advancing. Ruben said one student answered seven out of seven questions correctly, but decided not to proceed to the final round. Another student, Dakota Harriman, was out sick the entire week and was automatically eliminated.

The final round was double-elimination with three questions, where the student having the most correct answers won. Ruben said the competition came down to one question, “What city in Sweden does the climate activist Greta Thunberg live in?”

“I had no idea what city she lived in,” Ruben admitted. In fact, he said, he only knew one Swedish city, and that was Stockholm — so he made an educated guess, and it was correct. The other two students could not answer the question, leaving Ruben the winner for the round. The second- and third-place winners, according to Campbell, were Ben Richards and Allison Kelley, respectively.

Ruben then took the online qualifying test consisting of 70 questions to see if he would be selected to compete at the state level in Farmington.

Growing up, he said, his father would quiz him and his older brother, Isaac, about geography, the continents, and the oceans. The friendly competition between brothers sparked Ruben's interest, which branched out to history as well. “I enjoyed it,” he said.

Kim Widmer said it was hard to drag him away from reading all the informational plaques at the different battlefields they have visited as a family. “I can spend hours reading the displays,” Ruben said.

Ruben remembers when he was 9, taking two weeks to learn all the U.S. presidents. “I didn’t just look at them and instantly remember them; I had to spend a lot of time to burn it into my memory,” he said.

His mom said she was very proud of him and "glad the school participated in the geography bee. I think it’s a really fun opportunity for kids, and it’s a great school event to have for the first round. It’s always good for anyone to think beyond our location and to learn about other parts of the world.”

His dad wryly noted “all those years of National Geographic subscriptions have finally paid off,” and added that as a family, they love geography.

Campbell said, "I have every confidence that Ruben will perform brilliantly at the state geography bee. His performance will demonstrate the academic excellence characteristic of Mount View Middle School students."

More than 300 students at Troy Howard Middle School participated in the school competition of the National Geographic GeoBee, with Reilly Newton capturing first place, Rohan Joseph, another seventh-grade student, winning second and Ben Allen, also in seventh grade, finishing third.

In a conversation with the Journal March 3 at Troy Howard Middle School, Reilly said he was excited about winning the bee. Last year, he wanted to compete, but because of what his dad, Gene Newton, calls a "colossal" mix-up, it never happened.

Gene said Reilly's been into geography since he was 3, when his mom got him a puzzle with all the states and capitals. "It progressed from there," he said. History is also one of Reilly's interests. "He learned a lot from a video game called 'Civilization,' and he also has one of the ridiculous memories," Gene said.

"At the dinner table, Reilly tells us to challenge him with history and geography questions," his father said.

"He definitely puts time and effort into it," Gene said. "He was disappointed last year that he missed the competition."

Reilly enjoys soccer and takes part in the school's theater group. "Sometimes it's harder to talk in front of people than it is to sing," he said. After completing high school, he is considering attending college in Hawaii to study astronomy, another one of his interests.

"I want to give a shout-out to my friends and competitors, Rohan Joseph and Ben Allen," Reilly said, "You guys are awesome."

The 2020 national champion will receive a $25,000 college scholarship, $1,000 in cash, a lifetime membership in the National Geographic Society and an all-expenses-paid Lindblad expedition to the Galápagos Islands aboard the National Geographic Endeavour ll. Second- and third-place winners receive $10,000 and $5,000 college scholarships, respectively, and $1,000 cash prize. Seven runners-up will each receive $1,000 in cash.

BAHS junior Wins @ Lions Club Speak Out Competition!

Congratulations to BAHS junior Daniel Snider for winning the Belfast Lions Club Annual Speak-Out Competition held March 5th at their local Lions Club meeting. Snider has the opportunity to compete in the same format at the next level at the Lions Club Region 4 Speak Out contest to be held on March 31 at the Lincoln Academy Food Commons. The Lions organization created this national and international-wide competition to provide high school students the opportunity to think about important issues facing them and their community, state or nation; organize their thoughts and ideas into a logical sequence, namely a prepared speech; and express their ideas publicly and defend ideas when questioned. They speak for five minutes and answer questions and are judged on the presentation and their responses. Cash prizes are awarded at each level of competition.


Celebrating Learning in the Tri Town!!!

All this week, kindergarten students at the Weymouth school have been learning about community helpers! To enhance our learning, we invited some “real” helpers from our own community, who were kind enough to join our classrooms and talk about their jobs and why they are important. We welcomed a doctor, a firefighter, a farmer, a veterinarian and a police officer. During these visits, students were able to hear about each job, see/touch tools that help each person complete their job(s) and students were able to ask many questions. We practiced thinking of questions to ask rather than telling stories- we know that a question is something that we don’t know the answer to and want to find out more. We also read books about several community helpers (a builder, a teacher, a librarian, a banker and a dentist.)


