Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Penn State City Semester Pittsburgh Students Learn Urban Sustainability, Community Engagement

For five years, Penn State students have engaged Pittsburgh communities by spending their summer working on urban sustainability and engagement through
City Semester Pittsburgh

The semester-long program facilitated by the Franco Harris Pittsburgh Center at Penn State, offers students a three-credit course in urban sustainability, an internship with a community partner and experience in the field.

Madeleine Ryan is majoring in Landscape Architecture in the College of Arts and Architecture and is part of the 2024 City Semester Pittsburgh cohort. 

She is an intern with Riverlife, a nonprofit organization that works with Pittsburgh property owners, public officials and community groups to create, activate and celebrate the city’s riverfronts.

“This internship has provided me with important insight into government, nonprofit and corporate systems aiding Pittsburgh’s urban development. Because Riverlife is a nonprofit, most of their work is collaborative and supported by these groups,” Ryan said. “My time at Riverlife has given me a deeper understanding of these public processes and how designs come to life.”

Ryan is from Pittsburgh and said she deeply values Riverlife’s mission and hopes to stay in the city, use what she is learning in her internship and carry it forward into her career.

“I assisted with planning and design for multiple long-term capital projects that support Riverlife’s master plan entitled Completing the Loop, to create trail connections to fill gaps between Pittsburgh neighborhoods that are located along the riverfront,” Ryan said. “Through this work I have gained extensive knowledge in community engagement, and I plan on referring to this as a guide throughout my career.”

While working with Riverlife, Ryan also worked alongside youth from H.O.P.E. for Tomorrow, a program dedicated to teaching youth in the Pittsburgh area financial literacy, health, fitness and other life skills through after school programs and summer camps. 

Together they assisted in building accessibility ramps on the West End Bridge and created a community garden.

“This project empowers youth community members not only by allowing them to take ownership of a space in their neighborhood but also by teaching them useful skills,” Ryan said. “It was rewarding to hear that the children were excited that they now knew how to start a garden in their yards.”

As part of the completion requirements for her internship with Riverlife, she was assigned a site for a small design project that can inspire future projects at the site.

“I was given a small site along the Allegheny River that is adjacent to the Three Rivers Heritage Trail and 11th Street. The site is a desolate patch of grass downtown, but I am working on drawings to activate this space as a trailhead,” said Ryan. “This site is also at the beginning of Riverlife’s proposed art walk so I am proposing a sculpture garden, including way-finding murals. If this space came to fruition, it would provide trail users a safe, interesting space for respite.”

Chun (Pure) Zheng, urban design and community engagement specialist for Riverlife, said Ryan is working on initiatives that will teach her skills needed in project management, urban planning, community engagement and landscape design.

“She will learn how to navigate the complexities of urban development projects in Pittsburgh, from initial design concepts to community collaboration and implementation. This experience will be invaluable in her future career, providing her with practical knowledge and a deeper understanding of how to create and sustain vibrant public spaces,” said Zheng. “Those projects also have the potential to significantly enhance the community by creating accessible, attractive, and functional riverfront spaces. These improvements can lead to increased community engagement, improved public health through the promotion of outdoor activities, and economic benefits from increased foot traffic and tourism.”

Students who are a part of the City Semester Pittsburgh cohort will present a video about their community project at the culmination of the semester. Videos created by previous cohorts can be seen here.

To learn more, visit Penn State’s City Semester Pittsburgh webpage and other urban sustainability programs, visit the Franco Harris Pittsburgh Center webpage.

(Photo: Madeleine Ryan helping to plant a community garden.)

[Posted: July 31, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

RiverStewards: Hughesville H.S. Students Learn Fly Fishing, Connecting With Nature At A Deeper Level In Lycoming County

Revitalization of fly fishing is beginning in Hughesville, Lycoming County under the guidance of David Weigle and a partnership with
RiverStewards.

”We create moments for students to discover the love of fly fishing while building a community that creates curiosity, purpose, and giving back,” said Weigle, the club advisor,  describing the mission of Hughesville Fly Fishing Club.

