Water Resources

Fellow Story

Turner on Santa Barbara's new campaign to promote water conservation

UCSB alumnus and SBCWA Program Specialist Randy Turner said the website provides creative methods of water conservation that citizens might not already be aware of. “The new WaterWiseSB website has become Santa Barbara County’s go-to resource for all things related to water education and conservation,” Turner said. “We all have some awareness of water as a crucial resource and take steps to not blatantly waste water. Our website highlights the many new ways to save water most people don’t yet know about.”
October 25, 2012
Fellow Story

Hall new Executive Director of Humboldt Baykeeper

Humboldt Baykeeper welcomed a new executive director to its Eureka offices Monday. Jessica Hall, a Los Angeles native and registered landscape architect, worked as a watershed coordinator for the Santa Monica Bay Restoration Commission, private consulting firms and the non-profit North East Trees, before accepting the position of executive director for the nonprofit, a press release said. Hall will continue the work of prior executive directors by engaging stakeholders on policies, activities and programs that promote the health of Humboldt Bay, the release said.
October 24, 2012
Fellow Story

Sensenig's ecology class sampling water using new app

Goshen Dam Pond is becoming an outdoor laboratory for a group of 60 students who are sampling water to learn about the pond's health. Assistant professor Ryan Sensenig's ecology class at Goshen College has started a five-week project with the help of local environmentalists and a new mobile application developed by a Goshen company.
October 16, 2012
Fellow Story

Cleaning the Beaches of Mahahual

The Los Angeles Times also ran an excellent story on this subject: "An exquisite Mexico beach, cursed by plastic" (January 27. 2012)
September 28, 2012
Fellow Story

Holden's urban water quality project receives $1.25 million

What contaminants lurk in the urban subsurface, and what happens to them once they're there? Do they make their way into storm drains and creeks to reach groundwater, or even oceans? Or do they naturally attenuate as they migrate through soils, somehow allowing them to self-cleanse as they travel? A UC Santa Barbara researcher hopes to find out, thanks to a generous new gift to fund her work. Read the full story
August 9, 2012
Fellow Story

Hall featured in Grist story on Los Angeles River

Few weeks ago, Jessica Hall, a Los Angeles landscape architect who also co-authors the excellent L.A. Creek Freak blog, showed me around some of the little-known wetlands of the old Dominguez Slough, hidden in the South Bay cities of Torrance, Gardena, and Carson.
August 6, 2012
Fellow Story

Harp Falk on Chesapeake Bay cleanup progress

"There are many successes that we should be happy about today, but there are many shortfalls," said Hilary Harp Falk, director of Choose Clean Water, a coalition of the region's environmental groups. "And we need to stay the course in order to clean the rivers and streams that flow to the Chesapeake Bay." Read the full story
July 30, 2012
Fellow Story

Gartner and team receive Sustainable Forestry Initiative grant

The World Resources Institute (WRI), a global development and environmental think tank, will receive a grant of $35,000 USD to research how forest certification standards can help protect American lakes and rivers, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative® (SFI) announced today.
July 26, 2012
Fellow Story

Hall on call for help from Angelenos to map small creeks

Landscape architect Jessica Hall, a longtime advocate for "daylighting" streams in LA, says the small waterways that remain can be sources of confusion for builders and urban planners."I’ve seen this situation a few times where because the creeks are not mapped," she says, "building and safety officials aren’t aware of their presence and don’t know to take the steps that they need to take to protect the streams when a neighbor comes in and wants to McMansionize their property."
July 17, 2012