At the end of the week, students were able to explain why we learned about community helpers, with explanations like; “in kindergarten, we need to know why jobs are important and how people can help us because we will have jobs when we get bigger” and “we learned about what is a community...a community is a group of people who are together. Our classroom is a community and our school is a community. We also have a BIG community around us...3 towns!”

We really appreciate the volunteers who graciously joined our classrooms and made our learning extra fun!

Mrs. Ray and Ms. Loveless

BAHS Fine Arts Evening - March 17th


March 3, 2020

Why chess is so popular at this Belfast elementary school? CASS in the News!



BELFAST, Maine — Late Monday morning, two students slipped into Jacquie Gage’s office at Capt. Albert W. Stevens School in Belfast with just one thing on their mind: chess.

“We just want to play a game,” they said, grabbing a vinyl chess board and settling down at a table to spend a few free minutes sharpening their skills in preparation for the Maine Scholastic Team Chess Championships this Saturday at the University of Maine.


Impromptu chess games like this one have become common at the elementary school and some others in the district, according to Gage, the extended learning program coordinator for Regional School Unit 71. Interest may be spiking this week because of the upcoming championships, but that’s not the only reason. All of the second- and third-graders in the school take chess lessons. Nearly one in five of the roughly 200 students in second through fifth grades at CASS have participated in chess team practice.
Abigail Curtis | BDN
Alex Miller, 10, of Belfast is a chess captain at the Captain Albert Stevens School and placed third in the state in his division last year at the Maine Team Scholastic Chess Championships.


“It’s a movement,” she said. “At any given day at this school, you will see kids playing chess. I think it’s fabulous to see children engaged and excited about an intellectual game.”

The history of chess — sometimes known as the game of kings — stretches back almost 1,500 years to northern India, where it originated. But in Regional School Unit 71, the chess movement began just four or so years ago when it was introduced through extended learning, the district’s gifted and talented program.


Other students who were not part of the program were interested in learning, Gage said, and so she began putting together proposals for the parent-teacher groups at CASS and the Ames Elementary School in Searsmont to have chess coach Bruce Haffner provide lessons.

It took off.

“We reach kids who may not have parents at home who play chess,” Gage said, adding that she makes long-term loans of boards to kids who don’t have a set at their house. “Throughout the country, we have seen chess level the playing field of economic diversity. I feel chess really changes lives.”


Haylie Whitney, 12, of Belfast, who started playing chess when she was in second grade, said she fell in love with it.

“It takes strategy, focus, sportsmanship and a lot of practice …,” she said. “I feel like it’s making me smarter and developing my brain.”

Her grandmother gave her a chess set for her birthday, and she plays a lot at home with her younger brother.
Courtesy of Jacquie Gage
Elementary school students from the Captain Albert Stevens School in Belfast, the Ames School in Searsmont and the Nickerson School in Swanville participate last month in a chess tournament at the Belfast Free Library.


“My mom is very surprised,” Whitney said. “Basically, all we want to do is play chess.”

One reason why she and the other students may have fallen so hard for the ancient board game is Haffner, an enthusiastic coach who has a knack for sharing his love of the game.

“Bruce is very charismatic and passionate about chess, and that rubs off on the kids,” Gage said.


Rohan Joseph, 11, of Belfast, who placed third in his division last year during the statewide scholastic chess team championships, said he’s been able to apply the strategies he’s learned in chess elsewhere.

“I use some chess tactics on the soccer field,” he said, adding that what he loves most about chess is its versatility.

That’s just what chess enthusiasts such as Gage, who was the only girl on her middle school chess team, likes to hear about the game.


“It’s life-changing for many people. It teaches kids how to win and lose graciously. It teaches how to strategize and plan ahead,” she said. “I like seeing how it positively affects kids, and that’s why I do so much of it.”

Ashley Reynolds, assistant principal at CASS, said she believes the interest in chess at the elementary school has made math “cool again” to students.

“There is a level of aspiration to be on the chess team,” she said. “We look at chess as an equalizer. Anyone can learn to play and learn to play well.”


Alex Miller, 10, of Belfast is a chess captain who has been playing for two years now. He placed third in the state last year in his age division.

“When I played my first game, I didn’t even know what chess was,” he said, adding that he’s figured it out, at least in part. “It’s basically math and science combined, and I like both of those things.”

Miller has big dreams — to be a state chess champion, and to one day be a chess teacher himself. For now, he’s a bit anxious about the upcoming tournament, but is looking forward to it, too. Before each game, as he has been taught to do, he will shake hands with his opponent and tell them, “good luck.”


Then he will get to work.

“You have to calculate where the piece is going to go and how far it’s going to go,” he said. “And you’ve got to think outside the box.”

