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Archive for May, 2012

GRAHAMSVILLE, NY (May 6, 2012) – Just about two weeks ago, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency honored 26 individuals, organizations and businesses from across New York State with Environmental Quality Awards for their achievements in  protecting public health and the environment.

EPA Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck was joined by Mayor Dana Redd of Camden, New Jersey to present the EPA EQA 12_203awards to this year’s recipients at a ceremony at EPA’s offices in Manhattan.

Included in the group was Robert Hayes, agriculture teacher at Tri Valley Central School, who was nominated for the award for the contributions he and his students have made to stream stewardship in partnership with Sullivan County Soil & Water Conservation District and New York City DEP.

In the photo at left are Dana Redd (left) Mayor of Camden, NJ, Robert Hayes – Tri Valley Central School and Judith Enck – USEPA Region 2 Administrator.

The EPA presents Environmental Quality Awards annually during Earth Week to individuals, businesses, government agencies, environmental and community-based organizations and members of the media in EPA Region 2, which covers New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and eight federally-recognized Indian Nations. The awards recognize significant contributions to improving the environment and public health in the previous calendar year.

Mr. Hayes has engaged his conservation class students in a unique collaboration with stream management staff from Sullivan County and New York City DEP. In addition to learning about stream management concepts, the students established and operated a native plant materials center which provided willows and potted plants for stream stabilization projects designed and built to protect New York City’s unfiltered water supply.  As they focus on the important day-to-day tasks associated with growing plants native to the Catskills, the students are part of the wider collaborative stewardship approach that has been demonstrated in the New York City watershed in which New York City and watershed residents work together to protect water quality and promote healthy ecosystems.

The learning activities are keyed to NY State curriculum goals for coursework in the National Resources cluster.  Students acquire basic technical, manipulative, job-related, and societal skills in preparation for entry into employment and/or higher education in areas such as conservation, forestry, and fishery occupations.

One of the biggest contributions made by the students has been building a plant materials center to maintain potted native plants destined for stream restoration planting projects at local sites identified by the Catskill Streams Buffer Initiative.  Prior to this project, the plants were in a remote location where, though near to a watering pond, access for deliveries and watering were challenging due to steep terrain.

As Tri-Valley already had a nursery developed with greenhouses and an abundance of surrounding lawn, the school  proved to be an ideimageal site for everyone (and everything) involved – the plants, the field staff and the students. Mr. Hayes worked closely with Americorps intern, Brenden Wagner, and high-school intern, Steven Vogler, to build this plant facility. The students were actively engaged repotting plants into larger containers as they were moved from the mountain location to the new school storage.  Irrigation was installed along with a deer exclusion fence, and the native plant facility steadily expanded and improved.

Students provide daily support to Rondout Neversink Stream Program by Mr. Hayes and class aides Mr. Fritz and Ms. Hussey. The biggest undertaking last fall was the creation of a willow-soaking pit to prepare 9,000 live cuttings for planting in a timber crib wall at the Ulster County Highway Garage in Sundown along an important tributary of the Rondout Creek. After excavating a large ditch, the students moved over 5 tons of sand to line the pit above and below a waterproof bladder, installed to create a temporary pond. They learned how to operate many hand tools, in addition to water pumps.  The most important contribution they made was their daily, physical labor. The students enthusiastically moved the willow cuttings out of refrigeration into the pit for soaking. As the weeks went by, the cuttings sprouted all along their lengths and the student crew regularly helped the field staff load them in batches for transport to the restoration site imagein Sundown. The students became an integral part of the project construction team and successfully completed their plant material supply function.

Visits to the restoration site were scheduled, where the students began to see the end result of all their hard work. They viewed the engineer’s plans, heard about the roles of the foreman and equipment operators, learned about safety onsite and studied many detailed aspects of the construction process up close, including all the materials specified in the design. When the timber crib wall was complete, the students returned to prepare a final planting of over one hundred trees, shrubs and ferns, which included digging holes, adding soil amendments, seeding and mulching.

