1 / 19

Annette Frank Chair of the GYWC

Annette Frank Chair of the GYWC. What the GYWC does?. The Greater Yamhill Watershed Council Established non-profit status last year 2011

dagan
Download Presentation

Annette Frank Chair of the GYWC

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Annette Frank Chair of the GYWC

  2. What the GYWC does? • The Greater Yamhill Watershed Council • Established non-profit status last year 2011 • Looking to develop more fully into an organization that can bring a diverse group of people/organizations to the table to discuss how we can improve our watershed. • Work with interested groups to bring about positive change through advisement, and grant writing

  3. A Watershed • The area where all of the water above and below ground drains to a common channel or body of water.

  4. The Yamhill Watershed • South and North Forks of the Yamhill • 781 square miles • Grand Ronde, Newberg, Perrydale, Yamhill

  5. The Big Picture Willamette River Columbia River

  6. Urban Impacts Urban Residents • What you flush • Stormwater

  7. Stormwater • Undeveloped areas • Loose soils and plants capture much of the precipitation • The water slowly moves through the system recharging ground water, wetlands and streams • Developed areas • Impervious surfaces • Generate unnaturally high runoff volumes

  8. Medications in our waterways • Flushing prescription drugs is a problem • Municipal wastewater treatment plants are not designed to remove these small water-soluble chemicals • The drugs end up in our waterways • Scientists are concerned about wildlife health and the safety of our drinking water.

  9. Household hazardous waste • Many household products are toxic to the environment • Paint, batteries, pesticides and herbicides, motor oil, CFL light bulbs, solvents...

  10. Car Washing • Soap residue and the dirt, oil and metals washed from the car • Most soap contains phosphates and other chemicals

  11. Oils • One pint can make a slick larger than a football field • Americans spill 180 million gallons a year, 16 times the amount spilled by the Exxon Valdez in Alaska

  12. Landscaping Contamination • Fertilizers • Nutrients, causing algae blooms • Pesticides and Herbicides • Harmful to aquatic life • Apply as directed • At least two days prior to a rain event • In quantities recommended

  13. Bacteria • Carries waste from pets directly into waterways • E. coli and other harmful bacteria are found in our waterways 303(d) list Tualatin Bacteria Sources Study

  14. What can we do about this?

  15. Take Back Programs • Properly Disposing of Prescription drugs • Serious human health concerns • The McMinnville Police Station has a drop box • 20 lbs a week • National drug take back days • April 28th in Walgreens parking lot

  16. Proper Disposal • Yamhill County holds a HHW collection event in the Fall and Spring. • May 19th at the Newberg Transfer Station on Wynooski Rd, just off Hwy 219 • Fall there will be one in McMinnville, Contact Yamhill County at 503-434-7445 • Metro has hazardous waste facilities in the Portland area, cost of $5

  17. Car Care • Fix leaks promptly • Wash car on lawn or at commercial car wash

  18. Landscaping • Healthy lawns without chemicals • healthylawns.org • Naturescaping • Native plants to create habitats for wildlife • Uses less water

  19. Rain Gardens • Slow rainwater on your property • Can treat the storm water • Are beautiful and functional • Our friends with the Master Gardeners will now talk about how to build one at your house

More Related