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Donate Your Time, Talent or Treasures
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Kyra Norton

Student at Bloomsburg University
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Rayne Brown
Student at Luzerne Co. Community College
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AMD Sampling for O&M of Treatment Systems
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Record Sampling Data @
 Monitoring Assistance @
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Mine Subsidence Insurance
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Dominion & the Western PA Conservancy Award EPCAMR $500
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AMD Environmental Education Outreach Programs Targeted for Tioga & Lycoming County Schools in the Northern Tier
(Ashley, PA)—EPCAMR was chosen as 1 of 68 proposals within Dominion’s service area in the Northern Tier to help support our AMD Environmental Education Programs to be able to reach students in Tioga and Lycoming Counties who live in watersheds impacted by AMD. Hands-on programming about watersheds, AMD impacts, community volunteerism, recycling of iron oxide, monitoring water quality of local streams, and education on local solutions to treat mine drainage will be discussed in the classrooms. EPCAMR will present our AMD Chalk Talk, Tie Dye, and Comedy Skit Educational Programs built upon the already popular AMD Avengers vs. The Pollution Posse Activity/Coloring book created several years ago by the EPCAMR Staff. EPCAMR Staff will be attending an awards ceremony to receive a $500 check and join a luncheon on Thursday, April 8th, 2010 at the Chestnut Ridge Resort, Blairsville, PA to be recognized and to provide the staff with networking opportunities with other award winners. The event will also offer a workshop designed to assist the management of non-profit organizations as a bonus training experience.
The funds will go towards educational material supply costs and travel to get to the Northern reaches of our service area. “The ability to obtain grant funds and material supplies to be able to travel 2.5 hours north to conduct our environmental education programs is a need that EPCAMR currently has limited our ability to reach even further into the Bituminous Coal Region,” stated Robert E. Hughes, EPCAMR Executive Director. “This funding will allow us to conduct a few more programs that we might not otherwise have been able to do in this area. The Northern Tier is a beautiful place to visit and work with the students. Our work over the years with Blossburg Elementary and many of the community groups in the Northern Tier has been successful, however, we wish we had more travel funds to be able to make the drive more often,” regretted Mr. Hughes.
EPCAMR will partner with its regional partners in the Northern Tier to introduce the AMD Education Programs to some of the elementary schools in the area with the help of the Carey Entz, Lycoming County Conservation District Watershed Specialist, who supported our application and is currently working with a local watershed association on Larry’s Creek that is impacted by AMD, and other groups like the Tioga County Concerned Citizens organization, Blossburg Rod & Gun Club, Tioga River Watershed Reclamation, Inc., who work in the Tioga River watershed. EPCAMR Staff will coordinate with these regional partners to network with the local schools to be able to come and provide several programs to students from 4-7th grade.
Financial support for this project is provided by the Dominion Foundation, which is dedicated to the economic, physical, and social health of communities served by Dominion companies. The grant program is being administered by the Western PA Conservancy in commitment to its core mission of conserving PA’s diverse ecosystems through science-based strategy, leadership, and collaboration. ###
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Posted by admin on Friday, 05 March 2010 (12:41:17) EST (203 reads)
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Art sculpture exhibition to be held in Pioneer Coal Mine
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The WYSO Foundation in association with the Pioneer Tunnel Coal Mine and Train Tour is excited to exhibit a selection of original sculptures in the coal mine. The art show will be exhibited through the month of September 2009 and may very well be the first art sculpture exhibition to be held in a coal mine. On September 23 @ 6PM WYSO Foundation curator, Steven Lichak, will be there to provide some insight.
Schedule:
Weekday Mine Tours -11 AM, 12:30 PM & 2 PM.
Weekend Train & Mine Tours Continuous, 10 AM - 6 PM.
Last Train Ride- 5:00 PM, last Weekend Mine Tour- 5:30 PM.
Call 570-875-3850 or 570-875-3301 or visit The Pioneer Coal Mine and Train Tour Website for more details.
