Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Laurel Hill Creek


Courtesy of The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (click here)
As a homeowner and avid fisherman on the Laurel Hill Creek this article disturbed me. I hope that the county/state is paying attention to these matters. Most, if not a majority, of the visitors to the area are outdoors people (hunting, skiing, fishing) and this is an issue we all take to heart.

Laurel Hill Creek a river at risk
Advocacy group lists it as endangered
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
By Don Hopey, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Laurel Hill Creek, a picturesque trout stream that tumbles its way through the Laurel Highlands in Somerset County and into the Youghiogheny River with much less water than it once had, has been named one of America's 10 most endangered rivers.
The designation, announced today by American Rivers, a nationwide river advocacy organization, said the popular fishing, swimming and kayaking creek is at risk due to excessive and growing water withdrawals by the township and borough of Somerset, two state prisons, two ski resorts and too few safeguards.
"We nominated Laurel Hill Creek for the American Rivers listing because more than 1 million gallons a day that should be flowing downstream is already being pulled out," said Krissy Kasserman, who heads the Youghiogheny Riverkeeper organization with the Mountain Watershed Association.
The resulting low summer flow levels in recent years have caused water temperatures to rise in the cold water fishery and forced the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission to cancel some trout stockings in the stream, located about 70 miles east of Pittsburgh.
And the problem is exacerbated, Ms. Kasserman said, by a water bottler that has proposed withdrawing an additional 108,000 gallons a day from Shaffer Run, a major tributary of Laurel Hill Creek.
Drilling companies also want to tap into the creek water for use in deep gas well drilling operations into Marcellus shale. Each of those deep wells uses between 1 million and 4 million gallons of water to fracture the shales and release the natural gas.
That deep shale formation, underlying about three-quarters of the state 5,000 to 8,000 feet below the surface, contains about 363 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas, enough to supply all of the nation's natural gas needs for 14 years. It's set off a frenzy of drilling activity, including one well within the Laurel Hill Creek watershed and three just outside the watershed.
Ms. Kasserman said all four of the well drilling companies wanted to draw water from Laurel Hill Creek. After challenges by local environmental groups and questions from state agencies, all four revised their applications and will now withdraw water from the Casselman River, a much larger flow in a nearby watershed.
A 2008 state Department of Environmental Protection water study identified Laurel Hill Creek as eligible for designation as a Critical Water Planning Area, but the state has yet to act on that recommendation or establish minimum flow criteria that could protect the creek's existing uses.
"Sucking too much water out of Laurel Hill Creek will destroy the very lifeblood that sustains local communities and the areas's popular recreation and tourism," said Rebecca Wodder, president of American Rivers. "Without the right safeguards, one of the Youghiogheny River's key streams will suffer irreparable harm."
Helen Humphreys, a DEP spokeswoman, said the department has begun analysis of 32 watersheds in the state, including Laurel Hill Creek, to determine their proper designations and protections.
"We are glad to see American Rivers shares our concern for the Laurel Hill watershed," Ms. Humphreys said. "We are moving quickly on the analysis and expect it to be completed this fall."
Other rivers on the 10 most endangered list are the Sacramento-San Joaquin River System in California; the Flint River in Georgia; the Lower Snake River in Idaho, Washington and Oregon; Mattawoman Creek in Maryland; North Fork of the Flathead River in Montana; Saluda River in South Carolina; Beaver Creek in Alaska; Pascagoula River in Mississippi, and the Lower St. Croix National Scenic Riverway in Minnesota and Wisconsin.
American Rivers releases a new "most endangered" list each year based on recommendations from river groups, environmental organizations, outdoor clubs, local governments and sportsmen's groups.
This year's list features rivers and creeks threatened by damming, mining, sewage pollution, oil storage facilities, highways and oil and gas development.
"Laurel Hill Creek is a Pennsylvania treasure," Ms. Kasserman said. "We have a responsibility to our communities and to future generations to protect this creek and to manage our water wisely."

