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Kids Can Win DEC Camperships Through OCCA Essay Contest

Kids Can Win DEC Camperships Through OCCA Essay Contest

COOPERSTOWN – Today the Otsego County Conservation Association kicks off a countywide competitive essay contest which will send eight middle-school students to DEC Environmental Education Camp this summer.

Instead of spending time outdoors, today’s children are all too often inside, playing video games, watching TV or surfing the Internet. OCCA’s new Campership Sponsor Program is geared toward sparking the interest of this county’s youth in nature and, ultimately, getting them outside more.

Working with the Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society, OCCA will award eight winning essayists – seven from Otsego County and one from Delaware County, compliments of DOAS – with a week-long stay at New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Environmental Education Camp, the main focus of which is environmental education. Campers spend their week immersed in the natural environment and enjoy a balance of environmental education, sportsman education and outdoor fun.

Otsego and Delaware County students ages 12-14 (including 11-year-olds who will be 12 by December 1) are invited to compete for camperships via the essay competition. In 750 words or less, they are asked to consider “Why Kids Need to Experience Nature” and to examine the physical, emotional and social benefits of a healthy, active, outdoor lifestyle.

“Our new Campership Sponsor Program is educational, competitive and interactive,” said OCCA Executive Director Darla M. Youngs. “It helps reconnect middle-schoolers with nature through their writing skills and knowledge of science, combined with introspection and real-life experiences.

“Our goal is to strengthen the connection these kids have with the outdoors,” Youngs said.

Eight winning essays will be chosen: six from participating Otsego County schools, one from Delaware County entries, and one from Otsego County applicants at large. The deadline for essay submissions is February 17, and winning essays will be chosen by February 24. The contest will culminate with an awards ceremony and open house in the spring.

Complete contest rules and requirements are available by e-mailing admin@occainfo.org or by calling (607) 547-4488. Teachers are invited to incorporate the essay contest into their lesson plans and are asked to call OCCA in order to qualify as a participating school.

OCCA is a private, non-profit environmental membership organization dedicated to promoting the appreciation and sustainable use of Otsego County’s natural resources through education, advocacy, resource management, research, and planning. For more information on OCCA, or to support programming, call (607) 547-4488 or visit www.occainfo.org. The OCCA Campership Sponsor Program Essay Contest is made possible in part by funds from the Stewart’s Foundation.

PLEASE JOIN US FOR EARTH FESTIVAL 2012

Last year, more than 800 people attended Earth Festival at Milford Central School!

The date has been set for Earth Festival 2012. The event will be held on Saturday, April 14 at Milford Central School. If you would like to reserve a table, please fill out and return the attached form.

Also, event partners are being sought at the “Sustainable Forest” ($500-$999) and “Canopy” ($1,000 and up) donor levels. Please let me know if your organization is interested in donating and/or assuming organizational duties at a comparable level.

Whether as an exhibitor or sponsor, we would love to have you!

Darla M. Youngs

Executive Director, OCCA

Preliminary event details are included below:

EARTH FESTIVAL 2012 TO BE HELD ON APRIL 14: Planning has begun for the 7th Annual Earth Festival, set for Saturday, April 14 at Milford Central School. Returning is the traditional information and vendor fair from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the gymnasium. The popular pre-festival bird walk, to be led by Bob Donnelly from the Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society, will kick off the event again this year, and the EcoArt/Trendy Trash Contest and expanded children’s activities provided by Milford Central School will also be featured. New for 2012, Master Gardeners of Cornell Cooperative Extension Schoharie and Otsego Counties will host Spring Garden Day in conjunction with Earth Festival, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., with morning and afternoon classes on a wide variety of gardening topics suitable for both new and experienced gardeners. Morning session presentation topics will include garden design, composting, gardening with containers, and gardening using alternative methods. In the afternoon, Master Gardeners will provide new gardening product demonstrations and hands-on opportunities for participants to construct an alternative gardening project using recycle materials, such as a bottle garden or living wreath. Additionally, Master Gardeners will have a table at Earth Festival and will be available to answer any gardening questions. Earth Festival is an environmentally-focused, interactive event featuring exhibits, activities, vendors and entertainment, all with a fun, earth-friendly twist. Financial contributions are most welcome, and an open invitation to earth-friendly exhibitors, food and retail vendors is extended. Earth Festival 2012 is sponsored by Otsego County Conservation Association and WildLearn.com. For more information about Earth Festival, click on http://occainfo.org/documents/EarthFestivalMasterLetter2012FINAL2.pdf , call (607) 547-4488 or e-mail admin@occainfo.org.

