Invasive Alien Plant Removal Programs Supplement
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Some Fun Facts About the National Wildlife Refuge System
A quarterly newsletter for Volunteers and Friends of the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center and Patuxent Research Refuge FRIENDS OF PATUXENT Vol. 30 • No. 2 www.friendsofpatuxent.org April-May-June 2019 Some Fun Facts About the Friends Co-sponsor Open House for National Wildlife Refuge System Research Community By Brad Knudsen, Refuge Manager at Bee Lab ot off the press from the U S Fish and Wildlife Service’s By Rich Dolesh, Chair, Headquarters in Falls Church, Friends of Patuxent H th Virginia, and just in time for the 116 birthday of the National Wildlife Refuge System (NWRS) on March 14, 2019, every refuge has received copies of a beautiful new publication entitled “Ex- perience the National Wildlife Refuge System.” It is in an easy to read format, brimming with facts and gorgeous pho- tos of what the NWRS is all about. Let Trumpeter Swan me share some of what I find to be the most interesting information. the entire NWRS with a specific pur- pose of supporting wildlife research; atuxent’s whooping cranes may First, of course, it emphasizes – “The thus, it is the birthplace and current be gone, but with the return of mission of the NWRS is to administer home of the USGS’ Patuxent Wildlife Pthe Bee Conservation Lab to a national network of lands and waters Research Center. the USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research for the conservation, management, Center, an entirely new opportunity for and where appropriate, restoration of The publication goes on to enumer- collaborative field research on bees the fish, wildlife and plant resources ate that the NWRS consists of 95 and pollinator/plant relationships is and their habitats within the United million land acres, 740 million sub- opening up at Patuxent. -
Baltimore County, Maryland 2017 Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan
Baltimore County, Maryland 2017 Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan As Adopted by the Baltimore County Council June 5, 2017 COUNTY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE COUNTY, MARYLAND Legislative Session 2017, Legislative Day No. 10 Resolution No. 55-17 Mr. Tom Quirk, Chairman By Request of County Executive By the County Council, May 25, 2017 A RESOLUTION to adopt the Baltimore County, Maryland 2017 Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan (LPPRP) as an addendum to the Baltimore County Master Plan 2020. WHEREAS, the Baltimore County Council adopted the Baltimore County Master Plan 2020 on November 15, 2010; and WHEREAS, the Baltimore County Council adopted the 2005-2006 Baltimore County Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan Update as a Baltimore County Master Plan 2020 addendum on January 20, 2015; and WHEREAS, Title 5, Subtitle 9 of the Natural Resources Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland requires a local governing body to revise its land preservation and recreation plan every five years and submit the plan to the Maryland Departments of Natural Resources and Planning for review and approval; and WHEREAS, the Baltimore County Departments of Recreation and Parks, Planning, and Environmental Protection and Sustainability worked cooperatively to draft the required 2017 Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan; and WHEREAS, the Baltimore County Planning Board approved the 2017 Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan on April 20, 2017; and WHEREAS, the Baltimore County Council has reviewed the amended 2017 Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the County Council of Baltimore County, Maryland that the Baltimore County, Maryland 2017 Land Preservation, Parks and Recreation Plan, be and is hereby adopted and incorporated into the Baltimore County Master Plan 2020 to serve as a guide for meeting the recreation, park, and open space needs of the Citizens of Baltimore County; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that a copy of this Resolution be sent to the Maryland Departments of Natural Resources and Planning. -
Bond Funding
2016 Bond Bill Funding During the 2016 legislative session, the Maryland General Assembly evaluated 155 bond bill requests that totaled nearly $32.5 million. The Senate and the House each funded $7.5 million in legislative projects; individual bond bills were not acted upon by the legislature. Instead, the General Assembly amended the State Capital Budget Bill (SB 191) to specifically list the projects selected for funding. The chart below indicates the status of those bond bills funded in 2016. The "Total" column on the right indicates the total amount of funding approved for each project. House Bill Senate Bill Amount House Senate Number House Sponsor Number Senate Sponsor Project Title County Requested Initiatives Initiatives Other Total Funding 432 Clippinger 790 Ferguson Baltimore Museum of Industry Statewide 500,000 200,000 200,000 1597 Oaks 1098 Klausmeier Girl Scouts of Central Maryland Urban Program Statewide 250,000 250,000 250,000 and STEM Center 1203 C. Wilson 972 Peters Patriot Point Statewide 500,000 250,000 250,000 500,000 1635 Clippinger 563 Ferguson Port Discovery Children's Museum Statewide 500,000 200,000 300,000 500,000 478 McCray 316 McFadden Ulman Cancer Fund Home for Young Adult Statewide 200,000 200,000 200,000 Cancer Patients and Caregivers 1539 Allegany County 1045 Edwards Friends Aware Facility Allegany 150,000 75,000 75,000 Delegation 1538 Allegany County 1044 Edwards Frostburg Museum Relocation Project Allegany 150,000 50,000 50,000 100,000 Delegation 987 Allegany County 900 Edwards Lefty Grove Statue Allegany -
