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The “tree army” installs wooden spawn boxes for fish
The US Army Corps of Engineers will host National Public Lands Day events at various lakes throughout the Pittsburgh District. In 2010, more than 500 volunteers came to 15 of 16 Pittsburgh District recreation projects and provided 2,179 hours of work valued at nearly $47,000. National Public Lands Day keeps the promise of the Civilian Conservation Corps, the “tree army” that worked from 1933-1942 to preserve and protect America’s natural heritage.
A local event at Mahoning Creek Lake will be held Sept. 24. This year the goal is to accomplish the building and placement of some fish habitat spawning boxes in the lake. If time permits, shore line clean-up will be done. Volunteers are asked to meet at 9:30 a.m. at the Milton Loop Campground pavilion, on Route 839, two miles north of Dayton.
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The project will be to build wooden spawn boxes and then taking them by boat to place them in the lake. Event will take place rain or shine. Questions may be directed to Park Ranger Grover Pegg 412-719-9227.
Wyoming Game and Fish Habitat Improvement
The Bureau of Land Management, within the Department of the Interior, has announced funding of $750,000 to support the Wyoming Game and Fish Habitat Improvement Project.
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This funding will aid in the understanding, enhancement and protection of fish, wildlife, and plant species. This will be done through projects, data sharing, conducting studies, and through education and information dessimination.BY MICHAEL SAUNDERS
For more information on this government grant visit:
Fish habitat plan unveiled for northwest quadrant of Kemptville
Highlighting the natural environment with a “green corridor” and a unique approach to stormwater servicing are two features of a recently introduced concept plan for the long-term development of the northwest quadrant of Kemptville.
Forbes Symon, director of planning and development, unveiled the summary of work done on the concept plan to date to council during the Sept. 6 Committee of the Whole meeting. The idea is to create a planned community in the northwest quadrant, which are the lands located north of County Road 43 and west of County Road 44. These lands were added into the urban boundary of Kemptville during the 2009 five-year review of North Grenville’s Official Plan.
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“It was intended to accommodate a large proportion of the future residential growth of the Kemptville urban area,” Symon explained, adding that the Official Plan outlined a need to develop some sort of master plan to guide the growth. “One thing the Official Plan said…was to involve all property owners in developing a master plan that all developers can follow.”
“In actual fact, it’s a planned community, which was a new experience for me and it’s a unique experience for small towns to have a relatively large area like this to plan communities in,” he continued.
The draft concept plan features protection of the more than 52.6 hectares (130 acres) of wetlands in the northwest quadrant as well as a drainage greenway, five low maintenance naturalized ponds to address stormwater servicing, as well as a link to a trails system, paths for pedestrians and cyclists and the possibility of establishing an interpretive trail and boardwalk in the future. The main entrance to this planned community would be situated across from the North Grenville Municipal Centre on County Road 44, with a secondary entrance located on County Road 43 and another further down County Road 44.
According to Symon’s report on the matter, it was important for the plan to identify environmental hazards and constraints, road networks, natural heritage features, linkages for pedestrians, water, sanitary and stormwater servicing, as well as parkland needs. “It would be anticipated that the individual development proposals would complement the agreed upon concept plan for the area,” he stated in his report.
One of those developments already in the works is the approved 480-unit Oxford Village subdivision. In the subdivision proposal, a need for a new sanitary pump station, stormwater management infrastructure and a new municipal well to accommodate the new units was highlighted.
Work on the concept plan began in spring 2010 and major property owners within the quadrant were invited to take part in what Symon calls a concept planning exercise. Engineers, landscape architects, biologists and planning professionals, as well as the Rideau Valley Conservation Authority (RVCA) were also brought to the table and last fall, an environmental review was undertaken.
“Since then over the last year we’ve been working on dealing with a number of technical issues that we faced with master planning this area,” he said, with the wetlands located in the middle of the northwest quadrant being the primary issue.
How to manage stormwater servicing was another concern, which led the group to come up with an “innovative, state-of-the-art approach of dealing with stormwater,” Symon said.
The solution, which has only been used in smaller areas previously, involves the five low maintenance naturalized ponds which will be placed throughout the planned community. Karen Dunlop, director of public works, said if all goes well, these ponds should only need to be cleaned of sediments every 20 years.
A focus has also been placed on ensuring the existing fish habitat thrives as ditch work in the community will force a relocation of the habitat. It is something the RVCA is monitoring closely.
“We will compensate and create a new fish habitat,” Symon explained.
Councillor Terry Butler questioned how many homes would be going into this planned community.
“When the Official Plan review was done, there was an estimation there could be between 2,500 and 3,000 homes go in over a 20-year period,” Symon commented. “At this point in time that number’s closer to the lower number of 2,500 because the wetland ended up being larger than it was originally mapped.”
“We haven’t had a complete analysis done on the maximum or minimum density but that will come out later. This (report) is literally hot off the presses,” he added.
While he had concerns with the primary entrance to the community being on County Road 44, which Symon said was better from a “promotional standpoint,” Butler wondered how this concept plan would fit in with the United Counties of Leeds and Grenville’s County Road 43 master plan.
“The 43 master plan anticipated this development and the volume of traffic coming from the area…we’ve worked at trying to fit the concept plan into the 43 long-term design,” Symon noted, adding that traffic impact studies would be conducted later on in the process.