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Tom Piccirilli


In an effort to (a. help broadcast to {to probably nobody-nobody reading my blog} The Coldest Mile by Tom Piccirilli (BLOG) and b. to whore myself to get a Free Book) garner a free book I am imploring that you visit your local book dealer and purchase this fine piece of work. For those of you under or un-employed - visit your local library.


Hope this suffices.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Tournament of Books


For the 5th year, The Morning News is hosting The Tournament of Books, which takes 16 of the most acclaimed novels of the year and pits them against each other, March Madness Style, in a bracketed, judged tournament to determine a winner (sort of tongue-in-cheek complete with thier own t-shirt {pictured here}). Past winners include:


Cloud Atlas - David Mitchell

The Accidental - Ali Smith

The Road - Cormac McCarthy

The Brief Wondorous Life of Oscar Wao - Junot Diaz

A bracket sheet in pdf is available so you can 'track' your favorite book as it advances through the rounds.

In the Sweet 16 this year are:

2666 - Roberto Bolano
Steer Toward Rock - Fae Myenne Ng
Netherland - Joseph O'Neil
A Partisan's Daughter - Louis De Bernieres
The White Tiger - Aravind Adiga
Harry, Revised - Mark Sarvas
Unaccustomed Earth - Jhumpa Lahiri
City of Refuge - Tom Piazza
Shadow Country - Peter Matthiessen
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks - E Lockhart
The Northern Clemency - Philip Hensher
The Lazarus Project - Aleksandar Hemon
A Mercy - Toni Morrison
The Dart League King - Keith Lee Morris
Home - Marilynne Robinson
My Revolutions - Hari Kunzru

For more information visit either Omnivoracious or The Morning News

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

President Obama


Like a lot of people I watched the President on the tube last night. Like or dislike - Democrat or Republican - you have to admit he is a great speaker. As for the plans and ideas, I hope they come to fruition - especially in education. I have been a fan (even before I saw this picture) since I witnessed his speech at the Democratic National Convention years ago. I am pulling for him and his ideas to lift us out of this economic turmoil we are in.

Monday, February 23, 2009

VA State Wrestling

Congratulations to Colonial Forge on their victory this past weekend at the State Wrestling Tournament (and to Fauquier, runner-up, as well).

Congrats to all the former A.G. Wright alumni who participated.

To those graduating - good luck in your futures. To those returning - see you on the Mat next season.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

VA State Wrestling Tournament

Good Luck to all Virginia Wrestlers participating in the AAA State Wrestling Championships this weekend at Oscar Smith High School - and a special good luck to one certain heavyweight from Liberty High School - Kory Gough.

For information on the tournament and to track your team/wrestler - visit Virginia Wrestling

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Eugenics

Only in America - Wow! The things I didn't know.

Courtesy of The Freelance Star (17 Feb 09)http://fredericksburg.com/News/FLS/2009/022009/02172009/446062


VIRGINIA STATUTE INSPIRED HITLER
Virginia, along with the rest of the United States, allowed compulsory sterilization before Adolf Hitler ever took power. One of Hitler's first moves when he came to power was the Sterilization Act, which was based on Virginia's statute, according to a 1993 documentary.
Through the 1970s, more than 70,000 Americans were sterilized under "eugenics," the science of good breeding. Those judged by the state to be defective or inferior were targeted, according to the documentary "The Lynchburg Story: Eugenic Sterilization in America."
Virginia passed its eugenics law in 1924 and routinely sterilized the blind and deaf, epileptics, those with tuberculosis and the homeless and poor.
More than 8,000 children and teenagers were sterilized at the Lynchburg Colony for the Epileptic and Feebleminded until 1972.
A test case of Virginia's sterilization law reached the U.S. Supreme Court in 1927. A woman who became pregnant after she was raped was deemed "morally delinquent" and "socially inadequate" and was sent to Lynchburg to be sterilized.
The court upheld the state's decision to sterilize.
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote the majority opinion in the case. He called the woman the feeble-minded daughter of a feeble-minded mother, who'd had several illegitimate children.
"Three generations of imbeciles are enough," he said.
The way he saw it, forced sterilization was the same as compulsory vaccination.