Stafford Township Arbor Day 2014 B.O.G. (Befriend Our Groundwater) Sherry L. Roth

Similar documents
Pennsylvania Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual. Chapter 3. Stormwater Management Principles and Recommended Control Guidelines

Chapter 1. Introduction

East Maui Watershed Partnership Adapted from Utah State University and University of Wisconsin Ground Water Project Ages 7 th -Adult

Streamlines V2, n2 (May 1997) A Newsletter for North Carolina Water Supply Watershed Administrators

VILLAGE OF BELLAIRE WATER QUALITY ACTION PLAN

NATURAL FEATURES, LAND SUITABILITY FOR DEVELOPMENT AND DEVELOPMENT CONCERNS

WATERSHED. Maitland Valley. Report Card 201

Implementing Stormwater Management through Split-Flow Drainage Design

2018 NACD POSTER CONTEST Sponsored By: 2018 Theme - Watersheds: Our Water, Our Home. Fact Sheet for Parents and Educators

Understanding Environmental Impacts of Horticulture

STORMWATER RUNOFF AND WATER QUALITY IMPACT REVIEW

A MYSTERY DOWN UNDER!

STREAM AND BUFFER AREA PROTECTION/RESTORATION

Issue paper: Aquifer Water Balance

Unit 5 Lesson 1 What Is the Water Cycle? Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

BAEN 673 / February 18, 2016 Hydrologic Processes

Introduction. Welcome to the Belgium Study Abroad Program. Courses:

A Case for the Design and Modeling of BMP Infiltration and LID Techniques. By: Bob Murdock

Watershed: an area or ridge of land that separates waters flowing to different rivers, basins, or seas. It is the interdependent web of living

INTRODUCTION TO HOBBY FARMING AND WATER QUALITY

VIDEO: Riparian Forest Buffers: The Link Between Land & Water

TORCH LAKE TOWNSHIP WATER QUALITY ACTION PLAN

Earth Science Chapter 6 Section 1 Review

Non-point source pollution now accounts for over 75% of Pennsylvania s total water pollution

Background (cont.) Measuring Pollutant Loads. Nonpoint source Nitrogen is discrete and generated by a vast array of sources, including:

City of Fairmont Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) January 23, 2017

SURFACE WATER HYDROLOGY AND HYDRAULICS SECTION

SURVEY OF PUBLIC ATTITUDES ABOUT WATER ISSUES IN COLORADO

Municipal Stormwater Management Planning

Land Use Activities Potential Pollution Problems. Land Disposal septic system bacteria, nitrate, phosphate

Design Features of Constructed Wetlands for Nonpoint Source Treatment. September 1995

Appendix J. Existing Efforts for Identifying Multi-Benefit Projects

GLY 155 Introduction to Physical Geology, W. Altermann. Grotzinger Jordan. Understanding Earth. Sixth Edition

What is a stormwater utility fee?

Read: Case Study: America s First River : A Success Story Summarize the story of the Hudson River and PCB s:

TEKS Lesson 7.8C: Effects of Human Activity on Surface Water and Groundwater

Paraprofessional Training Session 1

Sustainable Agricultural Management Practices for Nurseries

What We Are Hoping For: Learning Goals. Runoff Human Impact o A, B, C. Learning Goals:

ECOSYSTEMS, WATERSHEDS AND POLLUTION CONTROL REVIEW

Hydrology 101. Impacts of the Urban Environment. Nokomis Knolls Pond Summer June 2008

February 28, Re: N.J.A.C. 7:8 Stormwater Management Rules. Dear Commissioner Martin:

Municipal Stormwater Ordinances Summary Table

The Hydrological Cycle. Hydrological Cycle. Definition of Terms. Soils and Water, Spring Lecture 7, The Hydrological Cycle 1

Tackling Non-point Source Water Pollution in British Columbia

UNDERGRADUATE COURSES

Unit 2: Weather Dynamics Chapter 1: Hydrological Cycle

Long Island: Water Resources. Water Sayings. Water Issues. Water Quality Issues specific to LI Coastal Areas. Agriculture and Water Regulation

Watersheds Functions and Management 1

WATER AND THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE

Lecture 1 Integrated water resources management and wetlands

Hydrology 101 A Reference Document for Teachers and Students

INVESTIGATING YOUR STREAM S DRAINAGE BASIN

MS4 Programs: Quality, the Other Stormwater Q. Dan Bounds, PE, D.WRE IAFSM March 9, 2017

