Intro Letter Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
The federal government’s decision to reject the scientific finding that greenhouse gases threaten our health ignores long-established research with very serious implications: It takes away the basis for the government’s power to limit dangerous pollution that causes climate change.

But we will keep pushing forward.

Scenic Hudson remains committed to working with communities to address the increasing temperatures, shifting weather patterns, intensifying storms, and climbing sea levels that we’re already experiencing firsthand in the Hudson Valley. The new decade has brought us not only the hottest years ever recorded in New York State, but also some of the worst air quality on the planet during catastrophic wildfires.

We believe in the power of climate solutions — for a healthier environment, a healthier public, and a healthier economy. And we’re continuing our work, full steam ahead.

We Protect Land — providing a natural climate solution that locks carbon into forests and vegetation, protects local ecosystems and habitats, and reduces risks from flooding and extreme heat. We’ve conserved more than 54,000 acres of land across the Hudson Valley and are continuing to work with partners to protect more of the landscapes we love.

We Partner with Farmers to Conserve Farmland — on more than 150 farms to date — nourishing the Hudson Valley and New York City with fresh, healthy food. We also support farmers making the shift to regenerative practices, which not only reduce agricultural carbon emissions but also help farmers stay in business, supporting soil health and resiliency in the face of destructive flooding, droughts, and storms.

We Collaborate to Create Parks — providing communities and visitors with free access to more than 45 featured parks across the Hudson Valley. Scenic Hudson parks are thoughtfully designed to safeguard precious natural resources, as well as the plants and wildlife that call these landscapes home. We’re also continuing to take steps to prepare our parks to withstand the harsh impacts of climate change so they are around for future generations to enjoy.

We Support Urban Conservation and Green Planning — by collaborating with partners and community groups in cities along the Hudson on projects that flip traditional thinking on its head: Cities are not just adding to today’s challenges — they are also part of the solution. In our hometown of Poughkeepsie, for example, we’re working to heal the ecology of the Fall Kill Creek and convert it into a community connector and asset for regional climate resilience. We’ve also worked with stakeholders to reimagine a neglected city lot as Pershing Community Farm, which has grown and shared thousands of pounds of free fresh produce in a neighborhood hurt by decades of disinvestment.

We Ground Our Work in Science — from maintaining healthy forests to supporting smart growth. Our efforts to protect wetlands safeguard sensitive, vibrant ecosystems, for example, while ensuring that housing is not placed where people will have to deal with flooding down the road. We’ve also developed mapping tools to inform communities in local planning, highlighting core forest that plants and animals rely on and laying the groundwork for a smooth transition to solar power.

We Innovate and Model Sustainable Practices — at our new Northside Hub in Poughkeepsie, reducing our footprint in a context where buildings contribute about 40% of carbon emissions. We led a historic renovation of the former Standard Gage factory and cleaned up a polluted brownfield to create inspiring carbon-neutral staff offices and community gathering spaces. The Hub runs entirely on solar power drawn from rooftop arrays and timber canopies above our parking lot, and keeps all rainwater on site to reduce the downstream impacts of storms.

We Advocate — in Albany, Washington, D.C., and beyond — for policies and funding that support all of this critical work, from climate-smart farming that strengthens resilience to renewable energy that greens our grid and reduces our dependence on fossil fuels. We sync up with others who share our concerns to be the strongest possible voice for the Hudson Valley.

With the recent change in federal policy, the stakes just got higher, but we will not falter.

We believe in protecting what we love and will continue to do so — for the health of the Hudson Valley, for the health and well-being of everyone who calls it home, and for all generations to come. — Scenic Hudson

Federal Commitment to the Environment has Changed.
Our Commitment Has Not.

This page will be updated as this work continues. If you have ideas, suggestions, or questions, please reach out to together@scenichudson.org. We are listening and welcome your input.
  • Learn more about Our Commitment to the Hudson Valley and its Communities
The Heart Icons Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
At the
Heart of
Scenic Hudson
is our commitment to a healthy
and thriving future for all
We are responding to urgent, unprecendented threats to the health of the region's communities, lands, air, and waters.

