By: Megan Lehman, DEP Northcentral Regional Office
Like hundreds of towns across Pennsylvania, Kulpmont, a borough in Northumberland County, was built around an industry that provided a livelihood for generations of families, but also left behind a troubling environmental legacy as that industry receded.
This October, local students dove into their past and took action to help build a healthier future for their community through a day-long field trip focused on coal mining heritage and water quality.
“We show students their past, how this city grew with the coal industry, the environmental debts that were left behind, what a healthy perennial stream looks like, and what we can do to fix an impacted stream now,” said Chantel Shambach, Watershed Specialist with Northumberland County Conservation District, who served as the event’s primary organizer.
The annual Coal Mining History and Water Quality Field Trip began in 2016 with support from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection’s Environmental Education Grant Program, and is made possible by the Shamokin Creek Restoration Alliance (SCRA) and other local business and nonprofit partners that work together to provide the necessary resources and funding.
The watershed group sees the annual event as a prime opportunity to teach the next generation about its goal of returning the local creeks to a healthy state and sustain native fish and aquatic life.
The day’s schedule rotated small groups of students through stations in multiple locations in the community, creating a fast-paced and immersive experience. Volunteers from the diverse sponsoring organizations provided educational lessons and demonstrations at each stop.
The tour began in Kulpmont, where participants viewed a historic mural of the Scott Colliery, around which much of the once-company town was built, and learned about coal history from SCRA volunteers; observed the site of Quaker Run, in whose channel coal was first discovered in 1790 before it was redirected and heavily impacted by the coal industry; and walked through Veterans’ Memorial Sports Complex, built on the former colliery site after an extensive land restoration process.
A 20-ton monument known locally as “Stonehenge” now stands at the complex to mark the discovery of coal.
“This is a wonderful area to convey to students an idea of how the environment was changed so drastically, how that stream was once a perennial stream and now is no longer running unless there is a large rain event, and learn why other waterways in their area are orange from acid mine drainage,” said Shambach.
A short bus ride to Weiser State Forest took students into a natural learning lab, with stations demonstrating macroinvertebrate sampling and identification, forested riparian buffers, healthy stream channels, and watershed management.
Students could instantly visually compare the natural, wooded stream at the state park with the severely degraded Quaker Run.
The day ended with students returning to Veterans’ Memorial Sports Complex to put all they learned into action and get their hands dirty by planting 60 trees and shrubs along Quaker Run to help accelerate its recovery.
“It felt really good to see how much fun the students had and how they soaked up the chance to help with environmental stewardship,” said Shambach. “We reach out to our youth because they’re our future. We hope that when they go home at the end of the day, they’ll continue the environmental stewardship and educate others.”
A total of 80 middle- and high-school students from Mount Carmel and Our Lady of Lourdes Regional Catholic School participated in the October 2018 field trip. The Conservation District and SCRA hope to include additional schools in the future.
They also plan to seek potential locations for future riparian buffer plantings, because the Quaker Run site is nearly full, thanks to the outstanding survival rate of past years’ plantings.
“My favorite part this year was seeing the growth of the trees planted in previous years,” said Jennifer Biddinger, a biology teacher and Envirothon Team coach at Mount Carmel Area High School, who has brought students to the event all three years. “The field trip is so well organized. It gives the students a chance to learn about their hometown history and experience a field study that reinforces the environmental and biological learning standards aligned with riparian stream buffers and reclamation. Also, on top of that, they can feel like they made a difference to their environment.”
“This program shows how community partnerships can educate the Commonwealth’s future environmental leaders about land use in their own community and how it impacts the water quality of local streams and rivers,” said Bert Myers, DEP’s Director of Environmental Education. “Perhaps the most admirable aspect of this field trip was the action students took by planting trees and shrubs along the stream to improve its riparian buffer.”
Jaci Kerstetter, Conservation District Field Representative for DEP’s Northcentral Regional Office, emphasized the value of community connections in environmental stewardship and education. “The continued efforts of local groups planning this event for several years running shows this town’s support for upcoming conservation leaders with real knowledge in outdoor experiences,” said Kerstetter.
The 2019 Environmental Education Grant round recently opened, with applications accepted through January 11, 2019.
The intent of the Pennsylvania Environmental Education Act, which created the grant program, is to promote environmental education principles that encourage the public to promote a healthy environment, foster an understanding of the natural world, and promote an understanding of the necessity for environmental protection and sound resource management.
The following organizations provided support for the 2018 Coal Mining History and Water Quality Field Trip: BB&T Bank; Borough of Kulpmont; Church of the Holy Angels; Kulpmont Knights of Columbus; Kulpmont Sportsmen Association; Landscape Services Inc.; Northumberland County Conservation District; Department of Conservation and Natural Resources/Weiser State Forest; Pioneer Construction Company; Sciccitano’s Buono Pizza; Shamokin Creek Restoration Alliance; and Williams Atlantic Sunrise Community Grant Program.
For more information on environmental education, visit DEP’s Teaching Green webpage and sign up for the Teaching Green newsletter.
For more information on environmental education, visit DEP’s Teaching Green webpage and sign up for the Teaching Green newsletter.
Megan Lehman is Community Relations Coordinator at DEP’s Northcentral Regional Office in Williamsport and can be contacted by sending email to: meglehman@pa.gov.
(Reprinted from DEP’s Blog.)
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