Maryland & Virginia Premier Pads
MARYLAND & VIRGINIA PREMIER PADS Francis Scott Key Mall • Security Mall • White Marsh Mall • Dulles Town Center PATRICK MILLER JOE MEKULSKI [email protected] [email protected] 443-632-2042 443-632-1343 Mountaindale Smallwood Lawndale Dover Phoenix Myersville Englars Mill JacksonvilleSweet Air Boonsboro 165 194 UV27 UV Mousetown UV UV75 UV31 ¨¦§83 UV45 £¤40 Harmony Keedysville Dennings Bird Hill Oregon Ridge Park Cockeysville Glade Town Libertytown Walkersville j Appletown Gambrill State Park Weldon Unionville Glyndon 146 Antietam National Battlefield j £¤15 Morgan Run Natural Environment Area Cockeysville UV j j Reisterstown Greentop Manor Sharpsburg Clover Hill UV26 Franklinville South Mountain State Park Broadview AcresMt Pleasant Timber Grove Hampton Loch Raven Reservoir Rocky Springs Winfield Louisville Locust Grovej Middletown Fort Detrick j Delight Mays Chapel Rohrersville College Estates Liberty Reservoir Shepherdstown McKaig Dorsey Crossroads j Sunnybrook Hills UV25 Hampton 147 UV17 Braddock HeightsGrove Hill Soldiers Delight UV Frederick Owings Mills ¨¦§83 j Woodville Picketts Corner j Moler Crossroads Oak Acres Eldersburg Towson Piney Run Park Garrison Carney BurkittsvilleBroad Run 180 FRANCIS SCOTT KEY MALL Gillis Falls Resrv Site j Flohrville Ridgley Park Perry Hall UV Dorceytown Carney Grove New Market j Day WHITE MARSH MALL White Marsh Hernwood Heights Hillendale Dargan Mt Airy 32 Parkville Ballenger Creek Bartholow UV Pikesville Uvilla Briarcrest Heights Wellwood Nottingham Jefferson Monocacy National Battlefield Parrsville -
Patuxent Research Refuge Established in 1936 by Executive Order of President Franklin D
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Patuxent Research Refuge Established in 1936 by executive order of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Patuxent Research Refuge is the nation’s only National Wildlife Refuge established to support wildlife research. With land surrounding the Patuxent and Little Patuxent Rivers between Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, MD, the Refuge has grown from the original 2,670 acres to its present size of 12,750 acres and encompasses land formerly managed by the Departments of Agriculture and Defense. Throughout decades of change, Patuxent’s mission of conserving and protecting the nation’s wildlife and habitat through research and wildlife management techniques has remained virtually unchanged. Introduction Patuxent Research Refuge supports a wide diversity of wildlife in forest, meadow, and wetland habitats. The land is managed to maintain biological diversity for the protection and benefit of native and migratory species. During the fall and spring migrations, many waterfowl species stop to rest and feed. Over 200 species of birds occur on the refuge. A nesting pair of bald eagles has used the North Tract of the Refuge since 1989. Increasing forest fragmentation in the area due to urban development has damaged many populations of neotropical migratory birds. The refuge is one of the largest forested areas in the mid-Atlantic region and provides critical breeding habitat and an important nesting area for these species. Patuxent Research Refuge is divided into three areas: 1) North Tract, which offers hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, trails, and many interpretive programs 2) Central Tract, where the offices and study sites of the many research biologists are located, and 3) South Tract, where the National Wildlife Visitor Center and its trails are located. -
Land Preservation, Parks, and Recreation Plan August 2017
Land Preservation, Parks, and Recreation Plan August 2017 LPPRP Table of Contents I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................................................................................ 1 A. PURPOSE OF THIS PLAN .......................................................................................................................1 B. PLANNING PROCESS SUMMARY .............................................................................................................1 C. KEY ISSUES SUMMARY .........................................................................................................................1 D. GOALS AND RECOMMENDATIONS ..........................................................................................................2 II. INTRODUCTION AND PLANNING CONTEXT ......................................................................... 3 A. PURPOSE OF THIS PLAN .......................................................................................................................3 B. PLANNING PROCESS AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT.........................................................................................4 C. COUNTY CHARACTER AND EXISTING SYSTEM OF PUBLIC OPEN SPACE ..............................................................7 III. PARKS AND RECREATION ................................................................................................ 15 A. SECTION SUMMARY ......................................................................................................................... -