Scenic Hudson has launched a collaborative, multi-year initiative called "The Heart of Scenic Hudson," to advance natural climate solutions, increase access to open space, improve air and water quality, and work with local community members and changemakers to ensure that the full scope of our work benefits everyone.
Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
  • Advancing Smart Agriculture
We’re growing a regional network of land trusts and farm management operations throughout the Northeast to increase awareness and adoption of climate solutions on farms. We’re expanding our advocacy for climate-smart farm policies at the state and federal levels. We’re investing in research into regenerative agricultural practices, and developing demonstration areas — places to measure the effectiveness of these practices and share knowledge about them with local farmers.
  • Promoting Renewable Energy
We’re accelerating the transition to fossil-free energy with our How to Solar Now toolkit, helping communities site large-scale solar projects where they protect farmland, wildlife habitat, and iconic views. We’re reviewing proposals for new transmission lines to ensure they minimize community and environmental impacts. And after six years of opposition from Scenic Hudson and the Stop Danskammer coalition, in June 2024, the coalition had a major victory when Danskammer withdrew their application for a permit to expand a new fossil-fuel power plant in Newburgh.
  • Supporting Sustainable Conservation
    Practices & Policies
We’re committed to carrying out the federal initiative to conserve 30% of the nation’s remaining open land by 2030 — essential for sustaining wildlife — by developing a collaborative blueprint for valley land trusts to reach this goal regionally. We’re prioritizing our own land acquisitions to maximize carbon sequestration and resistance to extreme floods and storms .

We're championing coordinated state solutions to address related challenges by ensuring public funding for projects in the Clean Water, Clean Air, and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act (passed by voters in November 2022) and the Environmental Protection Fund.
WE ARE Through our work with partners, governments, and leading research scientists, we’re developing and promoting viable, effective climate solutions while ensuring that our actions reflect the needs and concerns of people most affected. The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Strengthening
Climate Resilience...
Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
  • Empowering People to Take Action
We're taking steps to deepen community engagement so that local residents can mobilize and speak out against projects that impact their environment and take an active role in cocreating healthy, vibrant, connected neighborhoods. We're increasing our commitment to active listening to ensure all efforts support the needs and actions of the community.
  • Anticipating Climate Impacts
We continue adopting more sustainable land management and maintenance practices to improve and increase habitats in our parks and preserves relied on by native species that pollinate crops, kill pests, and help ward off human diseases. And we’re ramping up the protection of wetlands, shorelines, and adjacent upland areas to allow species to migrate away from habitats facing destructive flooding.
  • Honoring and Growing Connections with the First Stewards of the Valley’s Lands & Waters
We’re exploring opportunities for land sharing through discussions with members of Indigenous peoples who were the region’s original land stewards, as well as researching and sharing knowledge about the living history and heritage of those who were forcibly removed from these lands.
WE ARE The valley’s conserved landscapes and habitats, clean water, and fresh air are essential for people’s health and quality of life. While working to ensure they will provide these benefits to future generations, we’re actively exploring ways to honor and grow relationships with the Indigenous peoples of the region, who first safeguarded these natural treasures. The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Protecting
Natural Assets...
Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
We’re collaborating to create safe and inviting new parks — such as Sojourner Truth State Park in Kingston — and restore existing ones — like Poughkeepsie’s Pershing Park — to provide more places in riverfront cities for people to enjoy outdoor recreation, explore wildlife, and come together. We’re also exploring the development of new greenways that will enhance access to natural assets like Quassaick Creek in Newburgh and Fall Kill Creek in Poughkeepsie.
  • Transforming Industrial Sites into
    New Public Amenities
  • Connecting People to Nature & Each Other
In September 2025, we officially opened the doors to the new Northside Hub in Poughkeepsie, transforming an abandoned, polluted factory into sun-powered offices for our staff and inspiring community spaces. We’re also collaborating with Dutchess County and the City of Poughkeepsie to continue working on future phases of the Marcus J. Molinaro (MJM) Northside Line in the city and town, increasing non-motorized transportation options for traveling between neighborhoods, jobs, and shops.
  • Increasing Land Access
We launched a grant initiative to increase access to land ownership and stewardship opportunities for people who have historically faced barriers to land-access. Our investments have supported site planning, land acquisition, and farm operations throughout the Hudson Valley — helping community groups, cultural organizations, and land trusts connect more people to land-based opportunities that simultaneously advance Scenic Hudson's conservation priorities.
WE ARE A healthy, livable, and vibrant Hudson Valley must reflect the voices, visions, and needs of all who live here by weaving communities together in mutual trust and respect. The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities…
Intro Letter Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Scenic Hudson is committed to ensuring the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people in the Hudson Valley — regardless of who they are or where they come from — as we actively work with partners and local communities in efforts such as land care and conservation, parks creation, advocacy, and climate solutions.