IV. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ANALYSIS G. HYDROLOGY/WATER QUALITY

Water Resources on PEI: an overview and brief discussion of challenges

Chapter 6. Hydrology. 6.0 Introduction. 6.1 Design Rainfall

Background / Regulatory Requirements

Long Island s. Environmental Issues. Environmental Issues. Environmental Setting. Environmental Setting. Suburbia and the Environment

The Regulatory Framework

Community-Based Watershed Management

Pennsylvania Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual. Section 3 Stormwater Management Principles, Goals, and a Management Model

7-4 Soil. By Cyndee Crawford September 2014

E. STORMWATER MANAGEMENT

Where did the water you drank today come from? Summary With a roll of the dice, you can simulate the movement of water within the water cycle.

Wisconsin s Buried Treasure

WATER POLLUTION & PREVENTION

Presented by: The Environmental Joint Insurance Fund (E-JIF) and PMK Group 65 Jackson Drive Cranford, NJ (800)

Groundwater. Chapter 10 11/22/2011. I. Importance of groundwater

Managing Our Water. Small Flows Quarterly, Fall 2000, Volume 1, Number 4

STORMWATER POLLUTION PREVENTION PLAN

STAAR Science Tutorial 55 TEK 8.11D: Human Dependence on Ocean Systems

ENVIRONMENT LONG-TERM GOAL: INTRODUCTION: Environment 117

Awesome Aquifers A DEMONSTRATION. THE GROUNDWATER FOUNDATION

TABLE OF CONTENTS 4.17 UTILITIES AND SERVICE SYSTEMS...

Go Green, Save Money: Lowering Flood Insurance Rates in Virginia with Stormwater Management. Kristen Clark VCPC Alumna, Spring 2014

Environmental Information Worksheet

Surface Water and Non-Wetland Surface Waters Delineation and Classification pursuant Chapter F.A.C.

Overview. Students will...

Environmental Geography

(1)(A)Inventory of the following existing natural resources on the USFSP Campus or within the context area adjacent to the University.

City of Winter Haven Water Sustainability Program. Mike Britt, P.E., Natural Resources Division

Clean Water is Everyone s Business. A commercial & industrial property owner s guide to improving Lake Tahoe s clarity

PA Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) TMDL Plan

Our Eastern Shore Groundwater Part IV Groundwater Quality on the Eastern Shore: How safe is our groundwater and are there ways we can protect it?

FACTSHEET INTRODUCTION. help rebalance the water cycle, mitigate the effects of climate change and improve human health and livelihoods.

Water Smart Connections

CHAPTER. 14 Water Resources

RURAL RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITY ROLE COUNCIL ROLE RURAL RESIDENTIAL ALL COMMUNITIES

Implementation of Priority CRP Conservation Practices and Estimated Nutrient Load Reductions

Chapter 10 Natural Environment

Water Resource Protection and Enhancement. Recommended Practices

MCWD Mid-Year Highlights. Key Highlights

Headwater Wetland Restoration Techniques The Wetland Drain Restoration Project

Sustaining the region s waters, sustaining the region.

Riparian Buffers and Stream Restoration

Council of Governments

Decatur, Georgia Stormwater Management Policy Guidelines. DRAFT November 5, 2014

Watersheds and the effects of Nonpoint 5 ource Pollution

Transcription:

