Delaware River Basin Commission - News Release Project managers and contact persons for the cooperative program are. Bob Limbeck,delaware River Basin Commission (609883-9500 ext 230); and Fred Stine, http://www.state.nj.us/drbc/release4.htm
Extractions: (WEST TRENTON, N.J., June 22, 1998) The Delaware River Basin Commission and the Delaware Riverkeeper Network today announced the startup of the Lower Delaware Cooperative Monitoring Program. The Commission is an interstate-federal water resources agency while the Riverkeeper Network is an organization of citizen activists. The Commission and the Network are uniting under the umbrella of the Delaware River Greenway Partnership to initiate a joint pilot water quality and ecological monitoring program for the section of the Delaware from the Lambertville wing dams to Trenton. The Greenway Partnership is a consortium of over 140 agencies, organizations, and individuals interested in the condition of the Delaware River. Although the States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey conduct water quality monitoring activities in the Lower Delaware (the 80-mile reach of river from the Delaware Water Gap to Trenton), additional monitoring is needed as recognized in the recently released National Park Service Lower Delaware River Management Plan for the proposed Lower Delaware national scenic river. Concerns for the health of the increasing numbers of recreational river users and for that of resident fish prompts the need for increased monitoring. Although funds are not available for a fully operational program for the entire river section, the Commission and the Riverkeeper Network have pooled resources to initiate the pilot program. It is anticipated that the experience and information gained from the pilot effort will prove useful when funding is found for a larger program in subsequent years.
Pictureagg USDA logo delaware Agricultural NASS logo. Statistics service. A State StatisticalOffice of the National Cooperative Extension Weekly Reports http://www.nass.usda.gov/de/
Communications Office - Weekly Report - July 8, 2004 Moore is being honored for her 36 years of service as an NWS Cooperative Observer . (Contact Lauren Morone, W/NP, 301763-8000, ext. 7010) http://www.nws.noaa.gov/com/weekly/wk070804.htm
Extractions: NWS Input to NOAA's Weekly Report - July 8, 2004 HOT ISSUES I. KEY DEPARTMENT NEWS The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) National Weather Service (NWS) Forecast Office in Spokane, WA, to Present Holm Award. All of the following italicized items will appear in the internal NWS version of the weekly report ONLY. They will not be forwarded to NOAA. NOAA's National Weather Service (NWS) Dispatches Incident Meteorologists (IMETs) to Alaska Fires. As of 8:00 a.m. ADT on July 8, 2004, 2.1 million acres have burned in Alaska since June 13-14, when a record setting number of lightning strikes affected much of the interior of Alaska. There are currently 73 active fires, with a total of 1,682 personnel spread among 20 of those fires. Two NWS IMETs and one IMET trainee have been dispatched to Alaska. NWS IMETs assist in efforts to combat wildfires that rage annually across the Nation. IMETs are a small group of experienced fire weather forecasters (54 certified nationwide) who are sent to locations throughout the U.S. to support wildfire operations and help support the safety of the fire fighters. Another NWS IMET will likely be dispatched early next week. Weather conditions for the remainder of the week indicate dryer and warmer weather with a potential for new fire starts from lightning strikes later this week. (Contact: Laura Furgione, W/AR, 907-271-5136) NOAA's Tropical Prediction Center To Give Tour and Briefing to International Red Cross Societies.