We are committed to working with local people and organizations to ensure they have voice and choice in decisions and actions that impact their environment, health, and livelihoods.

To fulfill these commitments, we have launched a collaborative, multi-year initiative we call “The Heart of Scenic Hudson.”
Ned Sullivan
President

Our Commitment to
the Hudson River Valley

This page will be updated as this work continues. If you have ideas, suggestions, or questions, please reach out to together@scenichudson.org. We are listening and welcome your input.
  • Learn more about Our Commitment to the Hudson Valley and its Communities

Intro Letter Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Federal Commitment to the Environment has Changed. Our Commitment Has Not.
The federal government’s decision to reject the scientific finding that greenhouse gases threaten our health ignores long-established research with very serious implications: It takes away the basis for the government’s power to limit dangerous pollution that causes climate change.

But we will keep pushing forward.

Scenic Hudson remains committed to working with communities to address the increasing temperatures, shifting weather patterns, intensifying storms, and climbing sea levels that we’re already experiencing firsthand in the Hudson Valley. The new decade has brought us not only the hottest years ever recorded in New York State, but also some of the worst air quality on the planet during catastrophic wildfires.

We believe in the power of climate solutions — for a healthier environment, a healthier public, and a healthier economy. And we’re continuing our work, full steam ahead.

We Protect Land — providing a natural climate solution that locks carbon into forests and vegetation, protects local ecosystems and habitats, and reduces risks from flooding and extreme heat. We’ve conserved more than 54,000 acres of land across the Hudson Valley and are continuing to work with partners to protect more of the landscapes we love.

We Partner with Farmers to Conserve Farmland — on more than 150 farms to date — nourishing the Hudson Valley and New York City with fresh, healthy food. We also support farmers making the shift to regenerative practices, which not only reduce agricultural carbon emissions but also help farmers stay in business, supporting soil health and resiliency in the face of destructive flooding, droughts, and storms.

We Collaborate to Create Parks — providing communities and visitors with free access to more than 45 featured parks across the Hudson Valley. Scenic Hudson parks are thoughtfully designed to safeguard precious natural resources, as well as the plants and wildlife that call these landscapes home. We’re also continuing to take steps to prepare our parks to withstand the harsh impacts of climate change so they are around for future generations to enjoy.

We Support Urban Conservation and Green Planning — by collaborating with partners and community groups in cities along the Hudson on projects that flip traditional thinking on its head: Cities are not just adding to today’s challenges — they are also part of the solution. In our hometown of Poughkeepsie, for example, we’re working to heal the ecology of the Fall Kill Creek and convert it into a community connector and asset for regional climate resilience. We’ve also worked with stakeholders to reimagine a neglected city lot as Pershing Community Farm, which has grown and shared thousands of pounds of free fresh produce in a neighborhood hurt by decades of disinvestment.

We Ground Our Work in Science — from maintaining healthy forests to supporting smart growth. Our efforts to protect wetlands safeguard sensitive, vibrant ecosystems, for example, while ensuring that housing is not placed where people will have to deal with flooding down the road. We’ve also developed mapping tools to inform communities in local planning, highlighting core forest that plants and animals rely on and laying the groundwork for a smooth transition to solar power.

We Innovate and Model Sustainable Practices — at our new Northside Hub in Poughkeepsie, reducing our footprint in a context where buildings contribute about 40% of carbon emissions. We led a historic renovation of the former Standard Gage factory and cleaned up a polluted brownfield to create inspiring carbon-neutral staff offices and community gathering spaces. The Hub runs entirely on solar power drawn from rooftop arrays and timber canopies above our parking lot, and keeps all rainwater on site to reduce the downstream impacts of storms.

We Advocate — in Albany, Washington, D.C., and beyond — for policies and funding that support all of this critical work, from climate-smart farming that strengthens resilience to renewable energy that greens our grid and reduces our dependence on fossil fuels. We sync up with others who share our concerns to be the strongest possible voice for the Hudson Valley.

With the recent change in federal policy, the stakes just got higher, but we will not falter.

We believe in protecting what we love and will continue to do so — for the health of the Hudson Valley, for the health and well-being of everyone who calls it home, and for all generations to come. — Scenic Hudson
This page will be updated as this work continues. If you have ideas, suggestions, or questions, please reach out to together@scenichudson.org. We are listening and welcome your input.
  • Learn more about Our Commitment to the Hudson Valley and its Communities
The Heart Icons Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
At the
Heart of
Scenic Hudson
is our commitment to a healthy
and thriving future for all
We are responding to urgent, unprecendented threats to the health of the region's communities, lands, air, and waters.