HHS Fly Fishing Club holds fly tying sessions, casting practice, as well as knot tying and group outings on Muncy Creek. 

The Club also organized a stream cleanup of Muncy Creek with the Fish and Boat Commission.

RiverStewards’ partnership provides access to local waterways for this up and coming generation of Central Pennsylvanian fly fishermen and women through a generous donation of equipment.

Creating a lasting bond with our youth and nature is key to protecting and restoring the Greater Susquehanna watershed. 

Weigle and President of RiverStewards, Mark Gutshall, shared their knowledge and passion with students recently during a presentation at Messiah University for the 29th annual Rivers Conservation and Fly Fishing Youth Camp

Hosted by the Cumberland Valley Chapter of Trout Unlimited since 1994, students from all over the Mid Atlantic learn about ecology, conservation, and connecting to nature through fly fishing and habitat projects.

Future endeavors include the establishment of several new Flybrary Projects in Lycoming County, offering fly tying and fly casting instruction for community members and working with Project Healing Waters to support veterans.

Visit the Hughesville Fly Fishing Club Facebook page to learn more about Club activities and events.

For more information on programs, initiatives, upcoming events and how you can get involved, visit the RiverStewards website.

RiverStewards is a consortium of educational institutions, private sector companies, non-profit organizations, communities, government agencies and individuals working to conserve one of our most significant ecological, economic and recreational resources in central Pennsylvania, the Susquehanna River.

Related Articles:

-- PennVEST Announces Purchase Of Up To $7.1 Million In Nutrient, Sediment Reductions From Farm Conservation Practices In Lancaster County  [PaEN]  

-- Allegheny County Health Dept. Accepting Applications For $5 Million In Local Climate Resiliency And Adaptation Project Grants [PaEN] 

-- Penn State Extension Aug. 28 Webinar - Iron, Manganese, Hydrogen Sulfide In Private Water Supply Systems  [PaEN]

NewsClips:

-- LancasterOnline: Lancaster County Teachers Take To The Water With Millersville University 

-- Williamsport Sun: Chesapeake Bay Water Quality Report Card Should Spark Us

[Posted: July 31, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

Natural Resources Defense Council: The Cost Of Slow-Walking Clean Energy Can Be Seen In Latest PJM Electricity Prices

On July 30, the PJM Interconnection announced the results of its 2025/26 capacity auction, which revealed that costs will be roughly seven times greater than in 2024/25.   [
Read more here.]

The total capacity bill for the region will increase from $2.4 billion to about $14.7 billion, which could increase retail power bills by as much as 29% starting mid-2025. 

Following is a reaction from Tom Rutigliano, senior advocate with the Sustainable FERC Project at the Natural Resources Defense Council-- 

“The bill is suddenly due for an overreliance on fossil fuels and inadequate planning for a more affordable, diverse power grid in PJM. And customers throughout 13 eastern and midwestern states and D.C. will be the ones who pay the price.

“Make no mistake: this was foreseeable and preventable. This is what happens when regulators sideline a wealth of historically affordable clean energy resources waiting at their doorstep and the transmission needed to bring them online. 

“For years, the largest grid operator in the eastern U.S. has all but refused to diversify its resource mix and bring new energy online, and instead opted to depend excessively on an aging fossil fuel fleet while ignoring its reliability failures. 

“This sticker shock is a direct result of recent regulatory changes made to address those reliability failures.

“With so few gas alternatives online in PJM to absorb the shock, making up the difference is coming at a steep price that hard-working families and businesses in the region will pay – and revealing what a bad deal they had been getting for a supposedly reliable gas-run power system. 

“Diverse power grids are critical for reliability, and now we see just how critical they are for affordability. 

“With wind and solar only making up an abysmal two percent of resources in this auction, but the overwhelming majority of PJM’s project queue, it is clearer than ever that PJM needs to rapidly scale up new energy resources to protect customers and resilience. 

“The cost of PJM’s interconnection delays has now reached billions of dollars. Leaders in PJM states must demand accountability and solutions from their grid operator before they have to pay billions more in the next auction just five months from now.” 

