Participating in the 2025 AMS Annual Meeting
NCEI News Feed
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NCEI News Feed
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NCEI News Feed
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Jeff Mazanec finds perspective by taking time to enjoy local waterways.
Sometimes it’s hard to know if you are really making a difference with your life. Other times, you remove sewage from the landscape, and there is no doubt.
Jeff Mazanec, engineer, completed his first design project on the south shore of Lake Winnebago in the 1970s. At that time, lots of houses right on the lake had septic systems, and they were failing and leaking. Jeff designed the sewer and wastewater system that replaced what wasn’t working. “I realized I was making a difference,” Jeff said.
A decade later, Jeff started working on his first project with the City of Appleton, designing the North Fox Interceptor. He visited local parks and riverbanks to assess the situation, and he could see evidence of sewer overflows. In the park. Right next to the river!
Recalling what could have been a pretty gross moment, Jeff chuckled. Instead of turning up his nose, he said to himself, “I’m just glad we’re doing the project!”
Jeff has spent a lifetime jumping in to do this critical behind-the-scenes work, never taking much credit. “I can be proud of my role on a project,” Jeff said, “but there’s nothing we do alone. It’s humbling when you see how much other people have dedicated their professional and sometimes personal lives to improve the environment in every way they can.”
For Jeff, it has been a lifetime of watching things get better. “We don’t often see blatant pollution like we used to,” Jeff said. “I’ve been in this field for 50 years. We tend to spend 90% of our time on the 5% of things that are bad. Paddling lets me enjoy the parts that are very good.”
After the hard work of designing and maintaining hidden infrastructure, Jeff enjoys the beauty of our waters by getting into a canoe or kayak.
He’s been the president of the Northeast Wisconsin Paddlers for 13 of the last 15 years. In the early 2000s, they started a program with Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance called the Special Places Program.
“The primary purpose,” Jeff explained, “was to get people to see the community from the water. They would understand why water quality practices matter, and they’d want to keep those in place.”
Jeff is passing the love of water and paddling to his family. “My son has done six Boundary Waters trips with me. I’m hoping I can stay fit and healthy enough to take my grandkids out paddling, especially to the Boundary Waters.”
Does he think the water will be up to the task? “I think it’s a bright future, but it’s going to take continued diligence and investment,” Jeff said.
“It’s important to keep perspective,” he continued. “Every now and then you have to pull your head up and have a beautiful day in the park here on the Fox River, nice breeze, and sit back and take a little bit of a deep breath and enjoy it. There’s always more work to do, but in my experience, it’s come a long way.”
There’s More to the Story!
In October, Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance held an event to celebrate all the things that are going right for our local waters and to honor individuals and organizations that are making a difference. This issue of Watershed Moments highlights three of the individuals honored with a 2024 Impact Award. You can see the short videos for these and other honorees at our YouTube channel.
Watershed Moments is a publication of Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance, sharing the stories of how your donations have impacted lives in our community. Read our latest project updates, make a secure online donation, or become a member at www.fwwa.org
The post Watershed Moments: Keep Perspective appeared first on Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance.
Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance
https://fwwa.org/2025/01/07/watershed-moments-keep-perspective/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=watershed-moments-keep-perspective
By Lester Graham, Michigan Public
The Great Lakes News Collaborative includes Bridge Michigan; Circle of Blue; Great Lakes Now at Detroit PBS; Michigan Public, Michigan’s NPR News Leader; and The Narwhal who work together to bring audiences news and information about the impact of climate change, pollution, and aging infrastructure on the Great Lakes and drinking water.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/01/michigans-state-of-the-great-lakes-report-a-lot-of-work-ahead/
A new study is contributing to the ever-evolving understanding of what occurs in the Great Lakes during the winter months, and how the lakes affect winter weather in the region. Read the full story by Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-greatlakes-winter-season-shrinking
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-coastguard-icebreaking-begins-greatlakes
Many environmental groups oppose a proposed Osceola County, Michigan, salt mine out of concern that the “solution mining” process would contaminate aquifers and dry up surface water bodies. Read the full story by MLive.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-public-input-michigan-saltmine
The amount of cargo moving through ports on the Great Lakes is trailing behind shipments at the same time last year as the shipping season nears its end. Read the full story by Wisconsin Public Radio.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-cargotonnage-greatlakes-ports-shippingseason-ends
Sea lamprey abundance exceeded targets in 2024 in all Great Lakes due to treatment restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, numbers of the parasitic fish are expected to decline. Read the full story by USA Today.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-vampires-greatlakes
A large section of a 19th century vessel that washed up on the shore of Lake Erie in Erieau, Ontario, has generated a lot of interest. Read the full story by the Chatham Daily News.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-19thcentury-vessel-erieau
A recent Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan report documents substantial progress in creating The Great Lakes Way — an interconnected set of greenways and water trails stretching from Port Huron, Michigan, on southern Lake Huron, to Toledo, Ohio, on western Lake Erie. Read the full story by Great Lakes Now.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-greatlakesmoment
With temperatures in single digits, more ice developed in Duluth, Minnesota, giving the crew of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Mackinaw a chance to show off its skills. Read the full story by the Duluth News Tribune.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250106-photos-mackinaw-path
A recent Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan report documents substantial progress in creating The Great Lakes Way — an interconnected set of greenways and water trails stretching from Port Huron, Michigan on southern Lake Huron to Toledo, Ohio on western Lake Erie.