EARLY HISTORY of PATUXENT WILDLIFE RESEARCH CENTER (Circa 1948) by Dr
1 EARLY HISTORY OF PATUXENT WILDLIFE RESEARCH CENTER (circa 1948) by Dr. L. B. Morley A REPORT ON THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PATUXENT RESEARCH REFUGE Introduction In the short span of twelve years the Patuxent Research Refuge has become an important institution in the program of wildlife restoration. It is a monument to those who have helped make it possible because they believed that research was a basic necessity. The Refuge was developed during the critical years of the depression and continued to progress through the turmoil of World War II. History was accelerated and little opportunity was given for the recording of events. Permanency has come to the Patuxent Refuge and with it organization and unfaltering progress toward the designed destiny. The period of confusion is past and the early construction scars have heeled. The function of the Refuge will remain an existing accomplishment, but the original incidents and events concerned with its founding and development already have become legendary. It is appropriate that the facts be recorded and that the history of the first national Wildlife Experiment Station be complete. Purpose The riotous squandering of our most valuable and priceless heritage, our natural resources, is appalling when we compare the duration of our national history with that of civilization. Many are cognizant of the recreational and economic importance of wildlife, and with the endless problems concerned with maintaining or restoring it, but too few, having no selfish or partisan interests, can or will contribute what is demanded. The new conception of wildlife requirements recognized the need for research as a prerequisite of building and administering an intelligent and practical program. -
Summer 2018 Newsletter Volunteer
Friends of Kinder Farm Park Newsletter – Summer 2018 Page 1 Summer 2018 Newsletter Inside This Issue Page 1 – Volunteer Award Banquet Page 7 – Anne Arundel Bird Club Happenings… Page 2 – Volunteer for the Fall Harvest Festival Page 9 – Visit the Woodland Garden Page 3 – We Don’t Want No Naked Scarecrows Page 10 – Blue Bird Monitors Needed Page 3 – Temporarily Under New Supervision Page 11 – A New/Old Tractor Page 3 – Farm Education Livestock News Page 13 – Pieced Together Page 4 – Tips from the Chartwell Garden Club Page 14 – Fall Harvest Festival Page 5 – The Genesis of the Friends of Kinder Page 15 – Life in the Park Photo Competition Farm Park Page 16 – FoKFP 12 Month Calendar Page 6 – Summer at the Apprentice Garden Page 18 – Business and Organization Support Online viewing feature: You can control-click on the title in the index and go directly to the article. Volunteer Award Banquet present this would be the last time we By Mike Lowman, Friends of Kinder Farm Park Board Member would see Paul, This year’s who passed away a Volunteer Banquet few weeks later. took place on a Hosts Bill Offutt beautiful Friday and Carrie Fielder evening on the 1st presented the following awards: of June at the River Birch Pavilion. Special Friends Award: This annual event The FoKFP Farm Education Livestock Groups is given to thank volunteers for their continued This group of families that care for our permanent support of the Kinder Farm Park. This year, to breeding livestock here at the park and help assure everyone’s delight, Mission Barbeque catered the that our 4H have access to affordable animals for food. -
PROGRAM BOOKLET April-August 2021
PROGRAM BOOKLET April-August 2021 BALTIMORE BIRD CLUB MARYLAND ORNITHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, INC. BALTIMORE BIRD CLUB a chapter of the MARYLAND ORNITHOLOGICAL SOCIETY, INC. Cylburn Arboretum 4915 Greenspring Avenue Baltimore, MD 21209-4168 Website: https://baltimorebirdclub.org Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/382565775136349/members/ OFFICERS PRESIDENT Joe Corcoran 667-231-6453 [email protected] VICE PRESIDENT **VACANT** TREASURER Dick Krejci 410-252-7147 [email protected] RECORDING SECRETARY Linda Corcoran 443-851-3548 [email protected] MEMBERSHIP Terry Ross 443-253-5179 [email protected] BBC DIRECTORS Nancy O’Hara 443-286-0922 [email protected] Nico Sarbanes 443-632-5506 [email protected] Mary Shock 443-690-4319 [email protected] STANDING COMMITTEES AND REPRESENTATIVES BIRD* BALTIMORE *(Birders for Inclusivity, Representation, and Diversity) Lynne Parks 443-416-6180 [email protected] Lindsay Jacks 256-493-7393 [email protected] CHIP NOTES DESIGN Sean Downs 256-493-7393 [email protected] CHIP NOTES EDITOR Joan Cwi 410-467-5352 [email protected] COLLECTIONS John Dennehy 410-375-9802 [email protected] COMMUNITY SCIENCE Libby Errickson 717-968-3535 [email protected] CONSERVATION Carol Schreter 410-664-5151 [email protected] CYLBURN LIASION Peter Lev 410-823-2962 [email protected] EDUCATION & OUTREACH Martin Brazeau 443-595-8694 [email protected] ELECTRONIC DATABASE MANAGER Sarah Luttrell 641-352-7718 [email protected] FIELD TRIPS SCHEDULING Nancy O’Hara 443-286-0922 [email protected] -