CSREES - USDA - Urban Program Resources CSREES, Cooperative State Research, Education, and extension service Mississippi State University extension service virgilc@ext.msstate.edu. Missouri http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/family/part/urban_part_contacts.html
The Work Site - Social Security Online Birmingham, AL 35233 866 2591745 ext. 102 service Areas Alabama Department ofRehabilitation South Dakota, Black Hills Special services Cooperative http://www.ssa.gov/work/ServiceProviders/BPAODirectory.html
Extractions: Social Security Online The Work Site www.socialsecurity.gov Home Questions? How to Contact Us ... The Work Site Home You are here: The Work Site Home Service Providers Information for: Youth With Disabilities Employers Beneficiaries Service Providers Advocates General Information on: About Us Events The Work Site Search Resources Toolkit ... Ticket To Work Benefits Planning Assistance Outreach Program (BPAO) Cooperative Agreements - Contact Information As authorized by the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999, the Social Security Administration (SSA) established a grant program called Benefits Planning, Assistance and Outreach (BPAO). Under this program, cooperative agreements (monetary awards) were granted to community-based organizations, called BPAO Projects, to provide all SSA beneficiaries with disabilities access to work incentives planning and assistance services. The Directory below lists BPAO contact and service information for every State, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Human Services Directory (A-C) In Tri-County Area Chamber of commerces, human services, medical, education, and more. Cornell CoOpExt. - delaware County - 34579 State Hwy 10 - PO Box 184, Hamden, http://www.tri-countyny.net/hs/
Delaware State Resources delaware Health and Social Services Main Administration Building Publication ofthis document is made possible through a Cooperative Agreement between http://www.nichcy.org/stateshe/de.htm
Extractions: The offices listed on this state sheet are primarily state-level offices. Even if an office is not close to your home, they can usually put you in touch with resources in your community, as well as provide you with information and assistance about disability issues in your state. If you find that an address or number has changed or is incorrect, please e-mail us at nichcy@aed.org and let us know. Each state sets eligibility ages for services to children and youth with disabilities. For current information concerning this state, please contact the office listed under Department of Education: Special Education United States Senators
IAQ Tools For Schools Program - Excellence Awards 2002 Nassau County Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES), Westbury, NY delaware Joint Vocational School continues to use the resources provided http://www.epa.gov/iaq/schools/tfsawards2002.html
Extractions: Schools website 2002 Excellence Award Winners National Leaders in Improving Indoor Air Quality in Schools 2002 Special Achievement Award Winners In Recognition of Outstanding Commitment to a Healthy School Environment City and Borough of Juneau School District, Juneau, AK Eanes Independent School District, Austin, TX Hamden Public Schools, Hamden, CT Huber Heights City Schools, Huber Heights, OH ... Williamson County School District, Franklin, TN Read about the IAQ TfS Excellence Award Winners - and Buist Academy for Advanced Studies, Charleston, SC Delaware Joint Vocational School, Delaware, OH East Dubuque Community Unit School District #119, East Dubuque, IL Nassau County Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES), Westbury, NY ... San Francisco Unified School District, IAQ Policy Implementation Committee, San Francisco, CA City and Borough of Juneau School District, Juneau, AK
August 10, 2001 The first year for arts coop, 1975-76, just eight students carried that It s the last day of service for a while in a number of food outlets on campus. http://www.bulletin.uwaterloo.ca/2001/aug/10fr.html
Extractions: Cooler today: Weather forecasters say the heat wave should be ending, although the danger of being ankle-deep in snow is remote. Pictured is geography student Reid Van Brabant, who was featured recently very appropriately on the environmental studies "Cool Job of the Month" web site. He spent a work term at Environment Canada's Global Atmospheric Watch lab in Alert, Nunavut, and says his goal is a PhD in periglacial and glacial studies research into cold, really cold, climates. The percentage of UW co-op students who are women has gone up steadily over the past thirty years, but the increase has been very slow over the second half of that period, says an annual statistical report from the co-op and career services department. It says women made up just 12.4 per cent of co-op students in 1972-73, a number that had grown to 30.8 per cent in 1986-87. In 1999-2000, the most recent year included in the report, the figure was 36.6 per cent. The growth is most striking in science, where women were only 7.2 per cent of co-op students in 1972-73, but reached a majority in 1997-98 and a figure of 57.1 per cent in 1999-2000. Women were in the majority in three other faculties last year: applied health sciences (76.2 per cent), arts (67.4 per cent), and environmental studies (51.1 per cent).