Scenic Hudson has launched a collaborative, multi-year initiative called "The Heart of Scenic Hudson," to advance natural climate solutions, increase access to open space, improve air and water quality, and work with local community members and changemakers to ensure that the full scope of our work benefits everyone.
Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Strengthening Climate Resilience...
  • Promoting Renewable Energy
We’re accelerating the transition to fossil-free energy with our How to Solar Now toolkit, helping communities site large-scale solar projects where they protect farmland, wildlife habitat, and iconic views. We’re reviewing proposals for new transmission lines to ensure they minimize community and environmental impacts. And after six years of opposition from Scenic Hudson and the Stop the Plant coalition, in June 2024, the coalition had a major victory when Danskammer withdrew their application for a permit to expand a new fossil-fuel power plant in Newburgh.
  • Advancing Smart Agriculture
We’re growing a regional network of land trusts and farm management operations throughout the Northeast to increase awareness and adoption of climate solutions on farms. We’re expanding our advocacy for climate-smart farm policies at the state and federal levels. We’re investing in research into regenerative agricultural practices, and developing demonstration areas — places to measure the effectiveness of these practices and share knowledge about them with local farmers.
  • Supporting Sustainable Conservation Practices & Policies
We’re committed to carrying out the federal initiative to conserve 30% of the nation’s remaining open land by 2030 — essential for sustaining wildlife — by developing a collaborative blueprint for valley land trusts to reach this goal regionally. We’re prioritizing our own land acquisitions to maximize carbon sequestration and resistance to extreme floods and storms .

We're championing coordinated state solutions to address related challenges by ensuring public funding for projects in theClean Water, Clean Air, and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act (passed by voters in November 2022) and the Environmental Protection Fund.
WE ARE Through our work with partners, governments, and leading research scientists, we’re developing and promoting viable, effective climate solutions, while ensuring that our actions taken reflect the needs and concerns of people most affected.
Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Protecting Natural Assets...
  • Anticipating Climate Impacts
We continue adopting more sustainable land management and maintenance practices to improve and increase habitats in our parks and preserves relied on by native species that pollinate crops, kill pests, and help ward off human diseases. And we’re ramping up the protection of wetlands, shorelines, and adjacent upland areas to allow species to migrate away from habitats facing destructive flooding.
  • Empowering People to Take Action
We're taking steps to deepen community engagement so that local residents can mobilize and speak out against projects that impact their environment and take an active role in cocreating healthy, vibrant, connected neighborhoods. We’re increasing our commitment to active listening to ensure all efforts support the needs and actions of the community.
  • Honoring and Growing Connections with the First Stewards of the Valley’s Lands & Waters
We’re exploring opportunities for land sharing through discussions with members of Indigenous peoples who were the region’s original land stewards, as well as researching and sharing knowledge about the living history and heritage of those who were forcibly removed from these lands.
WE ARE The valley’s conserved landscapes and habitats, clean water, and fresh air are essential for people’s health and quality of life. While working to ensure they will provide these benefits to future generations, we’re actively exploring ways to honor and grow relationships with the Indigenous peoples of the region, who first safeguarded these natural treasures.
Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities…
  • Connecting People to Nature & Each Other
We’re collaborating to create safe and inviting new parks — such as Sojourner Truth State Park in Kingston — and restore existing ones like Poughkeepsie’s Pershing Park, to provide more places in riverfront cities for people to enjoy outdoor recreation, explore wildlife, and come together. We’re also exploring the development of new greenways that will enhance access to natural assets like Quassaick Creek in Newburgh and Fall Kill Creek in Poughkeepsie.
  • Transforming Industrial Sites into New Public Amenities
In September 2025, we officially opened the doors to the new Northside Hub in Poughkeepsie, transforming an abandoned, polluted factory into sun-powered offices for our staff and inspiring community spaces. We’re also collaborating with Dutchess County and the City of Poughkeepsie to continue working on future phases of the Marcus J. Molinaro (MJM) Northside Line in the city and town, increasing non-motorized transportation options for traveling between neighborhoods, jobs, and shops.
  • Increasing Land Access
We launched a grant initiative to increase access to land ownership and stewardship opportunities for people who have historically faced barriers to land-access. Our investments have supported site planning, land acquisition, and farm operations throughout the Hudson Valley — helping community groups, cultural organizations, and land trusts connect more people to land-based opportunities that simultaneously advance Scenic Hudson's conservation priorities.
WE ARE A healthy, livable, and vibrant Hudson Valley must reflect the voices, visions, and needs of all who live here by weaving communities in mutual trust and respect.

