We use grassroots efforts to kill grass roots! This overview of the successes and challenges of establishing the Northeast Michigan Cooperative Weed Management Area (CWMA) will include topics like creating a scalable treatment program, working on public and private lands, prioritizing sites while including all landowners, and creating motivation to solve a problem that isn’t necessarily visible to often absent seasonal landowners. Ecologist Jennifer Muladore, who manages the Huron Pines Invasive Species Program and coordinates the Northeast Michigan CWMA, will lead group discussion and show visuals to help other invasive species program organizers boost their own program’s capacity for restoration success. This presentation was given by Jennifer Muladore, Ecologist, Huron Pines.
This panel will address whether threats from climate change, mercury emissions and other effects of fossil fuel dependence justify development of offshore wind in select areas of the Great Lakes. What state and federal regulatory schemes currently exist and are they adequate to protect the lakes? How are regulators, developers and environmental groups addressing wind development and environmental protection?
To restore Lake Erie to full health, we must reduce the amount of stormwater runoff it absorbs. Fortunately, green infrastructure can provide relatively low-cost solutions that contribute to this restoration. This workshop explores green infrastructure policies, programs, and projects in the City of Cleveland, leading to more effective stormwater management.
We use grassroots efforts to kill grass roots! This overview of the successes and challenges of establishing the Northeast Michigan Cooperative Weed Management Area (CWMA) will include topics like creating a scalable treatment program, working on public and private lands, prioritizing sites while including all landowners, and creating motivation to solve a problem that isn’t necessarily visible to often absent seasonal landowners. Ecologist Jennifer Muladore, who manages the Huron Pines Invasive Species Program and coordinates the Northeast Michigan CWMA, will lead group discussion and show visuals to help other invasive species program organizers boost their own program’s capacity for restoration success. This presentation was given by Jennifer Muladore, Ecologist, Huron Pines.
This panel will address whether threats from climate change, mercury emissions and other effects of fossil fuel dependence justify development of offshore wind in select areas of the Great Lakes. What state and federal regulatory schemes currently exist and are they adequate to protect the lakes? How are regulators, developers and environmental groups addressing wind development and environmental protection?
To restore Lake Erie to full health, we must reduce the amount of stormwater runoff it absorbs. Fortunately, green infrastructure can provide relatively low-cost solutions that contribute to this restoration. This workshop explores green infrastructure policies, programs, and projects in the City of Cleveland, leading to more effective stormwater management.