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Lichtkoppler says goodbye, retiring from Ohio Sea Grant Extension after 33 years | Ohio Sea Grant

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Lichtkoppler says goodbye, retiring from Ohio Sea Grant Extension after 33 years

12:00 pm, Tue September 30, 2014 – Extension agent and program leader ends career after 33 years with Ohio Sea Grant

Painesville, OH Just a few weeks after the US Environmental Protection Agency announced it was removing the Ashtabula River from its list of Areas of Concern, Ohio Sea Grant Extension Leader Frank Lichtkoppler is retiring. 

Frank, the Lake County Extension agent and program leader, ends his career September 30, after 33 years with Ohio Sea Grant and two prior years as an extension agent, for a total of 35 years of service. He was a major player in the river cleanup project, which took more than 30 years of work and $75 million in funding from the state of Ohio, the federal government and private sector businesses, says Ohio Sea Grant Director Jeff Reutter, praising Frank’s unceasing dedication to the cause.

“It wouldn’t have happened without this really long-term commitment by the Ashtabula River Partnership, and there were very few people who were with it the whole time”? Reutter says. “Frank is one of those key people, often serving as the secretary for the group, the facilitator for the group, the person that organized it and called it together, always trying to deflect leadership, but often serving as the glue to hold it together and keep it moving.”?

One of Frank’s strengths is in gathering information — both scientific facts and public opinion — and presenting it to public officials, allowing them to make informed decisions about public policy based on both economic and environmental impact. When 450 acres of wetlands and Lagoons in Mentor, Ohio were in danger of being lost to development in the 1990s, Frank put together information to show community leaders the land’s value as a nature preserve.

“It made a strong enough impression that city officials took the issue to the public to vote on, and the residents of the community voted to tax themselves to buy all that land and keep it as a wildlife preserve and public area within the city of Mentor”? Reutter says.

Today, the Mentor Lagoons wetlands are some of the last remaining riverine marshes along the shore of Lake Erie. The nature preserve has more than three miles of hiking and biking trails and contains an area of coastal dunes and beach that supports two species of plants on Ohio’s threatened list.

Frank says he looks forward spending more time with his family, including his wife, Kathleen, and to sleeping in more often.

“I don’t want to do anything”? Frank says with his characteristic humor. “I haven’t planned my life, so why should I start planning now?”?

Ohio Sea Grant is planning a reception for him from 3-6 p.m. Friday, October 17 at Perry Community Center, 2800 Perry Park Rd., Perry, OH 44081.

Ohio State University’s Ohio Sea Grant Program is part of NOAA Sea Grant, a network of 33 Sea Grant programs dedicated to the protection and sustainable use of marine and Great Lakes resources. For more information, visit ohioseagrant.osu.edu.


Contact

Jill Jentes Banicki
jentes.1@osu.edu

ARTICLE TITLE: Lichtkoppler says goodbye, retiring from Ohio Sea Grant Extension after 33 years PUBLISHED: 12:00 pm, Tue September 30, 2014 | MODIFIED: 1:12 pm, Tue April 28, 2015
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Lisa Aurand Rice
Authored By: Lisa Aurand Rice
Communication and Marketing Specialist, Ohio Sea Grant College Program

Communications and Marketing Specialist Lisa Rice promotes Stone Lab’s summer courses and is the face behind the Ohio Sea Grant and Stone Lab social media accounts.