Intro Letter Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Federal Commitment to the Environment has Changed.
Our Commitment Has Not.
The federal government’s decision to reject the scientific finding that greenhouse gases threaten our health ignores long-established research with very serious implications: It takes away the basis for the government’s power to limit dangerous pollution that causes climate change.

But we will keep pushing forward.

Scenic Hudson remains committed to working with communities to address the increasing temperatures, shifting weather patterns, intensifying storms, and climbing sea levels that we’re already experiencing firsthand in the Hudson Valley. The new decade has brought us not only the hottest years ever recorded in New York State, but also some of the worst air quality on the planet during catastrophic wildfires.

We believe in the power of climate solutions — for a healthier environment, a healthier public, and a healthier economy. And we’re continuing our work, full steam ahead.

We Protect Land — providing a natural climate solution that locks carbon into forests and vegetation, protects local ecosystems and habitats, and reduces risks from flooding and extreme heat. We’ve conserved more than 54,000 acres of land across the Hudson Valley and are continuing to work with partners to protect more of the landscapes we love.

We Partner with Farmers to Conserve Farmland — on more than 150 farms to date — nourishing the Hudson Valley and New York City with fresh, healthy food. We also support farmers making the shift to regenerative practices, which not only reduce agricultural carbon emissions but also help farmers stay in business, supporting soil health and resiliency in the face of destructive flooding, droughts, and storms.

We Collaborate to Create Parks — providing communities and visitors with free access to more than 45 featured parks across the Hudson Valley. Scenic Hudson parks are thoughtfully designed to safeguard precious natural resources, as well as the plants and wildlife that call these landscapes home. We’re also continuing to take steps to prepare our parks to withstand the harsh impacts of climate change so they are around for future generations to enjoy.

We Support Urban Conservation and Green Planning — by collaborating with partners and community groups in cities along the Hudson on projects that flip traditional thinking on its head: Cities are not just adding to today’s challenges — they are also part of the solution. In our hometown of Poughkeepsie, for example, we’re working to heal the ecology of the Fall Kill Creek and convert it into a community connector and asset for regional climate resilience. We’ve also worked with stakeholders to reimagine a neglected city lot as Pershing Community Farm, which has grown and shared thousands of pounds of free fresh produce in a neighborhood hurt by decades of disinvestment.

We Ground Our Work in Science — from maintaining healthy forests to supporting smart growth. Our efforts to protect wetlands safeguard sensitive, vibrant ecosystems, for example, while ensuring that housing is not placed where people will have to deal with flooding down the road. We’ve also developed mapping tools to inform communities in local planning, highlighting core forest that plants and animals rely on and laying the groundwork for a smooth transition to solar power.

We Innovate and Model Sustainable Practices — at our new Northside Hub in Poughkeepsie, reducing our footprint in a context where buildings contribute about 40% of carbon emissions. We led a historic renovation of the former Standard Gage factory and cleaned up a polluted brownfield to create inspiring carbon-neutral staff offices and community gathering spaces. The Hub runs entirely on solar power drawn from rooftop arrays and timber canopies above our parking lot, and keeps all rainwater on site to reduce the downstream impacts of storms.

We Advocate — in Albany, Washington, D.C., and beyond — for policies and funding that support all of this critical work, from climate-smart farming that strengthens resilience to renewable energy that greens our grid and reduces our dependence on fossil fuels. We sync up with others who share our concerns to be the strongest possible voice for the Hudson Valley.

With the recent change in federal policy, the stakes just got higher, but we will not falter.

We believe in protecting what we love and will continue to do so — for the health of the Hudson Valley, for the health and well-being of everyone who calls it home, and for all generations to come. — Scenic Hudson
This page will be updated as this work continues. If you have ideas, suggestions, or questions, please reach out to together@scenichudson.org. We are listening and welcome your input.
  • Learn more about Our Commitment to the Hudson Valley and its Communities
The Heart Icons Strengthening
Climate Resilience
Protecting
Natural Assets
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities
At the
Heart of
Scenic Hudson
is our commitment to a healthy and thriving future for all We are responding to urgent, unprecendented threats to the health of the region's communities, lands, air, and waters.

