The River Blog

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Protecting Rivers & Your Clean Water

My Contribution To Stormwater Issues

Katie Rousseau, Associate Director of Clean Water Program
January 14, 2013 | Stormwater & Sewage, Urban Rivers

This morning I woke up to the sound of a rather heavy, but steady rain outside my window.  This sound made me feel calm and peaceful.  This lasted for only a minute before I thought about taking a shower and how the water I will use will contribute to an ongoing problem here in my community.  The problem, which many older industrial cities in the Great Lakes are dealing with on a daily basis, is combined sewer overflows. 

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River Conservation Fellowship: Accepting Applications

Fay Augustyn, Intermountain West Blue Trails Manager
January 14, 2013 | Climate Change, Floods & Floodplains, Water Supply

For anyone interested in engaging communities, preserving our water resources, and becoming a leader in the world of river conservation, the Anthony A. Lapham River Conservation Fellowship is the opportunity of a lifetime.

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Continuing on the Path to Climate Resiliency

Fay Augustyn, Intermountain West Blue Trails Manager
January 11, 2013 | Floods & Floodplains, Climate Change, Stormwater & Sewage

On January 1, 2013, Maryland’s Governor O’Malley signed an executive order requiring new and rebuilt state structures to consider climate change and rising sea levels in a state with the fourth-longest tidal coastline in the continental United States. This is a significant stride to keep Maryland’s coastal region resilient in the face of uncertainty.

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Communities Evaluate Wild and Scenic as Tool to Protect the Crystal River

Matt Rice, Director, Colorado Conservation
January 10, 2013 | Wild and Scenic Rivers, Most Endangered Rivers

A couple of months ago communities along the Crystal River in Colorado gathered in Redstone, CO and Carbondale, CO to discuss the appropriateness of a Wild Scenic Designation to protect the river from new dam and trans-basin diversion projects.  Four panelists with experience working to designate Wild and Scenic Rivers in Colorado and throughout the country spoke about various aspects of the law, challenges faced in designation, and recreational, ecological, economic benefits of designation.

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What is the National Blueways Initiative?

Jamie Mierau, Director, River Protection
January 9, 2013 | Blue Trails, Urban Rivers, Wild and Scenic Rivers

In May of 2012, Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar announced the new National Blueways System, a key element of America’s Great Outdoors, and designated the Connecticut River Watershed – covering areas of Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut – as the nation’s first blueway.

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Stanford University Under Investigation for Possible Endangered Species Act Violations

Steve Rothert, California Regional Director
January 8, 2013 | Dams & Dam Removal

The National Marine Fisheries Service has launched an investigation into whether Stanford University's operation of Searsville Dam has violated the Endangered Species Act by harming steelhead trout and other species threatened with extinction. Located on the Stanford campus in Palo Alto, CA, the dam blocks steelhead from migrating to 20 miles of spawning habitat upstream, it dewaters Corte Madera Creek below the dam, degrades water quality and habitat downstream and causes other negative impacts that harm species threatened with extinction.

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National River Cleanup® Top Ten List of 2012

January 7, 2013 | National River Cleanup

In the spirit of year-end countdowns, the 2012 results were calculated – and it has been a remarkable year.  With more cleanups than ever before, the number of volunteers picking up trash out on our nation’s river has gained momentum each year. 

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