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Thursday, September 24, 2009

Holistic River Health

Hurray for legislation that actually includes appropriations! A great day for the people and animals, plants and other living things that depend on the Mississippi.
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press release from the USDA:

AGRICULTURE SECRETARY VILSACK ANNOUNCES MAJOR INITIATIVE TO IMPROVE HEALTH OF MISSISSIPPI RIVER BASIN $320 Million Available for Conservation Projects in Arkansas, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin

WASHINGTON, September 24, 2009-Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced a new initiative to improve water quality and the overall health of the Mississippi River Basin in taped remarks to the Gulf Hypoxia Task Force Meeting in Des Moines, Iowa. The Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watersheds Initiative (MRBI) will provide approximately $320 million over the next four years for voluntary projects in priority watersheds located in 12 key states. Participation in this initiative, which will be managed by USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), will be made available through a competitive process for potential partners at the local, State and national levels.

"The Obama Administration is committed to taking bold steps with our State and local partners to clean up the entire Mississippi River Basin, a critical natural resource that provides drinking water for tens of millions of Americans," said Vilsack. "Industrial, municipal, residential, and agricultural sources have all contributed pollutants to the waters of the Mississippi River Basin, and the MRBI will provide resources that will help us come together to address this issue."

Secretary Vilsack's announcement can be viewed online at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Rwi5rJ3eNE


The natural capacity of the Mississippi River Basin to remove nutrients has been diminished by a range of human activities over the years, including modification of floodplains for agricultural and urban land. MRBI will help agricultural producers implement conservation and management practices that avoid, control, and trap nutrient runoff. The initiative is performance oriented, which means that measurable conservation results are required in order to participate. By focusing on priority watersheds in these 12 states in the basin, USDA, its partner organizations, State and local agencies, and agricultural producers will coordinate their resources in areas requiring the most immediate attention and offer the best return on the funds invested.

"USDA is going to partner with farmers to implement a range of land stewardship practices, including conservation tillage, nutrient management, and other innovative practices," said Dave White, Chief of NRCS. "We all live downstream of other water users and this initiative will help make the Mississippi River Basin and the Mississippi River and its tributaries healthier for everyone."

In addition to other federal, State, and partner funding, NRCS is targeting $80 million annually over the next four years through Cooperative Conservation Partnership Initiative, Conservation Innovation Grants, and the Wetlands Reserve Enhancement Program. This is in addition to other NRCS program funding and assistance such as Environmental Quality Incentives Program, Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program, and the Conservation Stewardship Program. These funds will be available for projects in Arkansas, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.

MRBI will focus on 8-digit or smaller hydrologic units (watersheds) that contribute high loads of nutrients in the Mississippi River Basin. Priority watersheds for the initiative will be identified by NRCS in consultation with conservation partner organizations and State Technical Committees. Watersheds will be selected using an evaluation process that will include information from the Conservation Effects Assessment Project, the USGS Spatially Referenced Regression on Watersheds Attributes, state-level nutrient reduction strategies and priorities, and available monitoring and modeling of nitrogen and phosphorus levels in the Basin. Using this watershed evaluation process will ensure water quality and nutrient issues are improving as part of MRBI.

The Mississippi River Basin is a critical ecosystem to the United States. Its entire land mass, totaling 41 percent of the contiguous United States and 15 percent of North America, drains into the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico.

The Mississippi River runs 2,350 miles from its headwaters at Lake Itasca, Minnesota, to the mouth of the Gulf of Mexico and carries an average of 436,000 tons of sediment each day. It takes about 90 days for water to travel from the headwaters in Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico where water is discharged at an average rate of 600,000 cubic feet per second.

Assessment of the progress in implementing MRBI will be critical, as will evaluation of outcomes at the field scale/edge-of-field and on the watershed basis. Successful measures of the initiative will include a reduced nutrient footprint and environmental impact through more efficient use of nutrients for crop production in the priority watersheds.

For information about the Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watersheds Initiative, including eligibility requirements, please visit www.nrcs.usda.gov or your USDA Service Center.


Friday, September 18, 2009

Videos=Understanding

Give me immediate comprehension.

I don't want to wade through gobbily-gook. I get frustrated if a concept is simple, but I don't get it right away. Especially with technology. (I remember being 12 and not understanding the difference between email and the internet...it was a rough spot, but I got through it. Thanks, Susanna).

But with all the new technologies out there, new concepts are constantly entering our vocabulary. Wiki, blog, tweeting... new words into the world, full of possibility (and responsibility).

How do you make sense of it all? I just found out about Commoncraft.com, which is using technology to explain technology. It's a beautiful thing. It breaks down concepts and you don't even have to read! You just watch a video. How fitting for our sound byte culture-- a 3 minute video.

Good communication is good communication, plain and simple. I was excited to learn about commoncraft and think this concept could be applied at my work and in many other venues. Who wants to read a 10 page orientation packet? Watch a video and comprehend in half the time!

However, it is good to provide information in a variety of forms, for all the different learning styles. Reading, watching, listening...All of it. Bottom Line: if it's important, you need to understand it. So, hurray for new technologies! And hurray for taking a break from it!

Friday, September 11, 2009

Friday afternoon Florets

Your spider plant
lowers a limb
in front of my screen
extending with gravity.
Six stamens
reach further,
the yellow pollen
suspended from the
starfish-like petals,
six in soft white
arching back
to punctuate the nectar.
Friday brings thanks for
such graceful,
delicate florets
decorating
this helter-skelter
prolific plant.