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Wilkes University
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Environmental Education, Restoration, and Environmental Assessments
"Working to Restore Our Environment
![]() Mine Drainage Assessments Rehabilitation Plans Feasibility Studies Demonstration Projects |
Watershed Assessments, Data Gap Analysis, Study Design, Environmental Monitoring/ Training |
Some of Our Growing Greener Projects
Crescent Lake Watershed Assessment
Lake Carey
Watershed Assessment
Paradise Creek Watershed Assessment
(Powerpoint Presentations)
Roamingwood Wellhead Delineation and Capture Zone Analysis (2004 - 2005)
Harveys Lake
and Watershed Monitoring and Stormwater BMP Evaluation
Private
Well Owner Workshops and Testing Programs (Powerpoint)
Earth Conservancy: Acid Mine Drainage
Treatment
Using Constructed Wetlands and Watershed Monitoring
The Center for
Environmental Quality at Wilkes University has provided assistance to grass
roots organizations as part of the Growing Greener and other grant programs.
The Center is actively seeking community and organization partners and the
Center has provided technical assistance in grant preparation, budgeting,
project management, lake and watershed study design/implementation, QC/QA
Plan Preparation, laboratory and field testing, equipment selection and
training, database development, data gap analysis, and the integration of
GPS/GIS into project design. The Center for Environmental Quality has
also been active in Wellhead and Source Water Protection Projects, Environmental
Education and Outreach, and Groundwater Education.
If you need assistance, please do not hesitate to contact us at brian.oram@wilkes.edu.
Summary and History of Growing Greener Program
Signed into law by the Ridge-Schweiker administration on Dec. 15, 1999, and reauthorized by Gov. Schweiker in June 2002, this legislation will double the funding for the Growing Greener program and extend it through 2012. This increases DEP's portion of Growing Greener to $547.7 million from the original $240 million. Growing Greener will slash the backlog of farmland-preservation projects statewide; protect open space; eliminate the maintenance backlog in state parks; clean up abandoned mines and restore watersheds; provide funds for recreational trails and local parks; help communities address land use; and provide new and upgraded water and sewer systems.
The funds are distributed among four state agencies: the Department of Agriculture to administer farmland preservation projects; the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources for state park renovations and improvements; and the Pennsylvania Infrastructure Investment Authority for water and sewer system upgrades.
The total dollar commitment to the Growing Greener Program was recently doubled from $645 million to $1.3 billion and extended through 2012 by a permanent dedication of a new $4/ton municipal waste disposal fee to Growing Greener-- $50 million in FY 2002-03 (the balance going to the General Fund for this one year) and the full $94 million to Growing Greener from FY 2003-04 through 2012.
DEP's portion of Growing Greener has more than doubled to $547.7 million over the newly extended life of the program, from $241.5 million in the original program five-year program. DEP is authorized to allocate these funds in grants for:
Watershed restoration and protection;
Abandoned mine reclamation; and
Abandoned oil and gas well plugging projects.
Growing Greener is the largest
single investment of state funds in Pennsylvania's history to address
Pennsylvania's critical environmental concerns of the 21st century.
The Growing Greener Program is supported by the following agencies:
a) PADEP: Watershed Protection, Mine Reclamation, Oil and Gas Well Plugging, Technical Assistance, New and Innovative Technology Grants This application allows you to apply for five types of watershed grants on one easy form: Growing Greener Watershed, Federal 319 Nonpoint Source, Coastal Zone Management, State Flood Protection and Source Water Protection
Growing Greener Watershed Grant – to address nonpoint source pollution through local, watershed-based planning, restoration and protection efforts.
Federal 319 Nonpoint Source Grant (Nonpoint Source Management Grant for Federal Fiscal Year 2004) – must restore or improve the water quality of bodies of water impaired by one or more nonpoint sources or protect high quality waters. Funds not available until January 1, 2004.
Coastal Zone Management Enhancement Grants Program – encourages program refinements in one or more of the nine coastal zone enhancement areas. An assessment and strategy is completed every five years through an evaluation of the CZM Program to determine gaps to build upon to enhance the effectiveness of the program.
State Flood Protection Grant – reimbursement of up to 65 percent of costs for project improvements and non-routine maintenance of flood protection projects to local governments which sponsor existing state and federal flood protection projects.
Source Water Protection (SWP) Grant – fund the development and start-up of SWP programs to provide wellhead protection and/or watershed protection for surface-water sources.
Guidance Package (DOC)
(PDF)
(HTML)
Application
Package (PDF - 2.3MB)
Application
(DOC)
Online Application
b) DCNR: Open Space and Recreation Grants
c) PENNVEST: Wastewater, Drinking Water, Stormwater Management Grants
d) PDA: County Farmland Preservation Grants
The Department of Environmental Protection will be sponsoring a series of grant fairs throughout the State to provide assistance to questions about the Growing Greener and other grant programs. Grant applications and additional information is available at www.GrowingGreener.org.
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Field Data Loggers, Field Monitoring, Real Time Water Quality Monitoring and Global Positioning Systems |
![]() Stream Gauging, Flow Measurement and Water Budgets |
For More information about the Environmental Quality Center, please contact:
Attn: Mr. Brian
Oram, Professional Geologist (PG)
Laboratory Director
Wilkes University
Environmental Engineering and
Earth Sciences
PO Box 111
84 West South Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766
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