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Posted by admin on Tuesday, 08 September 2009 (12:19:37) EDT (336 reads)
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Press Releases: NATIONAL AWARD WINNING MAGAZINE, ORION, HELPS RAISE $ FOR OUTDOOR SUPPLIES
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For Immediate Release:
August, 28, 2009
Contact Robert E. Hughes-570-371-3523
NATIONAL AWARD WINNING MAGAZINE ORION HELPS EPCAMR RAISE $300 FOR OUTDOOR SUPPLIES TO GET KIDS IN CREEKS
Several months ago, as an added benefit to our membership to the Orion Grassroots Network (OGN), ( www.orionmagizine.org )a group that assists grassroots non-profit organizations by providing services that allow them to be engaged in ecological, economic, and cultural changes within their region had challenged EPCAMR to go out and get votes online for a small fundraising campaign to suit our needs. EPCAMR was asked to be a part of the OGN’s newest program, the Wish List, where $300 was going to be awarded to 1 of 5 member groups who had to go out and solicit the most on-line votes over a 30 day period for a project or program that they needed funds to support. EPCAMR had put out the call for help to its volunteer base for votes and was chosen by other OGN members as the top vote getter for our “Kids in Creeks” Campaign to get our youth into abandoned mine drainage streams and healthy streams for outdoor environmental education learning experiences and won by a landslide!
Erik Hoffner-OGN Coordinator, and Scott Walker, Orion Society-Marketing Director helped get set up an on-line funding drive at www.fundable.com , a website that allows people to pledge whatever they can towards a project they care about. These drives are wonderfully risk-free, no one pays anything if the goal isn’t reached in the given time frame of 26 days. Pledges came in over a 3 week period, and we met our goal. The OGN will have helped EPCAMR meet our goal of getting kids wet come this Fall when school starts and our outdoor environmental education programs ramp up.
EPCAMR decided to zero in on things that they needed to better allow their staff of two and occasional seasonal interns to reach more youth who don’t get the opportunities to explore the outdoor environment in formal school settings and have not learned much about local environmental issues plaguing their local watersheds, particularly with abandoned mine drainage in the Anthracite Coal Region of Northeastern PA.
EPCAMR needed waders for kids, bug viewers to look at and identify aquatic macro-invertebrate insects (bugs), triangular and vertebrate aquatic nets to catch fish, laminated 3-D bug scans to more closely identify aquatic insects, and a guidebook to the Ecology of Aquatic Insects. All of these supplies for just around $300! We focused on the waders for the most part.
Robert Hughes-Executive Director of EPCAMR, who created the campaign, emphasized, “We focused our campaign on getting waders for the kids to actually get them in the streams, regardless if they are orange-colored or not. They need to experience first hand, in the water, the impacts to the health of the stream ecosystem and the delicate balance it faces when pollution from abandoned mines is all around them. They don’t realize that it is entirely possible for them to be a part of the solution in the future to cleaning up their hometown watersheds, should they go into an environmental field of interest. We tell them that you can’t judge a stream by its color. You need to get in them to discover how to clean them up, if you want to be a part of the solution.” “We want to continue to support place-based environmentalism, related to nature and our environment, and ways in which we can engage our youth to participate actively and not turn their heads away from the past mining scars in our region, but to tackle them head on in the future as we are today!”
EPCAMR was featured in The Orion Magazine in February 2007 as a spotlight member organization.
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Middle school students study watersheds
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By DAVID KAGAN dbkagan@comcast.net
POSTED: May 25, 2008
RAUCHTOWN — What do the seventh graders at Jersey Shore Area Middle School know about streams, watersheds, freshwater aquatic life and fly-fishing? Quite a bit, after studying the environment in class for a month and then recently spending a day at Ravensburg State Park.
Science teachers William Ferguson and Tracy Silvis established the school’s watershed education unit four years ago. It was the result of a revamping of the science curriculum to become more aligned with the then newly adopted Pennsylvania State standards in science/technology and environment-ecology.
The Ravensburg State Park trip has been the culminating activity the past two years. Outside environmental experts assisted Ferguson and Silvis in leading the students in interesting experiments along Rauchtown Creek at the park.
John Kaercher, the Environmental Education Specialist at Little Pine State Park, led the students in doing physical testing along and in the creek. They calculated the volume flow of the stream from measurements of depth, width and velocity.
They also checked the slope and the temperature of the creek. Student Nick Caputo, after dipping a thermometer into the waters, reported it as “nine degrees Celsius.”