Lion foursome puts best feet forward at New England meet

Courtesy of: Jane RobertsonFrom left, Belfast Area High School's Jon Duso, Cole Martin, Junne Robertson-McIntire and Lia Frazee, New England high school indoor track qualifiers and competitors.


BOSTON, MASS. — Belfast Area High School saw four of its finest student-athletes sprint or jump onto the grandest of sports stages on Saturday, Feb. 29 at the prestigious 33rd annual New England Interscholastic Indoor Track and Field Championships at the Reggie Lewis Track and Athletic Center.

Lions Junne Robertson-McIntire and Cole Martin qualified and competed in the 55 meters, while teammate Jon Duso participated in the long jump and Lia Frazee high jump.

In the girls 55 meters, with 32 racers in the prelims, Robertson-McIntire finished 15th in 7.52. Lauren Sablone of Austin Prep (Reading, Mass.) was first in 7.18. She also won the finals at 7.14.

In the boys 55 meters, with 32 racers in the prelims, Martin finished 27th at 6.81, while Richmond Kwaateng of Lowell, Mass. was first at 6.39. Kwaateng also finished first in the finals at 6.34.

In the girls high jump, with 29 participants, Frazee finished 16th at 5-1. Sydney Garrison was first at 5-7.

In the boys long jump, with 29 participants, Duso finished ninth, while Kwaateng of Lowell was first at 23-7.5.

All four Lions were state Class B champions in their events. Robertson-McIntire and Duso are seniors, Martin a junior and Frazee a sophomore.

For video of Martin's 55 meter race click here, and for video of Robertson-McIntire's 55 meter race click here.

Courier Publications' sports staff can be reached by email at sports@villagesoup.com or by phone at 594-4401.

March 2, 2020

Belfast forges 7-9 record in 'incredible' campaign

BELFAST — In the case of the Belfast Area High School boys junior varsity basketball team, it was not strength in numbers, but in talent that carried the banner throughout the 2019-20 campaign.

Led by coach Korey Doolan, the Lions prowled to a 7-9 record and had what the young coach called “an incredible season.”

Team members included Jerry Porter, James Ritter, Zepherin Leppanen, Keegan McGowan, Matt LeBlanc, K.J. Payson, Zach Sanderson, Liam McConnell, Ethan Hall and Steven Friel.

McConnell average 10.9 points to lead Belfast in scoring, while McGowan averaged 7.8 points and Payson 6.6.

Doolan was impressed with his team’s campaign, particularly given the youth and lack of height.

“Our 7-9 record was the best record I have had as a coach in my three years coaching,” said Doolan. “This is an incredible group of young men and I can’t wait to see what the future holds for them.”

The third-year coach said the team’s highlight was a home game against Foxcroft Academy of Dover-Foxcroft, a contest that saw Belfast eek out a 40-39 victory.

“One of my proudest moments [as a coach] because I had told the players to foul if [the Ponies] were going to get an easy shot or layup,” he said. “Make them earn it from the line. The player missed both [foul] shots and we won the game. We cut their points in half from last time [they scored 75 the first time we played them]. Our defense improved so much from the beginning of the season to the end.”

With three of the team’s 10 players swinging to varsity — and thus practicing with the varsity — Doolan admitted, “It was tough to practice situational aspects of the game, but we did a lot of skill work and concept work for our defense [and other] plays.”

“I saw a huge improvement in each player from the beginning of the season to the end,” he said. “I look forward to seeing how much they improve over the summer.”

Courier Publications' sports staff can be reached by email at sports@villagesoup.com or by phone at 594-4401.

Youthful Lion girls jayvees work hard to improve

BELFAST — The youthful Belfast Area High School girls junior varsity basketball team did not have a successful 2019-20 season record-wise, but met other individual and team-based goals throughout the winter court campaign.

Led by coach Julie Morneault, the Lions finished with an 0-14 record, but “focused on improving as individual players as well as a team.”

Team members included Gabriella Genthner, Dayra Valle, Kara Richards, Emma Waldron, Audra Faulkingham, Jacqueline Batty, Jillian Hashey, Stella Collins, Brynne Sawyer and Luna Carlson.

Despite being winless, Morneault said one of her team’s signature performances on the season was a loss to Maine Central Institute of Pittsfield in a game that went down to the wire.

"One of our first few games we lost to MCI by 30 points,” she said. “But when we faced them again we battled back and forth. The game came down to a last-second shot where MCI came out on top. [The Lions] are a very promising group and have made great strides this season. We just have to keep pushing forward in the off-season.”

Courier Publications' sports staff can be reached by email at sports@villagesoup.com or by phone at 594-4401.

Lions split matches in state Class B duals championships

HOWLAND — The Belfast wrestling team experienced a remarkable regular season in 2019-20, as the Lions roared to a 28-3 dual-match record.

That strong, consistent, campaign-long performance earned the Lions an opportunity to participate in the first Maine high school Class B duals championships on Friday, Feb. 21 at Penobscot Valley High School.

