Maryland
UMD Program Plants Seeds of Stormwater Relief
Of the numerous methods downpours disrupt the small city of North Brentwood, Maryland—from flooded basements to sodden entrance yards—one specifically is stunning: the stroll to high school. One in all Prince George’s County’s oldest and lowest-lying cities alongside the Anacostia River is usually overwhelmed by rain, with water pooling on roads and sidewalks, leaving youngsters’s socks and sneakers squishy as they head to class.
“There may be water in areas we simply don’t anticipate,” stated Mayor Petrella Robinson. “It builds so quick and strikes swiftly. It’s an issue for North Brentwood, but in addition for locations all alongside the Anacostia watershed and calls for motion. It’s local weather change, so we should change.”
A pilot challenge administered by UMD’s Environmental Finance Heart (EFC) helps cities throughout Prince George’s County like North Brentwood hold the waters at bay by way of “conservation landscapes”—water-thirsty timber, shrubs and plantings that supply a line of protection in flood-prone areas.
Created in partnership with Maryland Black Mayors, the Nationwide Fish and Wildlife Basis and the Anacostia Watershed Society, the challenge is an outgrowth of the middle’s 12-week stormwater training collection to equip elected officers and employees in small Maryland municipalities with sources to handle stormwater impacts of their communities.
The bureaucratic means of managing stormwater might be as murky because the water itself, notably for smaller jurisdictions, stated Jacqueline Goodall, previous president of Maryland Black Mayors, who first reached out to the EFC about creating an training outreach initiative for the group in 2018. Local weather change, urbanization and antiquated infrastructure, she stated, have created an ideal storm; small municipalities, notably underinvested communities of coloration, aren’t any match for the now-regular flood occasions.
“For a lot of of those cities, it’s simply the mayor and a handful of part-time employees. We have to meet them the place they’re at and begin these conversations,” she stated.
Via technical programs and workshops, the stormwater collection helped employees from six municipalities draft stormwater motion plans that focused points like high-flood areas. Motion planning templates, data on grants and alternatives, and networking with service suppliers—offered like “velocity courting for stormwater”—helped municipalities determine new tasks. The thought for a pilot conservation panorama planting program got here after elected officers repeatedly voiced a vexing problem: How will we incentivize our residents to care about stormwater?
“These cities don’t have loads of public house to retrofit with stormwater mitigation interventions, like rain gardens,” stated EFC Program Supervisor Natalia Sanchez. “They wanted one thing to impress residents, but in addition transfer the needle whereas greater infrastructure tasks are deliberate and funded.”
The free conservation panorama pilot, which wraps up this month, outfitted 30 flood-prone properties recognized by municipalities with rain barrels and both timber or conservation landscapes.
Forest Heights home-owner Troy Lilly has seen the insidious influence of stormwater in his personal yard; within the winter, stormwater runoff transforms the underside of his driveway into an ice rink and has fractured the asphalt. As one of many pilot properties, he obtained a river birch tree, a species native to Maryland that can take in extra water and requires little upkeep. This system’s influence, he stated, has motivated neighbors and associates to observe swimsuit and spurred the city to discover different alternatives for increasing its tree cover.
“It’s a small step, but it surely builds momentum,” stated Lilly, who can also be city council president. “I believe taking part on this program has opened our eyes to the place else we will influence environmental points like stormwater and warmth island results. It’s vital to Forest Heights, so that is only the start,”
Digital workshops that passed off within the spring and summer season educated different owners on the advantages of native plantings for stormwater administration and supplied data on cost-fee applications they may apply on their very own properties.
“It is a extremely replicable initiative that may work throughout geographies,” stated Sanchez. “I believe there’s an urge for food for most of these partnerships. So long as there’s a want, the EFC shall be on the bottom working in communities.”
Maryland
2nd Bird Flu Case Detected At MD Poultry Farm
QUEEN ANNE’S COUNTY, MD — Maryland health officials on Tuesday said a second case of bird flu has been detected in a commercial poultry farm in Queen Anne’s County, according to a news release.
The case of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza marks the second in less than a week, according to the Maryland Department of Agriculture. The previous case was discovered at a poultry operation in Caroline County, officials said Friday.
The newest case brings the number of affected poultry operations in the Delmarva region to four. Last month, two cases were confirmed in Kent County, Delaware.
Confirmation of the Queen Anne’s County case is pending testing by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Veterinary Services Laboratory. Meanwhile, state officials have since quarantined the affected facilities and birds on the properties were being depopulated to prevent the spread of the disease.
Birds from affected flocks will not enter the food system, officials said.
Avian influenza — also known as bird flu — is a highly contagious airborne respiratory virus that spreads easily among birds through nasal and eye secretions, as well as manure. The virus can be spread in various ways from flock to flock, including by wild birds, contact with infected poultry, equipment, and the clothing and shoes of caretakers.
The virus affects poultry, like chickens, ducks, and turkeys, along with some wild bird species such as ducks, geese, shorebirds, and raptors.
According to the Department of Health, the risk of transmission between birds and the general public is low; however, those who work directly with poultry or dairy farms may be more at risk.
Learn more about avian influenza on the Department of Health’s website.
Residents and poultry producers are asked to report any unusual bird deaths or sudden increases in very sick birds to the MDA Animal Health Program at 410-841-5810 or after-hours to 410-841-5971; the Maryland Department of Natural Resources at 877-620-8367; or the USDA at 866-536-7593.
Maryland
Maryland’s second H5N1 bird flu detected on poultry farm
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