Kaercher, who has conducted numerous programs for northcentral Pennsylvania area students through the years, didn’t seem to be bothered by the fairly steady, rather cold rain that fell during the day May 9.“I’ve been out giving demonstrations when it’s been sleeting,” he said.
Half the Jersey Shore Area seventh-grade students came the day before for the all-day program — when it didn’t rain.
Three of the lucky May 9 “ducks” were friends Nicole Murray, Libby Hill and Kayla Allen.
“It was fun but it was really cold. I got to wear hip boots, which I had never done before, but I fell in anyway because the current was strong,” Murray said.
“It was sort of miserable, but it was a great learning experience. We’re learning how to stop pollution,” Hill said.
“We learned a lot of stuff. My favorite was macro-invertebrates,” Allen said.
Watershed Specialists Carey Entz (Lycoming County) and Erin Dunleavy (Clinton County) led the study of macro-invertebrates (“bugs”). Students actually collected insects from the cold waters of Rauchtown Creek and brought them to a nearby pavilion table to be identified.
Among the large diversity of creatures found were stone, caddis, may and black flies, crayfish, an aquatic worm and a tiny salamander. The students clearly very much enjoyed gathering and identifying the stream wildlife, and looking at them under magnifying glasses — with some even letting them crawl around in their hands.
Water Specialists Entz and Dunleavy helped lead the students to the happy conclusion that Rauchtown Creek has very little pollution. “We got excellent bugs!” all shouted together.
At a third station, students did chemical testing of the waters under the direction of Maryann Haladay-Bierly, the environmental education specialist for Raymond B. Winter and Ravensburg State parks. They determined the hardness of the water, its dissolved oxygen, Ph and the level of nitrates.
A fourth activity involved the tie-dying of T-shirts using iron oxide obtained from abandoned mine drainage recovered near Shamokin, Pennsylvania. Silvis pointed out an interesting side-point to the students that watershed restoration people have been raising money to clean up more streams by selling the iron oxide to paint companies to use for their pigments.
Finally, students got to learn about and to try their hands at fly-tying and fly-casting. Volunteer members of the Lloyd Wilson Chapter of Trout Unlimited (Ray Rathmell, Richard Rogers, Bill Bailey and Skip Frye) assisted Jersey Shore High School teachers James Smith and Jeffrey Miller instructing and demonstrating. Students enjoyed practicing “over your head and back down” fly-casting into Rauchtown Creek just above the dam.
Other adults helping out at the two daylong sessions included student teachers Mark Niedermeyer and Kelly Bradley, from Lock Haven University, and a number of parents of the seventh-graders. Mark Leitch, Jacob Leitch’s father, said that he appreciated the “chance to hang out with” his son.
As a result of the educational outing and preparatory, month-long, in-class science program, Jersey Shore Area Middle School’s seventh-graders certainly are more aware of their local Susquehanna Basin Watershed — its valuable features and the dangers that imperil it and the larger natural world. Perhaps some of these students will be inspired by this experience early in their lives to eventually become environmentalists, ecologists or other types of nature scientists.
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Posted by admin on Monday, 02 June 2008 (10:51:14) EDT (713 reads)
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Campers and Sponsors Needed
Endless Mountains Resource Conservation and Development Council and its partners are once again holding the Woodland Resource Adventure (WRA) Camp for 2008. This twenty-one year old program (previously named Youth Forestry Camp) will be held on the campus of Camp Lackawanna, Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania. The Woodland Resources Adventure Camp begins on Sunday, July 13 at 12:00 am and runs through Thursday, July 17 at 3:30 pm. WRA is an overnight camp and is open for students ages 12-16. This year’s theme is “Forestry”. Lodging and two days of sessions will be held at Camp Lackawanna while two days will consist of field trips to sites in the local area. We will travel to various locations such as a baseball bat factory, tree nursery, Christmas tree farm, and maple syrup operation. Participants will learn about the following topics: tree identification and measurement, Forest Stewardship planning, wildlife impacts to forests, invasive pests, and tree climbing.
The student is responsible to pay $175. The remaining $100 is provided in the form of a sponsorship. We encourage students to make every effort, on their own, to obtain local sponsorship from an organization or business. The Woodland Resource Adventure Camp committee has a limited number of sponsorships available, if you cannot find one on your own. The total fee covers the cost of meals, lodging, insurance, tour transportation, and program materials.
