“I persuaded the Park Authority to allow me to seek EU and national funding for new programmes of work which applied the lessons from my Fellowship. This was mainly through seeking funding from the new national and EU economic development programmes that were coming on stream in the late 1990s.”
On his return, Ken devised and managed a series of pioneering projects. He was integral in the £3.75 million New Environmental Economy, an initiative that created new products and services that used environmental assets as a key element in stimulating growth in the local economy. It engaged 625 different businesses and helped many to develop new products and services. New collaborative marketing initiatives were set up as a result, including a network of new Farmers' Markets.
Ken says: “To be chosen as one of the 70 people who have made a significant contribution to the 70 years of the Peak District National Park is a fantastic honour. If there is a theme to my contribution it has been to inspire a partnership approach to making the conservation of the environment something that everyone living and working in the area can contribute to. It is great to have that philosophy endorsed as a distinctive contribution to our first 70 years.”