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Missouri Department Of Conservation Hopes Spanish Videos Will Attract New Visitors

Missouri Department of Conservation educator Kayla Rosen hosts Spanish language videos posted to YouTube and Facebook. They include tips on things like camping and hiking.
Missouri Department of Conservation/YouTube
Missouri Department of Conservation educator Kayla Rosen hosts Spanish language videos posted to YouTube and Facebook. They include tips on things like camping and hiking.

The Missouri Department of Conservation is trying to attract more Spanish-speaking visitors to state parks by using social media videos.

“We believe Spanish-speaking Missourians are an underrepresented group at state parks and conservation areas,” said spokesman Dan Zarlenga. “We believe that the outdoors and nature, and fishing, hunting, all those kinds of things have universal appeal. And we want to engage as many people as we can in those types of activities.”

Department of Conservation Educator Kayla Rosen has recorded three different videos in Spanish giving tips on camping and hiking.

The department has posted them on YouTube and its Facebook page. The videos have received between 300 and 1,000 views each.

Targeting videos about the state’s parks to Spanish-speaking immigrants is a good idea, said Yolanda Lorge, president of Grupo Latinoamericano, an outreach and advocacy group based in Springfield.

“These people, for the most part, like to go to parks. To begin with, because so many of them came from rural areas, either Mexico or Central America. And many of them like to fish, for instance,” Lorge said.

But Lorge also said just putting materials in Spanish isn’t enough. She said it takes a full outreach effort to a community to show an understanding and respect that goes past just the language.

Zarlenga said that the department is working with Spanish language radio and TV stations and online groups to make those connections, but that it’s too early to know how well it’s working.

“It’s just an effort to get a toe in the water with this, so we don’t have a real structured way of getting feedback as of yet,” Zarlenga said.

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Jonathan Ahl joined Iowa Public Radio as News Director in July 2008. He leads the news and talk show teams in field reporting, feature reporting, audio documentaries, and talk show content. With more than 17 years in public media, Jonathan is a nationally award-winning reporter that has worked at public radio stations in Macomb, Springfield and Peoria, IL. He served WCBU-FM in Peoria as news director before coming to Iowa. He also served as a part-time instructor at Bradley University teaching journalism and writing courses. Jonathan is currently serving a second term as president of PRNDI ââ