RECYCLABLES TO BE COLLECTED AT EARTH FESTIVALEarth Festival 2012 will be held on Saturday, April 14 at Milford Central School. In keeping with the earth-friendly theme, a number of items will be collected for recycling. Event organizers invite attendees to drop off Styrofoam (white only), bubble wrap, empty inkjet cartridges, cell phones, eyeglasses, videotapes and CDs, and used nylon monofilament fishing line at no charge. An electronics collection will be held (some fees may apply), and Empire Recycling will be back with the ConfiData Shredder from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information about Earth Festival, visit http://www.occainfo.org/EarthFestival.htm, call (607) 547-4488 or e-mail admin@occainfo.org.

INVITATION TO PARTICIPATE – CLICK HERE

OCCA ECO-BULLETIN – Earth Festival 2012 and More!

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ECO-BULLETIN FROM OTSEGO COUNTY CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION

January 26: Vol. 5, No. 1

Eco-bulletin headlines this issue:

EARTH FESTIVAL 2012 TO BE HELD ON APRIL 14

BVA HOSTS TALK ON PEARLY MUSSELS

OCCA RELEASES SGEIS COMMENTS

START SAVING NOW FOR OCCA GARAGE SALE

OCCA CALLS FOR WITHDRAWAL OF SGEIS; ENDORSES TOXICS TARGETING RECOMMENDATIONS, HOME RULE

RECYCLABLES TO BE COLLECTED AT EARTH FESTIVAL

EARTH FESTIVAL 2012 TO BE HELD ON APRIL 14: Planning has begun for the 7th Annual Earth Festival, set for Saturday, April 14 at Milford Central School. Returning is the traditional information and vendor fair from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the gymnasium. The popular pre-festival bird walk, to be led by Bob Donnelly from the Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society, will kick off the event again this year, and the EcoArt/Trendy Trash Contest and expanded children’s activities provided by Milford Central School will also be featured. New for 2012, Master Gardeners of Cornell Cooperative Extension Schoharie and Otsego Counties will host Spring Garden Day in conjunction with Earth Festival, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., with morning and afternoon classes on a wide variety of gardening topics suitable for both new and experienced gardeners. Morning session presentation topics will include garden design, composting, gardening with containers, and gardening using alternative methods. In the afternoon, Master Gardeners will provide new gardening product demonstrations and hands-on opportunities for participants to construct an alternative gardening project using recycle materials, such as a bottle garden or living wreath. Additionally, Master Gardeners will have a table at Earth Festival and will be available to answer any gardening questions. Earth Festival is an environmentally-focused, interactive event featuring exhibits, activities, vendors and entertainment, all with a fun, earth-friendly twist. Financial contributions are most welcome, and an open invitation to earth-friendly exhibitors, food and retail vendors is extended. Earth Festival 2012 is sponsored by Otsego County Conservation Association and WildLearn.com. For more information about Earth Festival, click on http://occainfo.org/documents/EarthFestivalMasterLetter2012FINAL2.pdf , call (607) 547-4488 or e-mail admin@occainfo.org.

BVA HOSTS TALK ON PEARLY MUSSELS: The January meeting of the Butternut Valley Alliance, to be held this Sunday, January 29 at 1:30 p.m. in the New Lisbon Town Hall, will feature a presentation by Paul Lord and Tim Pokorny titled “Butternut Creek Sentinels: Pearly Mussels.” Sentinels are those assigned to look over or guard something of value. Pearly mussels are long-lived animals (100+ years) that move through, breathe and eat from the water. Their presence tells us much about the condition of a waterway. Lord and Pokorny surveyed several Butternut Creek locations in summer 2011, searching for four New York State pearly mussel Species of Greatest Conservation Need. What they found was beyond what they could imagine and contrasts markedly with nearby waters. The meeting is free and open to the public. The New Lisbon Town Hall is located at 908 County Road 16, Garrattsville (east of intersection SH51 and CR16). For more information, contact Ed Lentz at (607) 263-5425 or foxfallsfarm@gmail.com

OCCA RELEASES SGEIS COMMENTS: Earlier this month, OCCA submitted its official comments to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation regarding DEC’s draft regulations governing high-volume hydraulic fracturing for natural gas. Compiled by OCCA Environmental Planner Rima Shamieh, the comments include recommendations from a number of consultants and contributors. To read the complete document, click onhttp://occainfo.org/documents/SGEISOCCA010912.pdf.

START SAVING NOW FOR OCCA GARAGE SALE: OCCA’s Annual “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle” Garage Sale will be held on Saturday and Sunday, April 28 and 29 in the Cooperstown Farmers’ Market building at 101 Main Street, Cooperstown. Please begin setting aside items now for this fundraising event. The official collection dates for the OCCA garage sale will be April 22-26. All donations are tax deductible: OCCA will provide a donation voucher upon request. Those interested in dropping off materials sooner, or who would like more information about volunteering to assist with the event, should call (607) 547-4488 or e-mail admin@occainfo.org for further details. In addition to raising funds for OCCA programming, the garage sale also benefits the environment through waste prevention, or “source reduction.” Source reduction, including reuse, can help reduce waste disposal and handling costs, because it avoids the costs of recycling, municipal composting, land filling, and combustion. Source reduction also conserves resources and reduces pollution, including greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.