WRA Camp is recommended for young people who want to learn about the outdoors and the environment through an excellent hands-on experience. The Camp provides an opportunity to prepare for the Envirothon competitions, 4H Events and can be used as credit toward Scout Merit Badges.
For any student interesting in attending the camp, please contact Endless Mountains RC&D Council to obtain a brochure.
Any individual, group or business interested in becoming a sponsor of a student or the camp in general, please contact Endless Mountains RC&D office by phone 570-265-3409 ext. 5. Donations of any denomination will be accepted. Endless Mountains RC&D Council is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization, so any donation/sponsorship for the camp or a student is tax deductible.
For more information on the Woodland Resources Adventure Camp, contact Endless Mountains RC&D Council office by phone 570-265-3409 ext. 5 or www.endlessmountainsrcd.org.
WRA Tentative Agenda: Not all speakers or locations have been confirmed
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Tree Identification-Terminology and Using a Key
Plants Other Than Trees
Wood Mobile/Forest Products
Orienteering/Compass/GPS
Wildlife Rehabilitators and Taxidermist
Monday, July 14, 2008
Benny’s Nurseries-Tour of nursery and Christmas Tree Farm and discussion of invasive pests
Tour of Loch’s Maple Syrup operation
Community Forestry Session-each presentation is 45 minutes
Structured Soil
Urban Tree Commission
Urban Tree Pruning
Tree Climbing
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Watersheds and the Forest Connection
Basic Tree Measurements
What’s Your Tree Worth
Silviculture
Forest Succession
Woodland Inventory and Forest Stewardship Plans
Forest Scavenger Hunt
Tree Felling and Chain Saw Safety
PA Fuels for Schools and Beyond Program
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Tours of Oak Hill Veneer
Troy Ag Museum
Cummings Lumber
Larimer & Norton
Hike/Geocashing
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Owl Habitat
Deer Impacts and Quality Deer Management
Invasive Plants and Mis-management of Forests
Land Conservation Easements/Stewardship Plan
Careers and Natural Resource Opportunities in the Area
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Environmental group EPCAMR speaks at Tamaqua Area High School
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By JOE PLASKO / TIMES NEWS
jplasko@tnonline.com

Robert E. Hughes, Regional Coordinator for the Eastern Pa. Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation (EPCAMR) displays a map of reclamation projects along the Upper Schuylkill watershed during a presentation at Tamaqua Area High School Friday.
With the long history of Anthracite coal mining in this region, metal-filled water discharged from those mines are a daily part of life.
Metallic discharges are an environmental hazard that organizations such as the Eastern Pennsylvania Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation (EPCAMR) work toward alleviating, through their own efforts and partnerships with municipalities and government agencies.
Another function of EPCAMR, which is based in Luzerne County and covers a 16-county region, is environmental education, such as the presentation it gave Friday at Tamaqua Area High School.
Robert E. Hughes, EPCAMR Regional Coordinator, and Pamela J. Kattner, Jim Thorpe, an environmental education intern, spoke about the problems of acid mine drainage to the ecology and chemistry classes of Kristen Klingaman.
There's a connection there. Klingaman served as an EPCAMR intern for Hughes in 1999. “I wanted you all to hear this, because I feel it is important,” she told her students.
There are many abandoned mine reclamation sites in the Tamaqua area. Not too far from the school on Route 209 in Walker Township is the Newkirk Tunnel, a reclamation project in which the acidic water discharge is treated with an oxic limestone drain.
The Newkirk Tunnel featured an orange colored discharge due to the iron in the water, which became acidic by running through the mine. Other discharges can also contain magnesium and aluminum, which has a tint of white or gray, said Kattner.
“The discharge creates a harsh environment for fish and other invertebrates and impairs the health of the watershed,” explained Kattner.
Because of the metallic content, acid mine discharges can also contain sulfuric acid, which has a distinctive odor.
The Upper Schuylkill watershed, which includes 123 miles of streams, is only one of the areas with which EPCAMR is concerned. Hughes also discussed the Catawissa Creek watershed, which runs from Hazleton along Route 81 to Elysburg, covering 36 miles and running into the Susquehanna River.
Kattner said there are three methods of treating acid mine drainage: active, passive and backfilling.
