Environment
Festival Details and Directions:
Come enjoy a Celebration of the
Haw River with music, art, puppets, environmental displays and
activities. You can go down to Bynum Beach and try some river
monitoring and kids can take a short guided canoe ride on the river.
Kids can also paint their very own critter cut-out made by Bynum’s own
Clyde Jones. A fabulous Old Town canoe will be raffled and there’s a
silent art auction that includes works by Clyde Jones. There’s the
‘river of chalk” art project happening on the bridge, and much to learn
about the river, Jordan Lake and other environmental issues in our
watershed. The great cooks at the Ruritan Club will have tasty food for
sale all day.
Proceeds from the Haw River Festival help fund
our work throughout the year to protect the Haw River and Jordan Lake.
We are requesting a $5 donation for adults and $3 for kids under 14
years old (babies are free).
DIRECTIONS:
Bynum is located on the Haw River off of US 15-501, between Pittsboro and Chapel Hill.
From
Chapel Hill (and points north), go south on 15-501 for about 12 miles
and turn left onto Bynum Rd. (just after Allen and Son BBQ). Stay on
Bynum Rd and follow signs to parking and the Festival site.
From
Pittsboro (and points south), take 15 –501 north about 4 miles from
Pittsboro and turn right onto Bynum Rd, (before crossing the Haw River
on 15-501) and follow to dead end at river. Park on Bynum Beach Rd. and
walk across the Bynum Bridge to the festival site.
www.hawriver.org
Date:
Saturday, May 10, 2008 - 9:00am
Location:
The old Bynum Bridge on Bynum Road in Bynum, North Carolina
Duke University's Nicholas Institute and Nicholas School of the Environment are
hosting a discussion between the democratic candidates' environmental advisors.
______________________________________
What: Clinton and Obama on the Environment - A conversation between their
environmental advisors on how the candidates will handle emerging environmental
issues
Who: Dan Utech, Senior Advisor to Sen. Hillary Clinton on Energy and the
Environment, and Jason Grumet, Senior Advisor to Sen. Barack Obama on Energy
and the Environment
When: Friday, April 25th from 11:00am to 12:30pm with reception to follow
Where: Love Auditorium at Duke University's Levine Science and Research Center
Date:
Friday, April 25, 2008 - 7:00am to 8:30am
Location:
Duke University Nicholas School (LSRC)
Upon recommendation of the Orange-Chatham Group's Political and Executive Committees, the
North Carolina Chapter of the Sierra Club has endorsed the following
candidates for elected office here in Orange County. The Sierra Club supports candidates
with demonstrated knowledge of local environmental issues who will
provide strong leadership on matters including growth and conservation.
Orange County Commissioner:
- At-Large: Bernadette Pelissier
- District 1: Valerie Foushee & Pam Hemminger
General Assembly:
- NC Senate 23: Ellie Kinnaird
- NC House 54: Joe Hackney
- NC House 56: Verla Insko
The Special Transit Advisory Commission (STAC), appointed by the two Metropolitan Planning organizations (Capitol Area MPO and Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro MPO) is close to finishing up its work after nearly a year and 15 meetings to date. This has been a longer process than I think most initially envisioned (it was originally scheduled to be completed by October 2007) due to the amount and complexity of data that had to be reviewed, the different backgrounds of the 29 official members, and the thoroughness of the discussions that ensued.
The STAC members hope to approve a final draft of their report at their meeting on April 25th. The most recent (2nd) draft of this report can be obtained at http://www.transitblueprint.org/stac.shtml
Following the news that central NC has been upgraded from "exceptional" to "severe" drought, the OWASA home page maes it official: We have been de-escalated from Stage 3 to Stage 1 water restrictions!
Please don't go washing your cars all at once. ;-)
At the OWASA Board of Directors meeting on
April 10, 2008, the OWASA Board declared a Stage One Water Shortage
effective April 11, 2008 (rescinding the February 28th Stage Three
declaration). OWASA's storage capacity is now 70% full which
represents 400+ days of storage (assuming no rainfall and average
customer demand during the past 30 days).
In taking this action, the OWASA Board stressed that the drought is not over and that customers must continue to use water wisely.
The Board said they would continue to monitor water supply and demand
very closely and would return to more stringent restrictions if
conditions warrant.
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