Stafford Township Arbor Day 2014 B.O.G. (Befriend Our Groundwater) Sherry L. Roth This Arbor Day, in Stafford Township, we will celebrate the importance of our groundwater. The purpose of this year s theme is to encourage our role in being good stewards of our groundwater. Additionally, the theme ties into how Stafford Township hopes to utilize our historic cranberry bogs to improve groundwater quality in our community. Improving groundwater quality is paramount to making improvements to the Barnegat Bay because contaminated groundwater can harm the environment, including the ecosystems that depend on it. To develop a better understanding of the importance of groundwater protection, the Stafford Township Environmental Commission developed as its year 2014 theme, BOG (Befriend Our Groundwater). Each year, through our Arbor Day and Tree City Celebration, we encourage all children in Stafford schools to participate in our poster, poem and essay contest based on our theme. Medals and awards will be given in each category to the winning students grades K-12 who best represent an understanding of the theme. The awards will be presented at the televised Arbor Day and Tree City ceremony on Friday, May 2nd beginning at 3:45 pm at the Ocean Acres Community Center located at 489 Nautilus Drive, Ocean Acres, Manahawkin. Groundwater is part of the hydrologic cycle. Precipitation falls on land and seeps into the soil or runs off the land into streams, lakes, bays and oceans. Evaporation and transpiration carry the water back into the atmosphere where it once again condenses and falls to land. Water that doesn t run off, or is not evaporated or transpired, filters through the soil and becomes groundwater. Groundwater eventually surfaces at a lower point such as a spring, stream, lake, or wetlands where it can evaporate back into the atmosphere. Water filtering down through the subsurface first moves through an unsaturated zone where the spaces between solid particles or rocks contain both air and water. The rest of the water continues moving downward to the zone of saturation where the pore spaces are completely filled with water. Water in this zone is called groundwater. Areas of rock or soil layers that store a large supply of water are called aquifers. Our wells pump groundwater from the aquifer and the water is delivered to our homes through a network of pipes. Here in Southern Ocean County, all of our drinking water comes from groundwater supplied to us by wells. Whether we have a private well on our property, or we are serviced by municipal systems that pump water to our homes from larger community wells, we all need to be concerned about protecting the water that we drink. The first step toward protecting groundwater is to become aware of how it can be contaminated. The second step is to do your part to keep from contaminating groundwater.

Many human activities can negatively affect groundwater quality as well as quantity. Those activities can include waste disposal, resource extraction (such as mining), agricultural practices and urbanization. Sometimes contamination is a result of a point source, or a single source that is obvious. In our community, the most significant type of groundwater contamination is called nonpoint source. Nonpoint source groundwater pollution is that which comes from numerous sources which combined have a significant impact on the groundwater. This is the most difficult type of pollution to control because it is a result of every day human activity. Sources include fertilizers, pesticides, animal waste, leakage of oils and contaminates from automobiles or other machinery, construction activities, stormwater runoff from parking lots, soil erosion, etc. Once contaminated, groundwater is very costly and difficult to clean up. The best approach to maintaining groundwater quality is to prevent contamination in the first place. The regional environment is changing as a result of the rapid decline of the Barnegat Bay due to nonpoint source pollution and over-development. Dramatic increases of jellyfish underscore the need for restoration planning. Stafford Township is working to improve the quality of our watersheds using a variety of strategies. Efforts that have already been accomplished (and are continually updated and improved) include watershed-based planning, reducing nonpoint source pollution through strict storm water management standards, open space preservation, groundwater recharge of rainfall, strict tree ordinances, bio-retention basins, and groundwater and wellhead protection standards. Additional efforts that Stafford Township is pursuing involve two projects which, if approved, will have tremendous positive impacts on groundwater quality. Both of these projects have been in the media; the proposed Neptune Basin and the Cranberry Bogs. Stafford Township is attempting to partner with Edwin B. Forsythe Wildlife Refuge to use the former cranberry bogs that exist at the headwaters of Manahawkin Lake for management of stormwater runoff. The former cranberry bogs were created by Nathaniel Holmes Bishop during the 19th century. They have been abandoned for many decades and the area has evolved with successional species. The cranberry bogs currently receive stormwater runoff from approximately 12,150 acres. The contributing drainage area includes portions of Ocean Acres, Fawn Lakes and undeveloped land. The proposed project involves designing a system to detain stormwater runoff to encourage additional settling of solids and increase nutrient removal. The project includes the restoration and reconstruction of formerly operational outfall structures to allow the bog to function as a stormwater management facility and convey the required flows, maintain the necessary water quality storms and respect the historical significance of the former structures. Other benefits would include such things as stabilizing areas that have eroded, improving vehicular access for emergency vehicles and trails for firefighting and maintenance. If approved, this project can serve as a model for implementation to other bogs along Ocean County s coastline. Don t get bogged down with all the details, suffice it to say that Stafford Township is trying innovative ways to Befriend Our Groundwater! Please support these types of projects and do your part to protect the quality of our/your groundwater.

Saphira, Kindergarten

Zoey, 1st Grade

Elaina, 2nd Grade

Angelina, 3rd Grade

Sean, 4th Grade

Killian, 5th Grade

Belle, 6th Grade

Sarah, 7th Grade

Carly, 8th Grade

Shayne, 9th Grade

Brianna, 10th Grade

Lauren, 11th Grade

Rachel, 12th Grade