Active treatments mean the addition of chemicals. Passive treatments include using limestone to reduce the acidity of the water and restore its alkalinity, or using available wetlands to remove metals from the discharge.
“We try to remove the metals from the streams and re-use them,” said Hughes, who noted those metals can be used in the production of tie-dyes for T-shirts and woodstains for paint companies.
Some examples of passive treatments provided were the Audenreid Mine Tunnel on the Catawissa Creek, which uses concrete storage tanks of limestone to split the water and treat it, and the Lausanne Tunnel near Jim Thorpe, which utilizes wetlands, said Kattner.
Backfilling reclamation involves filling old strip-mine pits to prevent oxygen from reaching metals exposed through the mining process. In those cases, the pit is filled and covered with top soil and vegetation.
Hughes and Kattner urged the students to get involved by joining environmental groups, reading and writing articles on acid mine drainage and learning all they can on the subject.
For more information, visit the EPCAMR website at www.orangewaternetwork.org.
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Posted by admin on Friday, 24 February 2006 (16:42:20) EST (641 reads)
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Chesapeake Bay Program Launches New Educational Resource
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Last week, the Chesapeake Bay Program launched Chesapeake Academic Resources for Teachers (ChART), a resource designed to help educators provide meaningful watershed educational experiences to their students. ChART provides educators with one place to find Bay-related lesson plans and activities, field studies and professional development opportunities.
Explore ChART at: http://www.chesapeakebay.net/chart/
Source:
Amy C. Handen
Watershed Coordinator
National Park Service
Chesapeake Bay Program Office
410 Severn Avenue, Suite 109
Annapolis, Maryland 21403
Phone: 410-267-5786
Fax: 410-267-5777
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Posted by admin on Tuesday, 25 October 2005 (09:35:11) EDT (506 reads)
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Pennsylvania Wins the 2005 Canon Envirothon
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hardcoal writes "With an overall score of 578.50 out of a possible 700 points, Pennsylvania won the 2005 Canon National Envirothon! A five member team from Penncrest High School, located in Media, Delaware County, represented Pennsylvania at the 18th annual Canon Envirothon. The Penncrest team also received high station score awards for the following stations: Soils/Land Use with a score of 81; Wildlife with a score of 98.5; Forestry with a score of 85; and Aquatic Ecology with a score of 91 and tying with Texas. In addition they had the highest score in the Oral Presentation with 186.67 out of a possible 200 points. California received the high score at the current issue station with a score of 81, one point above the Pennsylvania team. The stations are based on a possible 100 points. Pennsylvania has won 10 of 18 past Canon National Envirothon.
Each of the team members received a $5,000 Canon Envirothon scholarship, medallions, and plaques. The advisors received a Canon DV camcorder.
Teams that placed in the top 10 include:
First - Pennsylvania - 578.50
Second - Virginia - 542.10
Third - Delaware - 536.40
Fourth - Texas - 518.20
Fifth - Wisconsin - 503.60
Sixth - New Jersey - 536.17
Seventh - Ohio - 529.17
Eighth - Connecticut - 524.50
Ninth - New York - 519.50
Tenth - Minnesota - 518.83
If you would like more information, please visit the Canon Envirothon web site at www.envirothon.org. For photos and a complete listing of all awards visit www.envirothon.org/media/photoalbum/winners_05.htm.
Congratulations Pennsylvania Envirothon Team!"
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Posted by admin on Monday, 01 August 2005 (09:31:18) EDT (563 reads)
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RiverFest 2005 Set For May 7th
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Saturday, May 7th The Lackawanna River Corridor Association (LRCA), will hold RiverFest-2005. RiverFest encompasses a day-long series of activities including: Canoe-A-Thon - now in it’s fourth decade, the Fourth Annual River Regatta and Eighth Annual Duck-A-Thon.
An exciting new Finish Line site will be located near the new Scranton High School on Olive Street. The new site will connect RiverFest 2005 festivities directly to downtown Scranton. RiverFest means a full day of family fun starting with the well known Canoe-A-Thon, then River Regatta and finally Duck-A-Thon. RiverFest has become a traditional celebration, a rite of spring and an opportunity for the entire community to return to the River in early spring and have fun.
LRCA Board member Jim Frankowski is co-chairing RiverFest 2005 with Thomas McLane, president of McLane Associates Architectural Firm, Scranton.