Students reported on their accomplishments to a public audience at the December meeting of the Tri-Valley Central School Board. During their presentations, they were able to convincingly articulate the process, goals, learning and group and personal successes of the partnership experience. In addition, the field staff was invited to give a final report on the multiple benefits of this partnership: providing education and vocation for the students; caring for the nursery stock; aiding in the completion of contract deliverables for the field staff; and modeling a commitment to stream stewardship for the community.

image Plans are underway now to expand this partnership over the next two years. Cornell Cooperative Extension of Sullivan County recently purchased an EMriver model stream demonstration table for use by 4H middle/high school students with a grant received from the Catskill Watershed Corporation. A curriculum is being developed by Tri-Valley, Cooperative Extension and the New York City Department of Environmental Protection to demonstrate stream stability concepts for community audiences in presentations by Soil & Water Conservation Districts during this period of post-flood outreach activity.

In addition, the following activities are planned or in progress: greenhouse propagation of native seeds (by elementary school students); development of native willow beds for use in future stream bank restoration projects; partnering with Frost Valley YMCA to plant flood-damaged streamside areas; hands-on training with riparian design experts to learn bioengineering techniques; and eradication of invasive species in the watershed. This conservation team will continue to contribute to stream protection activities in their community and inspire the wider watershed stream program to replicate successes in other New York City watershed basins.

“Change that will create a healthier and more sustainable future begins with people like those the EPA is honoring today,” said Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck at the ceremony in Manhattan on Friday April 27. “They give of themselves and set a high bar in their actions to protect public health and the environment.” For information about the Environmental Quality Awards in EPA Region 2, visit http://www.epa.gov/region02/eqa/.

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WOODRIDGE, NY (May 6, 2012) – The Kiwanis Club of Woodridge inducted two new members at a recent meeting held at Woodridge Village Hall. Joining the Club were Jeanne DePuy from Woodbourne and Susan Woodworth from Grahamsville.

photo (4) Ms. DePuy is active with the youth-sponsored clubs and Ms. Woodworth is active with the local food pantry.

The Club holds fundraisers throughout the year and proceeds benefit their scholarship program as well as the Benjamin Cosor Elementary School Backpack Program.

Although based in Woodridge, the club covers the entire Fallsburg School District. 

In the accompanying photo, welcoming the new members are (l – r) Past Distinguished Lieutenant Governor Pat Flynn, Jeanne DePuy, Susan Woodworth, President Sue Kasofsky, Lt. Governor Sue Sheehan and Immediate Past President Diane Garritt.

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WASHINGTON, DC (May 4, 2012) – Congressman Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) has released the following statement regarding the U.S. Department of Interior’s release of a draft rule to require gas companies to publicly disclose the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing operations on public and Indian lands.  Hinchey is a leader in Congress of the effort to protect drinking water and the environment from the risks of hydraulic fracturing. He is a co-author of the FRAC Act, which would mandate public disclosure of chemicals used in frack fluid and allow the EPA to regulate fracking activities under the Safe Drinking Water Act. The congressman also authored the appropriations language that led to the current EPA study on hydraulic fracturing.

"I am pleased that the administration is taking a first step toward requiring gas companies to disclose the chemicals they are pumping into the ground as they use hydraulic fracturing to extract natural gas from public lands. Until now, gas companies have left the public in the dark and gone about gas drilling without any true public understanding of exactly what they are pumping into the grounds we all collectively own as Americans. That’s poised to change thanks to these draft rules.

"However, I believe that this draft rule must be improved. In its current form, the rule would only require disclosure after gas drilling was already completed, not before. That’s not good enough. If we are truly serious about ensuring the public is well-informed about the hydraulic drilling process – and we need to be – then the American people deserve to know what chemicals gas companies are going to use before they commence drilling. Knowing after the fact is nice, but does not allow for any steps to be taken if the chemicals being used are of concern to the public.  I urge the Interior Department to strengthen this rule.