Resource Links:

-- Pennsylvania’s Electric Grid Is Dependent On One Fuel To Generate 59% Of Our Electricity; Market Moving To Renewables + Storage  [PaEN]

-- PJM Makes Multiple Reliability-Focused Improvements To Prepare For Winter To Deal With 70% Natural Gas, Other Generator Nonperformance In 2022   [PaEN]

-- PJM Reports Natural Gas Power Plants Were Over Half The Forced Outages During Winter Storm Gerri In January; Special Procedures Used For Gas Generators Raised Questions About Market Impacts   [PaEN]

-- New NERC Winter Reliability Assessment Finds Elevated Risk Of Blackouts In Extreme Weather Conditions; Natural Gas Supplies Still Vulnerable To These Conditions With 'Devastating Consequences'   [PaEN]

-- US EIA Report Shows How Winter Storms Have Reduced US Natural Gas Production, But Disruptions Can Happen Any Time Of The Year   [PaEN]

Related Articles This Week:

-- PJM Electricity Auction Price 9 Times Higher Than Previous Auction-- $269.92/MW-Day For 2025/26 Delivery Compared To $28.92/MW-Day In 2024-25; Extreme Weather Risk Big Factor    [PaEN] 

-- PennFuture: Dramatic PJM Electricity Price Increases Due To Forced Outages Of Gas Power Plants; Huge Backlog Of New Generation Projects; Demand Growth Driven By Data Centers, Cryptocurrency Mining  [PaEN] 

-- Natural Resources Defense Council: The Cost Of Slow-Walking Clean Energy Can Be Seen In Latest PJM Electricity Prices  [PaEN]

-- Kleinman Center For Energy Policy: The High Price Of Failing To Transition To Clean Energy In PJM Footprint; Next PJM Auction Is In December - By John Quigley, Senior Fellow, Kleinman Center  [PaEN] 

-- House Committee Held 2nd Hearing On Governor’s Energy Plan To Diversify Energy Generation, Improve Grid Reliability, Lower Consumer Energy Costs  [PaEN]

-- DEP Awards $15+ Million In PA Electric Grid Resilience Grants To Prevent, Shorten Power Outages In Rural Electric Systems; Fall Grant Round Planned  [PaEN]

-- DEP Awards $2.3 Million To Schools, Businesses, Local Governments Switching To Zero- Or Low-Emission Vehicles; Now Accepting Applications  [PaEN]

-- PA Solar Center, Philadelphia Solar Energy Assn., Partners Host Aug. 14 Webinar To Get Eligible Schools Ready To Apply For The New PA Solar For Schools Grants  [PaEN]

-- Allegheny County Health Dept. Accepting Applications For $5 Million In Local Climate Resiliency And Adaptation Project Grants [PaEN] 

NewsClips This Week:

-- Utility Dive: PJM Capacity Auction To Lead To Double-Digit Rate Hikes For Exelon Utilities: CFO  [PECO]

-- Utility Dive: FirstEnergy Seeks Alternatives To PJM Capacity Market’s Dramatically Higher Prices To Bolster Power Supply

-- Meadville Tribune: National Fuel Natural Gas Rates Rising More Than 11% Aug. 1

-- Utility Dive: PJM Electric Capacity Prices Hit Record Highs, Sending Build Signal To Generators-- $14.7 Billion Up From $2.2 Billion In Last Auction 

-- Bloomberg: PJM Interconnection Auction Results In Record Wholesale Electric Price Increases

-- Renewable Energy World: Energy Prices At PJM Capacity Auction Skyrocket 9x: Oh, That’s Not Good

-- Reuters: PJM Power Auction Results Yield Sharply Higher Prices

-- S&P Global: PJM Power Capacity Auction Clears At Record High Price Of $269.92/MW-Day For Most Of Footprint

-- Power Magazine: PJM Capacity Auction Prices Surge Over Nine-Fold, Signal Urgent Need For New Power Generation

-- RTO Insider: PJM Capacity Prices Spike 10-Fold In 2025/26 Auction

-- Bloomberg: Almost 20% Of Americans Face Prospect Of Higher Energy Bills

[Posted: July 31, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

Penn State Extension Hosts Sept. 24 Webinar On Community Forestry - TreeKeeper - A Tool For Tree Canopy Management

The
Penn State Extension will host a September 24 webinar on Community Forestry - TreeKeeper - A Tool For Tree Canopy Management from Noon to 1:30 p.m.

