Fern to be honored with tea tree
- Share via
Paul Clinton
A group of old-guard environmentalists will honor one of their own
Saturday during a ceremony at a local park.
Fern Pirkle, who lives in Corona del Mar, said she is honored to
be receiving the annual achievement award from Stop Polluting Our
Newport.
The group gives out the award each summer to honor the community
member “whose accomplishments in promoting environmental awareness
have distinguished” them.
“She has been a good citizen and a leader,” said Allan Beek, a
prominent local activist who sits on the group’s board.
The group will honor the 76-year-old Pirkle at 11 a.m. Saturday at
the Bonita Canyon Sports Park, which is near the intersection of Ford
Road and East Newport Hills Drive.
A Melaleuca tree -- more commonly known as a tea tree -- will be
planted at the park to honor Pirkle’s more than two decades of
environmental activism. The group is giving Pirkle its Frank and
Frances Robinson Environmental Award, chiefly for her role as
talisman of Friends of the Newport Coast.
The award is named for the well-known Newport Beach couple who led
the effort to preserve Upper Newport Bay.
“I’m just really honored,” Pirkle said.
After graduating from UCLA in the 1950s, Pirkle got a job as a
school teacher. While living in Kentucky in the late 1960s, the seeds of her activism were planted. Pirkle served as president of the
League of Women Voters of Louisville and Jefferson County from 1967
to 1970. She was also a founding member of the Kentucky Civil
Liberties Union.
In 1970, she moved to Corona del Mar. . Pirkle served as a vice
president of the Orange Coast League of Women Voters and was a
founding member of the Orange County Transportation District’s
citizens advisory committee.
But her biggest accomplishment, by her own reckoning, came in the
1980s, when she took on the Irvine Co. Pirkle filed two lawsuits
that ultimately forced the Irvine Co. to set aside more than 70 acres
for open space and sell the land for Crystal Cove State Park.
In that way, the planting of a tree is more than appropriate,
since the Robinsons also won the preservation of Upper Newport Bay
through the courts.
“I think it’s potentially interesting and appropriate,” Pirkle
said. “Not many people know about that connection.”
In November, Pirkle’s group announced they were renaming their
group to Friends of the Newport Coast from Friends of the Irvine
Coast.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.