"Finally, as I’ve said all along, public disclosure is only part of the answer. It’s time to repeal the Safe Drinking Water Act exemption granted to the gas industry under the 2005 Bush-Cheney energy bill.  No industry should be exempt from our laws to protect drinking water. If gas drilling is completely safe to drinking water supplies as gas companies claim it to be, then those companies should have no objection to the EPA monitoring the process.

"Passing the FRAC Act in Congress would require full public disclosure for all fracking activities in the U.S. and restore the EPA’s ability to oversee fracking and its impact on drinking water supplies. It’s time for Congress to pass that bill."

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LIBERTY, NY (May 3, 2012) – Anita Page, a former Liberty resident now living in Orange County, will be reading from her debut crime novel “Damned If You Don’t” (L&L Dreamspell) at the Liberty Public  Anita pageLibrary on Tuesday, May 22 from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.

The book features community activist Hannah Fox, daughter of ‘60s radicals, who battles the power brokers in her Catskill Mountain town when they attempt to seize a friend’s land in a fraudulent eminent-domain scheme. 

When the scheme ends in Damned If You Domurder and her friend becomes a suspect, Hannah probes the victim’s past hoping to uncover the killer. As she untangles a web of secrets and lies, she becomes convinced the murder was a heroic act, even when it’s clear she may be the next victim.

Page lived in Sullivan County in the seventies when she worked as a freelance feature writer for the Times Herald-Record. Her short stories have appeared in journals, webzines and anthologies, including “Murder New York Style: Fresh Slices” (L&L Dreamspell) and the MWA anthology “The Prosecution Rests” (Little, Brown). She received a Derringer Award from the Short Mystery Fiction Society in 2010 for “‘Twas the Night,” which appeared in The Gift of Murder (Wolfmont Press).

For additional information, call 845-292-6070.

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alternative energy,electricity,energy,Europe,European,industry,machines,Netherlands,powers,structures,turbines,wind energy,wind farms,wind power,wind turbines,windmillsLIBERTY, NY (May 2, 2012) – The local nonprofit Sullivan Alliance for Sustainable Development and Ontario, NY-based Sustainable Energy Developments will host a public meeting Sunday, May 6, at which they will outline and discuss four possible sites for a small, community-owned wind farm in Sullivan County.

The public is invited to learn about site research and prospecting that has already been done and to provide ideas about the four locations that are under consideration for further feasibility study.

The meeting is scheduled for 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. at the Liberty Senior Center, 119 North Main Street in Liberty, NY. For more information, visit www.sullivanalliance.org or call SASD at 845-482-4764.

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HARRIS, NY (May 1, 2012) – Catskill Regional Medical Center (CRMC), in conjunction with the Sullivan County Cancer Services Program, has announced a day devoted to cancer screening for breast exams,females,healthcare,hospital gowns,mammograms,mammography,people,photographs,scrubs,womeneligible women.

On Monday, May 21 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., free breast, cervical and colon cancer screenings will be available to eligible uninsured and underinsured women over the age of 40 at the CRMC Women’s Health Center at 60 Jefferson Street in Monticello.

According to estimates from the American Cancer Society, more than 190,000 women were diagnosed with breast cancer, and more than 40,000 women died of the disease last year.

Screening for breast cancer with a clinical breast exam and a mammogram can help physicians detect early forms of the disease, when it is most treatable.

Eligible women can receive a breast exam, mammogram and a pelvic exam with a Pap test; women over 50 may be eligible for a convenient, take-home colorectal cancer screening kit.

Appointments are limited and pre-registration is required.

Uninsured/underinsured women over the age of 40 who are interested in these free screenings should contact 845-794-3300 ext. 2115 to see if they are eligible and to make an appointment.

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