OCCA CALLS FOR WITHDRAWAL OF SGEIS; ENDORSES TOXICS TARGETING RECOMMENDATIONS, HOME RULE: In official comments submitted this month to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation regarding DEC’s draft regulations governing high-volume hydraulic fracturing for natural gas, the Otsego County Conservation Association has asked for an immediate withdrawal of the current document.

“OCCA recognizes and appreciates that the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation has worked extensively to improve environmental safeguards in its revised Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement on the Oil, Gas and Solution Mining Regulatory Program. However, we still do not believe the SGEIS adequately addresses the protection of water, air, wildlife or habitat, nor does it sufficiently mitigate possible environmental impacts by high-volume hydraulic fracturing to our ecosystem as a whole,” wrote OCCA President Vicky Lentz.

OCCA questioned numerous findings, procedures, and suggested mitigations in the SGEIS and noted DEC’s failure to evaluate cumulative impacts on the region in terms of water quality, air quality, agriculture, tourism, public health and safety, job markets, housing markets, and quality of life.

“The 2011 rdSGEIS fails to address cumulative impacts and appropriate remediation in any meaningful way,” the letter reads. “The gas isn’t going anywhere – we urge the state to make sure that both the technology and the process are perfected and proven before moving forward.”

On behalf of its 800-plus membership, OCCA’s final recommendation – in addition to immediate withdrawal of the current revised draft SGEIS – is that the DEC suspend all permitting until the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency concludes its study on the potential impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources.

In other related news, OCCA has written to Governor Andrew M. Cuomo in support of a November letter by Toxics Targeting which identifies numerous defects and/or omissions within the SGEIS.

“OCCA echoes the conclusion drawn by Toxics Targeting that the revised draft SGEIS fails to provide a meaningful plan to safeguard New York from the irreparable harm that could be caused by the vast industrialization associated with Marcellus shale horizontal hydrofracturing,” that letter read.

Among other recommendations, Toxics Targeting urged Cuomo to:

·         Ban gas drilling wastewaters from being discharged into publicly owned treatment works designed for sanitary waste or adopt strict pretreatment standards

·         Ban land-spreading of toxic gas drilling wastewaters

·         Identify New York areas prone to higher seismic activity and propose measures to prevent earthquakes potentially associated with horizontal hydrofracturing

·         Resolve EPA concerns about inadequate protection of ecosystems and wildlife

·         Assess cumulative impacts on a comprehensive basis

In a second letter to Governor Cuomo, OCCA asked that an amendment to Environmental Conservation Law be considered which: 1) authorizes local governments to consider whether natural gas drilling should be a permissible use within their  borders; 2) authorizes local governments to address natural gas drilling in their zoning or planning ordinances; and 3) allows the municipality regulatory control by special use permit should natural gas drilling be deemed a permissible use.

“Land-use planning touches on the many human activities which have an impact on our shrinking natural surroundings and addresses such concerns as unique natural habitats, water quality, traffic patterns, noise abatement, air quality, and light pollution,” the letter read.

“OCCA would be remiss in its role as partner and advisor to Otsego County’s municipalities if we did not ask for the immediate withdrawal of the current SGEIS and advocate as well for home-rule authority within the regulations proposed by the DEC.”

RECYCLABLES TO BE COLLECTED AT EARTH FESTIVALEarth Festival 2012 will be held on Saturday, April 14 at Milford Central School. In keeping with the earth-friendly theme, a number of items will be collected for recycling. Event organizers invite attendees to drop off Styrofoam (white only), bubble wrap, empty inkjet cartridges, cell phones, eyeglasses, videotapes and CDs, and used nylon monofilament fishing line at no charge. An electronics collection will be held (some fees may apply), and Empire Recycling will be back with the ConfiData Shredder from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information about Earth Festival, visit http://www.occainfo.org/EarthFestival.htm, call (607) 547-4488 or e-mail admin@occainfo.org.

OCCA Names New Executive Director

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OCCA Names New Executive Director

COOPERSTOWN – Following an extensive nationwide search, the Otsego County Conservation Association has announced that Darla M. Youngs is the organization’s new executive director.

Youngs has served at the OCCA helm as acting executive director since July 1, when former director Erik Miller left for a position with the Southern Tier East Regional Planning Development Board. Her promotion was made official in December.

“The Search Committee conducted a very deliberate and thorough search, and we are confident that we have the best person for the job,” said OCCA Board President Vicky M. Lentz. “Darla’s intimate knowledge of the organization and her extensive supervisory and managerial experience put her at the top of the list. We’re fortunate to have had the perfect candidate so close at hand.