Scenic Hudson has launched a collaborative, multi-year initiative called "The Heart of Scenic Hudson," to advance natural climate solutions, increase access to open space, improve air and water quality, and work with local community members and changemakers to ensure that the full scope of our work benefits everyone.
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Strengthening
Climate Resilience...
  • Promoting Renewable Energy
We’re accelerating the transition to fossil-free energy with our How to Solar Now toolkit, helping communities site large-scale solar projects where they protect farmland, wildlife habitat, and iconic views. We’re reviewing proposals for new transmission lines to ensure they minimize community and environmental impacts. And after six years of opposition from Scenic Hudson and the Stop the Plant coalition, in June 2024, the coalition had a major victory when Danskammer withdrew their application for a permit to expand a new fossil-fuel power plant in Newburgh.
  • Advancing Smart Agriculture
We’re growing a regional network of land trusts and farm management operations throughout the Northeast to increase awareness and adoption of climate solutions on farms. We’re expanding our advocacy for climate-smart farm policies at the state and federal levels. We’re investing in research into regenerative agricultural practices, and developing demonstration areas — places to measure the effectiveness of these practices and share knowledge about them with local farmers.
  • Supporting Sustainable Conservation
    Practices & Policies
We’re committed to carrying out the federal initiative to conserve 30% of the nation’s remaining open land by 2030 — essential for sustaining wildlife — by developing a collaborative blueprint for valley land trusts to reach this goal regionally. We’re prioritizing our own land acquisitions to maximize carbon sequestration and resistence to extreme floods and storms.

We're championing coordinated state solutions to address related challenges by ensuring public funding for projects in the Clean Water, Clean Air, and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act (passed by voters in November 2022) and the Environmental Protection Fund.
WE ARE Through our work with partners, governments, and leading research scientists, we’re developing and promoting viable, effective climate solutions, while ensuring that our actions taken reflect the needs and concerns of people most affected.
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Protecting Natural Assets...
  • Anticipating Climate Impacts
We continue adopting more sustainable land management and maintenance practices to improve and increase habitats in our parks and preserves relied on by native species that pollinate crops, kill pests, and help ward off human diseases. And we’re ramping up the protection of wetlands, shorelines, and adjacent upland areas to allow species to migrate away from habitats facing destructive flooding.
  • Empowering People to Take Action
We're taking steps to deepen community engagement so that local residents can mobilize and speak out against projects that impact their environment and take an active role in cocreating healthy, vibrant, connected neighborhoods. We’re increasing our commitment to active listening to ensure all efforts support the needs and actions of the community.
  • Honoring and Growing Connections with the First Stewards of the Valley’s Lands & Waters
We’re exploring opportunities for land sharing through discussions with members of Indigenous peoples who were the region’s original land stewards, as well as researching and sharing knowledge about the living history and heritage of those who were forcibly removed from these lands.
WE ARE The valley’s conserved landscapes and habitats, clean water, and fresh air are essential for people’s health and quality of life. While working to ensure they will provide these benefits to future generations, we’re actively exploring ways to honor and grow relationships with the Indigenous peoples of the region, who first safeguarded these natural treasures.
The Heart of
Scenic Hudson
Growing Capacity &
Connecting Communities…
  • Connecting People to Nature & Each Other
We’re collaborating to create safe and inviting new parks — such as Sojourner Truth State Park in Kingston — and restore existing ones like Poughkeepsie’s Pershing Park, to provide more places in riverfront cities for people to enjoy outdoor recreation, explore wildlife, and come together. We’re also exploring the development of new greenways that will enhance access to natural assets like Quassaick Creek in Newburgh and Fall Kill Creek in Poughkeepsie.
  • Transforming Industrial Sites into New Public Amenities
In September 2025, we officially opened the doors to the new Northside Hub in Poughkeepsie, transforming an abandoned, polluted factory into sun-powered offices for our staff and inspiring community spaces. We’re also collaborating with Dutchess County and the City of Poughkeepsie to continue working on future phases of the Marcus J. Molinaro (MJM) Northside Line in the city and town, increasing non-motorized transportation options for traveling between neighborhoods, jobs, and shops.
  • Increasing Land Access
We launched a grant initiative to increase access to land ownership and stewardship opportunities for people who have historically faced barriers to land-access. Our investments have supported site planning, land acquisition, and farm operations throughout the Hudson Valley — helping community groups, cultural organizations, and land trusts connect more people to land-based opportunities that simultaneously advance Scenic Hudson's conservation priorities.
WE ARE A healthy, livable, and vibrant Hudson Valley must reflect the voices, visions, and needs of all who live here by weaving communities in mutual trust and respect.
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