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Protect Our Watershed
Ten things you can do to make a difference:
- Enter the international “River
of Words” poetry and art contest. The contest, open to youth between the
ages of 5 to 19, invites children to explore and interpret their local
watershed through the arts. To obtain an entry form or more information,
contact River of Words, P.O. Box 4000-J, Berkeley, CA 94704, telephone
510.548.POEM or download an entry form at
http://www.riverofwords.org.
- Find out what a different plants
and animals live in your watershed. How many kinds of wildlife can you
identify (e.g. crabs, oysters, waterfowl, and fish)?
- Visit a local wastewater
treatment or water filtration plant to see how wastewater is treated or
drinking water is purified. Look at the treated water as it is being
discharged into your river, stream, or estuary.
- Identify two people working in
water resource protection and invite them to come and speak to your school
or club.
- Work with your school to
organize a Storm Drain Stenciling Project in your neighborhood. Produce
and distribute a flyer or door hanger for local households to make them
aware of your project and to remind them that storm drains dump directly
into your local water body.
- Do a display or presentation on
groundwater and how pollutants threaten its purity. Show where your
drinking water comes from. Students can check their family water utility
bill or visit EPA’s web page at
http://www.epa.gov/ow/states.html. Click on the map and link to
information about local drinking water.
- Share your knowledge of water
pollution with younger children, perhaps a kindergarten or first grade
class. Consider doing a presentation about your local watershed. Discuss
threats to its health (e.g. pollution or habitat loss). Highlight things
that students and their families can do to protect water quality. Visit
the Watershed information network at
http://www.epa.gov/win to obtain information about your watershed.
- Create a wildlife habitat or
another conservation project in your school. Call the Natural Resources
Conservation Service at 1-888-LANDCARE for a free backyard conservation
booklet that outlines 10 conservation activities. Or consider joining the
National Wildlife Federations schoolyard habitat program and receive a
certificate and sign for your school project.
- Find a watershed group in your
community and volunteer to help with a project (e.g. tree planting,
habitat restoration project.) Use the Environmental Protection Agency’s
Adopt Your Watershed internet site (http://www.epa.gov/adopt)
to search for an organization in your watershed. Check out EPA’s Five Star
Wetlands Restoration Program (http://www.epa.gov/owow/wetlands/restore/5star/index.html)
which offers opportunities for youth groups to get involved in wetland
restoration projects.
- Work with your school and your
local government to organize or join in a stream, wetland, or beach clean
up. Consider participating in the annual International Coastal Cleanup
sponsored by the Ocean Conservancy held the third Saturday every
September. Visit
www.cleanacreek.org for more information.
Safety First!
Any activities on or near the water should be
carefully supervised by adults, and safety tips need to be explained. Please
check with your school and be sure to follow all appropriate safety
procedures and policies.
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