February 7–10, 2019 | Towson, Maryland 34Th Annual MAEOE Environmental Education Conference
February 7–10, 2019 | Towson, Maryland 34th Annual MAEOE Environmental Education Conference Welcome to the 2019 MAEOE Conference! Full STEAM Ahead: Expanding the Potential of Environmental Education We hope that you will expand your Environmental Education-STEAM connections at the 34th MAEOE Conference! E-STEAM is about expanding ideas and creating. It is also about helping students develop critical thinking and problem-solving skills that will lead to 21st Century jobs. E-STEAM can prepare students to transform systems, conserve resources, and make decisions that will lead to a sustainable future. We hope that you will explore the STEAM Festival on Friday evening, enjoy the speakers that will open doors to connect STEAM and the environment, try out a field experience on Friday or Sunday, and connect with colleagues throughout the conference! We can’t wait to hear about the E-STEAM connections that you make! Laura Johnson Collard - Executive Director, MAEOE MAEOE Advisory Council Chair Welcome! We welcome you to the 34th Annual MAEOE Conference. MAEOE has had some changes this year that we would like to take this opportunity to share with you. One significant change has been to our organizational structure. This change should be seamless to our members and stakeholders, but has been put in place to strengthen the organization and build our capacity for the future. As of October 2018, MAEOE now has an Advisory Council and Board of Directors. The Advisory Council is comprised of experts in the field of outdoor and environmental education. They are charged with developing strategies to ensure that Maryland remains a leader in environmental and outdoor education by supporting the MAEOE staff with keystone projects like the conference and Maryland Green Schools Youth Summit. -
Patuxent Research Refuge FRIENDS of PATUXENT
A quarterly newsletter for Volunteers and Friends of the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center and Patuxent Research Refuge FRIENDS OF PATUXENT Vol. 30 • No. 4 www.friendsofpatuxent.org October-November-December 2019 Economics and Emotions Dr. Manuela Dal By Brad Knudsen, Refuge Manager Forno Speaks About the Fascinating very five years or so since 1997, the National Wildlife Ref- World of Lichens Euge System has undertaken an analysis of its economic impacts By Evelyn Kirby, Volunteer and Debbie to local communities. This series of Phillips, Volunteer Wildlife Educator studies is called “Banking on Nature,” with the most recent one being com- Knudsen Brad Photo by pleted in Fiscal Year 2017 (October 1, 2016-September 30, 2017). Patuxent Research Refuge was part of this re- view in 2006, but was not included in the 162 refuges that were part of the Cohen K. Photo by most recent study. The highlights of the report include: • The National Wildlife Refuge System estimated 53.6 million visitors to na- tional wildlife refuges. Patuxent has over 20 miles of hiking trails open to the public. • Trip-related spending by recreational visits generated $3.2 billion of eco- • Refuge recreational spending gen- nomic output in local economies. erated about $229 million in tax rev- enue at the local, county, and state Dr. Manuela Dal Forno. • As this spending flowed through the levels. economy, it supported over 41,000 n Sunday, July 14, the Friends jobs and generated about $1.1 billion Circling back to the 50-plus million of Patuxent was honored to in employment income. visitors, it is interesting to note that Ohave Dr. -
2016 GRANT LISTING 2016 Grant Recipients Exelon Corporation
2016 GRANT LISTING 2016 Grant Recipients Exelon Corporation Exelon’s vision of providing superior value for our customers, employees and investors extends to the communities that we serve. In 2016, the Exelon family of companies provided over $46.1 million to non-profit organizations in the cities, towns and neighborhoods where our employees and customers live and work. In addition, the Exelon Foundation contributed over $3.5 million to communities Exelon serves. Exelon’s philanthropic efforts are focused on math and science education, environment, culture and arts and neighborhood development. Our employees’ efforts complement corporate contributions through volunteering and service on non-profit boards. Our employees volunteered 171,341 hours of community service in 2016. In addition, employees contributed a total of $10.7 million to the charity of their choice through the Exelon Foundation Matching Gifts Program and the Exelon Employee Giving Campaign. Exelon Corporation (NYSE: EXC) is a Fortune 100 energy company with the largest number of utility customers in the U.S. Exelon does business in 48 states, the District of Columbia and Canada and had 2016 revenue of $31.4 billion. Exelon’s six utilities deliver electricity and natural gas to approximately 10 million customers in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania through its Atlantic City Electric, BGE, ComEd, Delmarva Power, PECO and Pepco subsidiaries. Exelon is one of the largest competitive U.S. power generators, with more than 32,700 megawatts of nuclear, gas, wind, solar and hydroelectric generating capacity comprising one of the nation’s cleanest and lowest-cost power generation fleets.