Press Room
W.V. Governor Recognizes CLD for Environmental Stewardship
ROGERS, Ark. (May 18, 2007)
--Cooper Land Development’s (CLD) efforts to preserve greens spaces and
control storm water runoff have earned the company an environmental stewardship
award from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection.
Tom Oppenheim, CLD Project Director for Glade Springs Village, accepted the
award Wednesday from West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin III in ceremonies at the
agency’s Charleston office. CLD was honored in the category of Land Use
Development, according to Randy C. Huffman, Deputy Cabinet Secretary for the
Department of Environmental Protection.
CLD opened Glade Springs Village in Daniels, W.V. in 2001 and started work on a
second phase in 2005. The company developed a master plan that lessened the
impact of storm water runoff into Glade Creek. This included constructing
diversion ditches and sediment traps prior to road construction, and site
reclamation after completion of the roads.
During the awards ceremony, Jeremy Bandy, an inspector with the Department of
Environmental Protection, praised CLD for using low-impact techniques to
protect the environment and preserve green spaces. The full text of the
presentation is as follows:
“Cooper Land Development, Inc. took on the challenge of developing nearly 3,000
acres surrounding Glade Springs Resort. Using a model developed in other states
by Cooper for other planned communities, the developer used low-impact
techniques to protect the environment and preserve green spaces.
“The West Virginia project demonstrated vast improvements in storm water
management and compliance. The master development plan was created to minimize
impacts to Glade Creek, and street construction and the installation of an
18-hole golf course have been completed without compromising the environment.
“Cooper Land Development, Inc. used its lessons from past construction projects
in other states to reduce its environmental impact and focus on protection and
compliance. By focusing its efforts on educating its contractors on the merits
of environmental protection and careful development planning, the company has
been successful in its mission.”
The environmental stewardship award is not the first time CLD or its parent
company, Cooper Communities, Inc., has been recognized for its environmentally
friendly approach to development. The company is a recipient of the Stockton
Award from the Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society and The Nature Conservancy
has established the Cooper Family Conservation Award, which is presented
annually to a business that makes outstanding contributions to conservation in
Arkansas.
Founded in 1954, Cooper Communities, Inc. employs more than 600 people in
projects across eight states. Through its subsidiaries the company develops
timeshare resorts and planned communities, owns and manages more than 3.5
million square feet of commercial property and is one of Arkansas’ largest
homebuilders. The company’s resorts and planned communities have attracted more
than 130,000 owner families.
©Copyright Cooper Land Development, Inc. 2006