The Lions finished 1-1 in two matches on the day. Belfast defeated Mountain Valley of Rumford 59-21 and lost to Wells 48-33.

Wells won the duals event and also captured the state Class B title this year. Belfast won the Class B South meet and was the top Class B team in the Kennebec Valley Athletic Conference tournament.

The duals event was set up to pit the top four teams in the two regions against one another in a single-elimination, state championship event. It was, as implied, a dual-match event, unlike the league, regional and state championship meets, which are individually-based as wrestlers earn places for themselves and points for their teams.

The top four teams, determined by regular-season dual-match records (it was previously incorrectly indicated the top four teams from the North and South regional championship meets participated in this event), from the two regions were pitted against one another.

Thus, on Friday, the teams faced off in head-to-head dual-matches.

The teams continued to battle on the mats in the single-elimination format until a champion was crowned.

Team seeds were based on the same criteria set down by the Maine Principals' Association to seed the regional championship meets for wrestlers in each weight class: Winning percentage, head-to-head, common opponent, etc. No consideration was given to a team's strength of schedule, which, is also true for individual wrestler's regional seeding placements.

In the quarterfinals, No. 2 North Belfast beat No. 3 South Mountain Valley of Rumford 59-22, No. 1 South Wells beat No. 4 Foxcroft Academy of Dover-Foxcroft 54-25, No. 1 North Dexter beat No. 4 South Dirigo of Dixfield 51-24 and No. 2 South Medomak Valley of Waldoboro beat No. 3 North Washington Academy of East Machias 42-30.

In the semifinals, No. 1 South Wells beat No. 2 North Belfast 48-33 and No. 1 Dexter beat No. 2 South Medomak Valley 48-36.

In the finals, No. 1 South Wells beat No. 1 North Dexter 50-30.

The individual Belfast results, with Lions listed first, were:

106 pounds — Connor Fournier won by technical fall over Hamidou Haidara, MtVal; and was pinned by Griffin Brickett, Wells.

113 pounds — Gavynn young won by forfeit over Mountain Valley; and beat Dan Marquis, Wells.

120 pounds — Timmy Smith pinned Nathan Laclair, MountVal; and was pinned by Michael Ducharme, Wells.

132 pounds — Kaden Bonin lost by major decision to Matt Miles, MountVal; and was pinned by Josh Burgess, Wells.

138 pounds — Mike Ham pinned Isaac Gordon, MountVal; and was pinned by Trevor Bickford, Wells.

145 pounds — Jonah Lovejoy pinned Max Merrill, MountVal; and pinned Devin Chace, Wells.

152 pounds — Gabe Kelley was pinned by Evrit Roy, MountVal; and pinned Nathan Coleman, Wells.

160 pounds — Francesco Martin was pinned by Anthony Mazza, MountVal; and was pinned by Xander Trofatter, Wells.

170 pounds — Elijah Charbonnier pinned Matt Brown, MountVal; and was pinned by Evan Cash, Wells.

182 pounds — Brian White pinned Jonah Byam, MountVal; and pinned Devin Bickford, Wells.

195 pounds — Nathaniel Porter pinned Tresdon Mills, MountVal; and was pinned by Jonah Potter, Wells.

220 pounds — Cam Watts pinned Gabe Winson, MountVal; and pinned Joshua Martinez, Wells.

285 pounds — Ben Watts pinned Gordon Gortler, MountVal; and won by forfeit over. Wells.

Courier Publications' sports staff can be reached by email at sports@villagesoup.com or by phone at 594-4401.

Ames among first 50 schools to sign on for Earth Day

Ames Elementary School in Searsmont is among among the first 50 schools to sign on as a "key partner" for the 50th anniversary of Earth Day this year.
Earth Day Network, which coordinates the annual Earth Day, said in a press release Feb. 19 that the schools “join thousands of other groups and entities worldwide dedicated to (making) environmental action a cornerstone in this crucial year.”
Earth Day is April 22. The overarching theme for Earth Day this year is climate change.
Tracey Ritchie, director of education for Earth Day Network, said, “Together we can build an environmentally literate citizenry ready to engage in civic action to fight against climate change.”
Schools can find free environmental education resources and sign on to be an Earth Day school at Earth Day Network’s website, earthday.org. They can also join thousands of groups and organizations by listing their Earth Day events on the organization’s global map.
From cleanups to citizen science and teach-ins to green festivals, schools across the world are leading the charge for climate action. Schools can take advantage of Earth Day Network’s free resources and toolkits found in its Education Resource Library.
Earth Day 2020 comes 50 years after the first Earth Day which, in 1970, mobilized over 20 million citizens to demand action on the environmental challenges of the time.
Today Earth Day is observed in about 190 countries and mobilizes one billion people and close to 100,000 organizations.