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Managing Director Tom Garabedian Continues ATP's Mission

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  • Managing Director Tom Garabedian Continues ATP's Mission

    MANAGING DIRECTOR TOM GARABEDIAN CONTINUES ATP'S MISSION

    ARMENIA, COMMUNITY | SEPTEMBER 10, 2013 4:25 PM

    By Gabriella Gage

    Mirror-Spectator Staff

    WATERTOWN - In early 2012, Tom Garabedian was named the new managing
    director of the Armenian Tree Project (ATP), a non-profit organization
    founded to promote Armenia's reforestation and subsequent socioeconomic
    developments.

    For Garabedian, a former actuary consultant, the decision to get
    involved was an easy one. "There is no question that more emphasis
    needs to be focused on Armenia's environment. The Tree Project is one
    of the key organizations whose sole focus is on Armenia's environment,
    and that is personally motivating," he said.

    Prior to joining the ATP team, Garabedian had worked for Aon Hewitt,
    retiring in early 2011. He first joined ATP as a management consultant
    for its Executive Committee. "I had an opportunity to interview
    management and staff both in Watertown and Yerevan and was able to
    develop a sense of ATP's strengths and to identify areas needing
    improvement," said Garabedian. From there, Garabedian took his skills
    managing both people and projects and his newly acquired intimate
    knowledge of the organization into his new role as managing director
    of ATP in early 2012, taking over for Jeff Masarjian.

    Garabedian is responsible for all of the operations of ATP both
    here and in Armenia. He oversees the finances of the organization
    including fundraising and expense perspectives, the programs
    underway in Armenia and staff assessment and development. While he
    has far-reaching responsibilities, Garabedian is quick to credit his
    fellow ATP staffers with aiding him in these endeavors. "We have very
    competent managers both in Watertown and in Armenia, so that relieves
    some of the pressure on the Managing Director," said Garabedian.

    While he does help to oversee operations in Armenia, his managerial
    focus is in the US and Director of ATP Armenia Operations Areg
    Maghakian has day-to-day control of activities there. "I usually plan
    three trips to Armenia each year to meet with our managers, review our
    projects both in the office and out in the field, discuss strategy
    and manager development and handle any people issues that arise,"
    Garabedian said.

    A knack for producing results and a passion for ATP's cause made the
    position an ideal one for Garabedian."My involvement stemmed from
    a desire to be engaged in a pursuit that was both challenging and
    interesting mentally and that was producing meaningful results in
    Armenia, he said.

    ATP was founded by Carolyn Mugar in 1994, and its primary mission
    at the outset was to plant trees in urban and rural sites as a
    way of overcoming the tree cutting that had occurred during the
    energy blockade that Armenia experienced. According to Garabedian,
    that mission led to the development of two nurseries within a short
    distance of Yerevan and employment of a full-time staff in Armenia of
    nearly 40 people. Since its founding, ATP has broadened its mission
    to include environmental education which it accomplished by developing
    a curriculum which is now in use throughout Armenia's public schools.

    New developments are always on the horizon for the organization, which
    continues to evolve. Garabedian noted, "Within the past 10 years,
    we established the Mirak Family Reforestation Nursery in Margahovit
    to develop seedlings for large scale reforestation efforts and two
    Environmental Education Centers sponsored by Michael and Virginia
    Ohanian."

    There are now 60 full-time staffers in Armenia and hundreds of
    seasonal and part-time workers engaged in forestry work. "As far as
    new projects, we are evaluating the need for a fourth nursery in the
    southern part of the country and considering ways that tree planting
    could become an integral part of an expanded environmental curriculum
    in every public school," said Garabedian.

    The actual planning and continued upkeep of trees after planting are
    both essential to the process. One of the primary responsibilities
    of planting managers is site selection. According to Garabedian,
    planting managers "review potential planting sites to ensure that
    there is proper soil and water and that the community is committed
    to maintain trees once they've been planted." He added, "We need
    to ensure that our sites are protected from livestock who view our
    seedlings as a tasty addition to their diets, and that often means that
    we need to fence areas that are planted. Generally, we will return
    to communities for a three-year period following planting to ensure
    that maintenance is being handled properly." As far as large-scale
    reforestation efforts, ATP hires seasonal workers for a similar period
    to cut grass around the planting sites to improve the likelihood that
    seedlings will survive. "In community planting, we expect a three-year
    survival rate of 85 percent or better; in forestry, the threshold is
    somewhat lower because we're at the mercy of the weather to produce
    an adequate amount of water. These are expensive commitments but you
    must undertake the maintenance. Otherwise you're just wasting your
    nursery stock," he explained.

    In addition to proper planning and maintenance, there are many
    challenges that ATP faces in its pursuit of reforestation. Garabedian
    explained, "The first challenge is recognition by the Armenian
    government that deforestation and illegal logging will threaten the
    country's long-term survival. Trees deliver an abundance of benefits to
    a country; they serve as a food supply, they protect against erosion,
    they clean the air and protect the water supply. They are a renewable
    resource and should be used, but only in a sustainable way.

    He added, "We would like the government to devote more resources
    to restore Armenia's historic forest cover and to enforce existing
    laws against illegal logging." Another daunting challenge that ATP
    faces is that it is one the few organizations undertaking large
    scale reforestation in Armenia. "We constantly need money in order
    to support our reforestation activities," explained Garabedian.

    Their education efforts are primarily directed to children through the
    environment al curriculum that we've prepared for Armenia's public
    schools and through classes taught at the Ohanian Environmental
    Education Centers. "We have conducted a few agricultural classes at
    our new Ohanian Center in Margahovit specifically for the region's
    farmers. These classes are extended without cost to the participants,"
    he noted.

    With Garabedian at the helm, ATP is currently in the midst of
    a sustainable forest management project in Margahovit. "Working
    with Hayantar, the Armenian forestry agency and the village, we are
    developing a pilot plan to manage a 200 hectare forest in a sustainable
    way," he said, adding, " If the pilot is successful, we hope that
    the model can be spread to other communities throughout Armenia."

    ATP has worked with several other organizations, most recently
    partnering with the Norwegian government which provided a four-year,
    $1.2 million grant to support reforestation activities and with the
    Acopian Center for the Environment at the American University of
    Armenia on "Regardening of Eden" activities in Margahovit.

    For more information on ATP, to donate or to get involved, visit
    www.armeniatree.org.

    - See more at:
    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/09/10/managing-director-tom-garabedian-continues-atps-mission/#sthash.GoKi2dse.dpuf

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