Join us as Celine Colbert from DCNR Bureau of Forestry leads us through DCNR TreeKeeper, developed by Davey Resource Group. [Read more here]

This user-friendly online tool enables community tree managers to visualize canopy assessment results and plan future community forest management efforts by mapping their inventories using this free cloud-based tool.

Who is this for?

-- Municipal managers, foresters, and arborists

-- Others interested in helping improve environmental conditions for challenged persons and neighborhoods

What will you learn?

-- How TreeKeeper can help your Pennsylvania Community record inventory and planting efforts

-- Learn how TreeKeeper can show the future benefit impacts of alternative urban forestry goals and priorities

Continuing education credits are available.

Click Here to register and for more informationClick Here for TreeKeeper video.

Visit the Penn State Extension website to learn more about many other educational opportunities.  Click Here to sign up for Extension education programs - bottom of page.


(Reprinted from the latest Penn State Extension Community Trees newsletterClick Here to sign up for your own copy-- bottom of the page.)

Resource Links - Extension:

-- Penn State Extension: Why Did My Young Riparian Buffer Tree Die?

-- Penn State Extension: Guide Provides Advice On Managing Spotted Lanternfly

-- Penn State Extension: Shade Tree Commission Spotlight - Lewisburg Borough

-- Penn State Extension: High School Students Learn About Tree Care 

-- Penn State Extension: Arborist Short Course Series Starting Oct. 7

-- Penn State Extension: Is That Vine Damaging My Tree?

Related Articles - Extension:

-- Aug. 13-15  Penn State Ag Progress Days To Feature 400+ Commercial & Educational Exhibits; Field Demos; Forest Management; Stream Buffers Tour In Centre County [PaEN] 

-- Aug. 9 Penn State Extension Using PA iMapInvasives To Identify, Track Invasive Species

-- Aug. 23 In-Person Managing Invasive Plants Full-Day Penn State Extension Workshop In State College  [PaEN] 

-- Penn State Extension Hosts Sept. 6 Webinar On Classic Biological Control Of PA Invasive Species  [PaEN] 

-- Penn State Extension Hosts Sept. 24 Webinar On Community Forestry - TreeKeeper - A Tool For Tree Canopy Management  [PaEN] 

-- Find PA Master Gardener Workshops Near You

Related Articles This Week - Watersheds:

-- PennVEST Announces Purchase Of Up To $7.1 Million In Nutrient, Sediment Reductions From Farm Conservation Practices In Lancaster County  [PaEN]  

-- Penn State Center For Agricultural Conservation Assistance Training Hosts 3-Part Conservation Cornerstone Webinar Series For Ag Professionals Starting Aug. 27  [PaEN]

-- Penn State Extension Aug. 28 Webinar - Iron, Manganese, Hydrogen Sulfide In Private Water Supply Systems  [PaEN]

-- RiverStewards: Hughesville H.S. Students Learn Fly Fishing, Connecting With Nature At A Deeper Level In Lycoming County  [PaEN] 

NewsClips:

-- LancasterOnline: Caernarvon Twp. Farmers Model Watershed Restoration At Hammertown Run 

-- LancasterOnline: Lancaster County Teachers Take To The Water With Millersville University 

-- Chesapeake Bay Journal - Karl Blankenship: Chesapeake Bay Underwater Grasses Rebound For Third Year

-- Williamsport Sun: Chesapeake Bay Water Quality Report Card Should Spark Us

-- Pike County Conservation District: Harmful Algal Blooms - What Are They And What Can We Do? 

[Posted: July 31, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

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