
"The public trust is an affirmation of the duty of the state to
protect the peoples common heritage in the streams, lakes, and tidelands..."
--California Supreme Court, 1983

The Mono Lake Committee began honoring with the Defender
of the Trust Award in 1993 individuals who had made extraordinary
contributions to champion Mono Lake. Recipients include:
2006,
Andrea Mead Lawrence - Andrea Mead Lawrence moved to Mammoth Lakes in 1968, and from
the outset she has been dedicated to finding the path between protecting the
Eastern Sierra environment and protecting the communities of people who live
and work in the region. Andrea served 16 years on the Mono County Board of
Supervisors, and throughout her service to the people and environment of
Mono County she has been a wise friend of Mono Lake and the Mono Basin.
Andrea currently heads a new organization, the Andrea Lawrence Institute for
Mountains and Rivers (ALIMAR), and continues to serve on the Mono Lake
Committee Board of Directors.
2005,
Richard Riordan - Mayor Riordan was elected the 39th mayor of Los Angeles in June 1993,
arriving in the office at an important time for the Mono Lake Committee.
The very next year, he, the City Council, and the Los Angeles Department of
Water and Power (DWP) Commission had to make a decision whether or not to
appeal the State Water Resources Control Board’s decision that ordered DWP
to re-water Mono Basin streams and wetlands for fish and wildlife and raise
the lake level to an ecologically sound level. Fortunately for Mono Lake,
the City’s decision was to accept the Water Board order.
2004, Dennis Tito - Dennis Tito, Founder, CEO,
and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Wilshire Associates, Inc., and
former Chairman of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Commission,
received the 2004 Mono Lake Committee Defender of the Trust Award. This
award is in recognition of his skill in working with the City of Los
Angeles, the City Council of Los Angeles, and his fellow Commissioners to
gain their acceptance of the 1994 State Water Resource Control Board order
that DWP share its water with Mono Lake. It was important to have someone
within the Department of Water and Power agree that
the legal battles should end and conservation and restoration should begin.
Mr. Tito’s pioneering role as the first space tourist parallels his
willingness to pioneer a new relationship between DWP and the Mono Lake
Committee.
2003, Sally Gaines -
Sally was born in 1952 with the last name Judy, a fourth generation
Californian and raised in Menlo Park, California. She earned a B.S. degree
from UC Davis in Environmental Planning and Management, specializing in
Environmental Interpretation. During her college years she met David
Gaines and joined him and his birding friends to see Mono Lake for the
first time in 1974. In 1976 Sally was part of the undergraduate research
team that conducted the first ecological study of Mono Lake, where they
proved how much would be lost if Mono Lake dried up. In 1978, Sally and
Dave moved to Lee Vining as founders and volunteer staff of the fledgling
Mono Lake Committee. Sally and David had a daughter in 1983 and a son 2
years later. Sally has lived in Mammoth since 1996, but now that the kids
have left for college, she and her husband Rick are moving 20 miles south
to Sunny Slopes. Sally continues to provide invaluable guidance to the
Mono Lake Committee as a member of its Board of Directors.
2002, joint award
winners:
Rick Lehman - As a Congressman, Rick Lehman pushed legislation to
create the Mono Basin National Forest Scenic Area and later made sure that
federal air pollution laws covered dust storms at Mono Lake. Through the
Scenic Area, millions of people learned about the importance of Mono Lake to
the nation and the world.
Phil Isenberg - As a California Assemblyman, Phil Isenberg
co-authored the Environmental Water Act of 1989 (AB 444), offering $60
million in funding to help Los Angeles develop new water supplies to
replace the Mono Basin diversions. By providing funding for the
development of replacement water supplies, the State initiated a problem
solving approach that not only ensured Los Angeles would have reliable,
adequate water supplies, but also assured that Mono Lakes protection
would not harm the San Francisco Bay Delta or any other place.
2001, joint
award winners:
Stan Eller
-
Mono County
Assistant District Attorney in 1984. In keeping with Fish and Game Code 5937,
he sent two sheriff's deputies to
warn the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power not to touch the valve
that would turn off Rush Creek, thus raising the legal importance of that
code and defending the Public Trust at Rush Creek.
California Trout -
a conservation group which took leadership in the legal battle to enforce on Rush Creek the
Fish and
Game Code 5937, which forbids dewatering creeks below dams. Their partnership with the Mono Lake Committee and the
National Audubon Society achieved legal victories that led to the landmark
Mono Lake decision of the State Water Resources Control Board in 1994.
2000, George Miller
-
California Congressman, who championed federal legislation for water
conservation and water recycling, helping to convince Los Angeles' political
leaders that there would still be water for the city if Mono Lake was
protected.
1999, Zev Yaroslavsky - Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky was one of the first leaders within the City of Los Angeles to advocate Mono Lakes preservation. Serving
on the Los Angeles City Council from 1975-1993, he also played a critical role in helping secure Federal and State funds for retrofitting low-flow toilets,
water recycling, and other conservation programs to replace the water being used now to restore Mono Lake and Mono Basin streams and wetlands.
1998, Ruth Galanter - Los Angeles City Councilwoman since 1987. Galanter was
instrumental in negotiations between the Department of Water and Power and the Mono Lake
Committee, resulting in the successful application of state and federal funding to find
replacement water sources for Mono Basin diversions. She has also crafted ordinances to
install ultra-low-flush toilets in all new construction projects, and in all homes and
apartments before resale.
1997, Martha Davis - executive director of the Mono Lake Committee from
1984-1996. Davis came to the Committee in 1983 as the legislative representative and
became executive director within a few months. Under her direction the Mono Lake Committee
made tremendous strides in both the courtroom and in the legislature.
1995, joint award winners:
Bruce Dodge - attorney with Morrison and Foerster of San Francisco. Dodge
has been the Committees lead attorney since the inception of the Mono Lake
litigation, and was the one to convince Morrison and Foerster to work on the Mono Lake
case on a pro bono basis.
Jan Stevens - Senior Assistant for the Land Law section of the
California Attorney General's office and expert on the Public Trust
Doctrine, who convinced the State Lands Commission and the Department of
Parks and Recreation to become a party to Mono Lake litigation,
participate in the preliminary injunction, and take an active role in the
State Water Resources Control Board hearings.
1994, George Peyton - attorney, former director of
the National Audubon Society. Peyton rallied National Audubon Society (NAS) behind the
original Public Trust Lawsuit in 1979, and convinced NAS to continue its involvement in
the Mono Lake cause.
1993, Harold Gilliam - author, environmental writer for the San Francisco
Examiner. Gilliams article, "The Destruction of Mono Lake Is on
Schedule" appeared in the papers Sunday edition in March, 1979, and was one of
the first articles to draw attention to Mono Lakes plight.

The Mono Lake Committee is a non-profit citizens group dedicated to:
Protecting and restoring the Mono Basin ecosystem;
Educating the public about Mono Lake and the impacts on the environment of excessive water
use; and
Promoting cooperative solutions that protect Mono Lake and meet real water needs without
transferring environmental problems to other areas.

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