Another issue was the cost associated with this planned community. Symon indicated all along the mentality of the municipality has been that growth will pay for growth.
“The previous council commented on this when the eastern quadrant was financed by the municipality to open up employment lands but the municipality is not going to finance for residential lands,” he explained. “eQuinelle set the bar with that when they paid their own costs…at least at this point in time it’s anticipated that development will pay for infrastructure needs such as the well, pump lines, station, roads, etc. So there aren’t going to be public expenditures for this development.”
Councillor Tim Sutton wanted to ensure all developers with a stake in the lands were in agreement with the plan.
“All have been well represented at the table,” Symon confirmed.
Mayor David Gordon was relieved to hear that this development would be taking place over a 20-year period. “We need to have the choice to control growth. I think this is a good concept,” he said. “It seems more like an eco-village.”
After Symon introduced the concept plan to council, Symon stressed there is also a need to go through a Class Environment Assessment (EA) for the stormwater and sanitary servicing. Once the EA has commenced, which will take four to five months to complete, the public will be introduced to the planned community through a public meeting set for sometime this fall.
“We think we’ve come up with a document that’s going to guide development in this area for the future…This is going to be one of the most attractive residential projects in the community,” Symon concluded.By Ashley Kulp
Wekepeke Brook Meeting held on fish habitat study results
Anglers to be honoured for support for salmon renewal
When they came together in the late 1990s to help protect fish habitat during construction of the Island Highway through the Comox Valley, they became a formidable force Continue reading “Anglers to be honoured for support for salmon renewal”
Arizona fish habitat video for Apache lake
See what work is being done on a large scale in Arizona in the name of fish habitat.
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Fish Habitat Project Starts on the Ashtabula River
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency is coordinating a federal, state and local effort to develop 1,500 feet of fish shelf in the lower two miles of the river, an area best known for its hard-armored and sheet-piled riverbanks. The project will provide northern pike, muskellunge and other native fish species a shallow water habitat necessary for foraging and spawning. “We are nearly tripling the Continue reading “Fish Habitat Project Starts on the Ashtabula River”
Stream restoration hurts fish more than grazing
Some ranchers in eastern Oregon are crying foul over a stream restoration project they believe has caused more harm to threatened fish than cattle grazing. See the dozens of unique artificial fish habitat models, fish attractors and fish cover used at fishiding.com, the industry leader and only science based, man made and artificial fish habitat, proven to provide all fish with cover they prefer to prosper.
“To see the devastation that occurred in the name of fish habitat is just mind-boggling,” Curtis Martin, incoming president of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association, said.
Ranchers who rely on numerous allotments in the Malheur National Forest for cattle grazing must comply with strict standards to prevent damage to stream banks and fish habitat.
Grazing in the national forest is the subject of litigation by environmental groups, and the practice has long been contentious along Camp Creek, part of the John Day River watershed where the restoration work is taking place.
Ken Holliday, a rancher in the area, said the U.S. Forest Service restoration project has involved heavy machinery tearing out vegetation and moving logs along more than 6 miles of stream.
Compared to such activity, grazing is much less disturbing to the habitat of steelhead and salmon that are federally protected under the Endangered Species Act, Holliday said.
“The double standard between logging, grazing and what they can do is off the chart,” he said. “You can run cows forever and not do what they did.”
Apart from restrictions on grazing cattle in the national forest, regulations often prevent ranchers from conducting similar activities involving heavy equipment within streams on their private land, Holliday said.
“Does anybody see the irony here?” he said.
Martin said ranchers aren’t trying to be abusive of the Forest Service, but the level of disruption to Camp Creek seems bizarre in light of the concerns about impacts to fish from stream bank alteration.
The group plans to file a Freedom of Information Act request to determine what standards the Forest Service had to meet and what environmental analysis the project had undergone, he said.
“We’re trying to get a level playing field where everybody plays by the same rules,” Martin said.
John Gubel, a Forest Service district ranger overseeing the project, said he could see why the project would raise the ire of ranchers.
“I understand their concern because the pressure is on them to meet these standards,” he said.
However, the restoration work is necessary for two reasons, said Gubel.
First of all, Camp Creek and its tributaries contained several elevated culverts that were barriers to fish passage, he said. Those were replaced with “bottomless arches” that allow unimpeded migration.
Secondly, the agency sought to correct previous restoration work that was overseen by Forest Service managers in the 1980s and 1990s, he said. At that time, logs were placed across the stream to create pools for fish.
As the Forest Service monitored the effects of this project, it turned out the “log weirs” had inadvertently led to new problems in the creek, Gubel said.
“They were put in to create pools, but instead they made the stream shallower and wider,” thereby increasing temperatures to the detriment of fish, he said.
The current restoration work sought to remove, cut or reorient those logs to restore a sinuous “snakelike” movement to the creek, he said.
Heavy machinery was used from mid-July to mid-August, a time when such activity is less damaging to fish, and now the agency plans to re-vegetate the affected areas, Gubel said.
The culvert replacement cost about $345,000 and the weir alteration cost about $70,000 to $100,000, paid for with funding from the Forest Service, the Ecotrust nonprofit group and the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation, he said.
The project will work to boost fish populations, which would allow for continued or elevated grazing over the long term, he said.
The impacts on habitat will only be for the short term, since such activities only rarely occur within the stream, Gubel said.By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI
“The last time we messed around in the creek was 20 to 30 years ago.”