“An added bonus is that the transition was seamless – we haven’t missed a beat,” Lentz said.

OCCA’s administrative director since October of 2008, Youngs originally focused primarily on bookkeeping, organizational and administrative oversight, fundraising, event planning, and newsletter design. Over time her responsibilities expanded to all program areas.

Since late 2009, Youngs has been responsible for public relations generated on behalf of OCCA, including press releases, eco-bulletins and “The Lookout,” OCCA’s quarterly newsletter. She has been a member of the Executive Board of the Otsego County Water Quality Coordinating Committee since 2007 and a member of the Earth Festival and Otsego Lakes Festival steering committees since 2006. For the past two years, Youngs has overseen OCCA’s annual “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle” Garage Sale as well as the Annual Meeting and Dinner.

Programmatically, Youngs has been increasingly hands-on in all respects, from water chestnut eradication on Goodyear Lake and trail clean-up at Basswood Pond State Forest to the Circuit Rider Planner Program and preliminary environmental reviews for Otsego Rural Housing Assistance. She has organized OCCA’s popular nature walk series for the past two seasons, and was instrumental in reviving both the OCCA-sponsored DEC campership program and the Natural Resources Survey mapping initiative. Fund-raising appeals, grant writing and website/social media development have also been among her focus areas.

After earning her associate’s degree in journalism from Morrisville State College, where she graduated first in her class, Youngs relocated to Long Island to begin her journalism career. Over the next 10 years, her on-the-job training – which she terms “invaluable” – led her to positions as managing editor and editorial design director of two prominent weekly newspaper chains.

In 1994, Youngs left her post as head of the production division of Richner Publications, where she directed a staff of 30-plus, to return to central New York so that she could raise her two sons closer to home, where they could enjoy farmland, rolling hills and forests as they grew up, as she had. At that time, she became production director of “The Freeman’s Journal,” the third oldest weekly newspaper in the nation. She continued with the Journal through a change of ownership, and was promoted to general manager by Otsego Templeton Publishing Co., Inc., then the parent company. She held that position from 2001-2006.

In 2006, Youngs left the paper to pursue a career that would allow her to spend more time with her family. She was hired by Otsego 2000, another local environmental nonprofit organization. In 2007, she was promoted to associate director there. While at Otsego 2000, Youngs administered the Cooperstown Farmers’ Market among other duties.

“Darla is a natural, strong leader.  Her ability to efficiently and effectively carry out administrative duties is a huge asset.  Since leadership and efficiency are crucial to OCCA’s success, these assets weighed heavily in her favor,” Lentz said.

Youngs said she looks forward to her new role at OCCA.

“I have been very fortunate in that I had the opportunity to train under Martha Frey and Erik Miller, two of Otsego County’s most successful environmental non-profit leaders. I intend to put what they taught me to good use,” Youngs said.

“The next step will be to complete our team. Rima Shamieh, OCCA’s new environmental planner, came on board last month and I’m currently interviewing to fill a newly-created program director position which will allow us to increase our programming in water and air quality, land protection, and livable communities, and will complement Martha Clarvoe’s work as special projects manager.

“This is an exciting time for us,” added Youngs.

Youngs grew up in Pine Woods and graduated from Morrisville-Eaton Central School. She is an award-winning graphic designer and sole proprietor of DM Youngs Design. She and her two sons – Morrison and John Darcy – live in Hartwick.

OCCA is a private, non-profit environmental membership organization dedicated to promoting the appreciation and sustainable use of Otsego County’s natural resources through education, advocacy, resource management, research, and planning. For more information on OCCA, or to support programming, call            (607) 547-4488       or visit www.occainfo.org.

PHOTO CREDIT: Photo by Richard S. Duncan

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Darla M. Youngs, Executive Director

Otsego County Conservation Association

101 Main Street, PO Box 931

Cooperstown, NY 13326

            (607) 547-4488      www.occainfo.org

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Audubon eagle trip Jan. 21

A reminder of the Delaware-Otsego Audubon Soc. field trip to view wintering Bald Eagles, scheduled for Sat., Jan. 21, 2012. The trip visits rivers and reservoirs in Delaware County where the birds concentrate to feed. Recent trips have turned up 20+ eagles. Other raptors and waterfowl are usually sighted on this trip. 

There will be a stop at a local restaurant for lunch for interested participants. The trip will leave the Dietz St. parking lot across from the YMCA in Oneonta at 8 a.m. Carpooling is strongly encouraged and participants can be picked up en route in Delhi and Walton. Return to Oneonta will be mid to late afternoon. For further information, contact Andy Mason, (607) 652-2162AndyMason@earthling.net.

If you are planning on coming along, and have access to hand-held walkie-talkies, bring them along.  We use them to communicate between cars.


THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

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