This year’s Canoe-A-Thon will again feature a 12-mile course and an eight-miler. Launch site for the 12-miler is at Maslyar Park, also known as Laurel Street Park, Archbald. The eight-mile run starts in Mellow Park, Blakely. Rental canoes and kayaks are available at Mellow Park only.
The Fourth Annual River Regatta is a tongue-in-cheek event with entries from the ridiculous to the sublime. Dr. Barry Minora is chairing this event. He notes that entrants need only follow the barest minimum of maritime decorum to enter history.
Duck-A-Thon is pure fun. “Ducks” take to the River and a make mad dash for the finish line. Chance holders wait word to see if they hold the winning duck ticket. Tickets for Duck-A-Thon are available weekends at The Mall at Steamtown, at Everything Natural, Clarks Summit or from any LRCA Board member.
Registration forms and all additional information are available by calling the LRCA offices at 570-207-7608, or visit the Association’s website at www.lrca.org. Interested participants, sponsors or volunteers can also email the LRCA at lrca@epix.net.
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Posted by admin on Friday, 08 April 2005 (13:36:39) EDT (574 reads)
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New TV Special @ Watersheds to Air on The Weather Channel
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Anonymous writes "Today, EPAs Acting Assistant Administrator for Water, Benjamin Grumbles, announced the airing of an upcoming hour television special about watersheds co-produced by the Environmental Protection Agency and
The Weather Channel. After the Storm will premier on The Weather Channel on Wednesday, February 4, 2004 at 8 pm and 11 pm Eastern Standard Time (EST). Additional showings are set for Sunday, May 9th at 8:30 and 11:30 pm EST and Saturday, June 26th at 8:30 and 11:30 pm EST.
I encourage everyone to tune in on February 4th to learn more about the threats facing our nations waters from polluted runoff, said
Acting Assistant Administrator Grumbles. After the Storm shows the connection between weather and watersheds and the importance of watershed protection. We all live in a watershed and we all have an
impact on our environment.
The program reminds viewers that a finite amount of fresh water exists on the planet, and that everyone needs to take actions to protect water resources. Over the last thirty years, the nation has done a tremendous job in tacking pollution from large factories and sewage treatment plants, said Grumbles. Remaining threats are much more difficult to regulate. When it rains or when snow melts, pollutants from city streets, suburban lawns, and farms may runoff into our nations streams, lakes, wetlands and coastal waters.
The show highlights three case studiesSanta Monica Bay, the Mississippi
River Basin/Gulf of Mexico, and New York City where polluted runoff threatens watersheds highly valued for recreation, commercial fisheries and navigation, and drinking water. Key scientists, water quality
experts, and citizens involved in local and national watershed protection efforts provide insight into the problems as well as
solutions to todays water quality crisis.
Acting Assistant Administrator Grumbles added, EPA was pleased to team up with The Weather Channel on this educational special. Broadcast meteorologists are considered trusted and effective spokespersons for conveying complex environmental and scientific information to the American public, and millions of viewers tune into The Weather Channel daily for the latest weather updates. Weather eventslike droughts, floods, and rain directly impact the quality of our water resources.
They offer a perfect opportunity for meteorologist to discuss connections between weather and watersheds."
(Interactive Environment)
In addition to illustrating the environmental implications of weather events, the special provides useful tips on how people can help make a difference. After the Storm explains simple things people can do to protect their local watershedsuch as picking up after ones dog and recycling household hazardous wastes. It also shows how some
communities and private companies are getting involved through low impact development utilizing rain gardens and green roofs to minimize stormwater runoff.
Viewers are encouraged to visit the EPA web site
After the Storm for more information about what they can do, including a free brochure about stormwater pollution.
After six months, EPA owns the rights to the special. The Agency intends to make After the Storm available to other television stations and educational organizations interested in broadcasting the show.
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Posted by admin on Friday, 30 January 2004 (01:20:55) EST (630 reads)
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Postal Address...
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EPCAMR Office
101 South Main Street
Ashley, PA 18706
Phone: (570) 371-3522
Directions
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OSM / VISTA Watershed Development Coordinator
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Wren Dugan
(570) 371-3522
wdugan@epcamr.org

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 Please enter "EPCAMR" as your charity.
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Check out our Western PA Counterpart!!
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