America in Bloom

America In Bloom (AIB) is an independent, non-profit 501(c)(3) organization which promotes community enhancement programs through the use of flowers, plants, and trees.[1] America in Bloom sponsors an annual nationwide competition between participating communities throughout the United States [2] and provides related educational programs. Communities receive top overall awards, based on their size. Within the entire body of participants, outstanding communities are also cited for their achievements in the areas of floral displays, landscaped areas, urban forestry, environmental awareness, heritage preservation, overall impression, and community involvement.[3] Additional special awards vary each year and relate to a specific noteworthy community feature. Examples of these include: Most Attractive Naturalistic Landscape, Most Dynamic Transformation of a Downtown Streetscape, Most Beautiful Canopy of Trees, Public Art that Celebrates the Heritage of the Community, Best Program for Engaging Youth in their Community, Best Container Display, or Most Innovative Environmental Initiative Involving Water Conservation. For special awards entrants compete against all participating communities regardless of size.

Description of the organization

The organization was founded in 2002 and modeled after long-standing programs in Europe: Ireland (Tidy Towns) Britain (Britain in Bloom and Regions) Scotland (Beautiful Scotland), Italy (Comune Fiorito), and originally France (Villes et Villages Fleuris), as well as Australia (Australia Tidy Town Awards) and Canada[4] (Communities in Bloom). The US organization has grown to embrace 235 participating cities in 40 states and touches more than 22 million lives.

America in Bloom is a grass-roots urban renewal program which provides a framework and is a catalyst for community organizations to work together for visible improvements. It offers one-on-one mentoring to participating communities and provides an extensive written evaluation detailing recommended improvements and enhancements. Its website provides educational materials related to the benefits of quality landscapes and more..

Through its national awards and mentoring program, AIB helps towns harness untapped energy, talent, and resources to champion greening, enhance environmental awareness, promote economic development, and improve quality of life.

The AIB program is designed to bring people from every demographic together to create meaningful, visible, constructive projects, by combining efforts of residents, businesses, and local government. These groups work on common goals in areas including: floral displays, landscaped areas, urban forestry, environmental awareness, heritage preservation, overall impression and community involvement.[3]

Eligible program entrants include towns, communities, cities, neighborhoods of large cities, business districts, military bases, and college campuses. Due to the numerous cases of consistent community involvement since 2002, in 2015 a new category, "Circle of Champions", was created for those participants that won repeatedly in the past. The 2015 Circle of Champion Winners were Holland, MI (mid-sized city category) and Lewes, DE (small city category).

America in Bloom 2015 population category award winners (population ranges vary each year)

America in Bloom 2015 outstanding achievement award winners

Some previous winners (with reference to their AIB awards)

Organizational honors

Board of Directors

America in Bloom is governed by a volunteer Board of Directors:

References

  1. "Mission - America in Bloom". Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  2. "Participants - Current and Past - America in Bloom". Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  3. 1 2 Butterfield, Billy (Aug 12, 2011). "America in Bloom judge was wowed by Holland". The Holland Sentinel. Holland, MI. Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  4. "About AIB". America in Bloom. Retrieved 2013-06-28.
  5. "America in Bloom Winners Announced". Greenhouse Product News. Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  6. "America in Bloom announces 2011 communities". Lawn & Landscape. 2011-03-30. Retrieved 2012-03-03.

External links

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