In 2000, the Community Foundation polled metropolitan Detroit communities about obstacles to building greenways.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/01/great-lakes-moment-connecting-people-to-nature-through-the-great-lakes-way/
Title: Vice President for Programs
Status: Full-time, Exempt
Location: This position is remote and will be located within a Great Lakes state, with a preference for the Chicago area. For candidates outside the Chicago area, monthly overnight travel to the Alliance’s Chicago headquarters is expected. Proximity to a major airport is required.
Role: The Vice President for Programs (VP) is responsible for all aspects of Alliance program implementation. They manage a team of policy and advocacy experts and work collaboratively to create new strategic initiatives for the organization. This is a high-profile position with leadership responsibility for internal program implementation and external advancement of the Alliance’s advocacy, research and relational work around Great Lakes and clean water issues.
Structure: The VP reports directly to the President & CEO. They are a member of the Alliance’s Leadership Team alongside the President & CEO, VP for Finance and Operations, and VP for Advancement. They supervise a team of five program directors with responsibility for various aspects of Alliance program implementation. The VP is an internal liaison to the Advancement and Finance & Operations teams.
Compensation and Benefits: Salary range begins at $140,000, with starting salary determined commensurate with experience. Medical, dental, short- and long-term disability, life insurance, FSA, 11 paid holidays plus the business days between 12/26 and 12/30 (staff who must work on any holidays may take those holidays at another time subject to the employee handbook), 3 weeks of vacation to start + PTO, paid parental leave, and Fidelity 401(k) with employer match of up to 6% of salary.
Work Environment: Remote with overnight travel required 1-2 times per month. A driver’s license and comfort with solo travel by car and plane is required. If the successful candidate is in the Chicago area, the Alliance’s downtown headquarters office is available for in-office work.
The Alliance seeks its next Vice President for Programs (VP) to lead its work to protect, restore and conserve the Great Lakes and their waters for the people and wildlife that depend on them. The VP will lead advocacy, research and relational work that enables the Alliance’s success as an advocate for the world’s largest source of fresh surface water. They will implement current programs, seek out and build new strategic opportunities, and manage a team of experts and advocates to advance every aspect of the Alliance’s programs.
The VP serves as a strategist, program leader and manager. They work collaboratively with Alliance staff and external partners to ensure high-quality delivery of policy analysis and recommendations, advocacy action, strategic convening and relationship growth.
In the coming three years, the VP of Programs will advance work to create:
The Alliance plays three critical roles in this work.
We advocate for policies that protect and restore the lakes and enable communities to depend on them. We use our voice and influence to encourage and compel decision makers to make choices that will improve protections for the lakes and the water they provide. The Alliance strives to address priorities identified by a diversity of Great Lakes communities, and to put our resources to work where needed most. Our policy leadership must build a bridge between the halls of power and people who rely on the lakes.
We build and communicate the research and analysis that motivates action to protect the lakes. Our staff, working with scientists, issue experts, volunteers, and community leaders, dig deeply into the data that defines Great Lakes challenges and guides renewal and revitalization. We seek to understand and communicate the science, policies and perspectives that must drive smart decisions for the lakes.
We educate and unite people as a voice for the Great Lakes. The Alliance invests time and resources into building a big tent of relationships to exert power for our waters. This means collaborating with trust, honesty, and transparency to elevate voices, collaborators, and partners from across the region. We build the strength of the Great Lakes movement, create pathways for action, and support people along the way.
The initial goals of this position are:
The VP is a public figure for the organization who speaks with authority and diplomacy, is regarded as a thought leader on Great Lakes and clean water issues, and exercises the highest level of political, business and relational acumen. The VP must be as adept at cultivating the best from a staff team as they are at leveraging the external relationships and partnerships necessary for advocacy success. They report directly the to the President & CEO and communicate to the organization’s Board of Directors on program progress.
The Alliance welcomes a new VP for Programs in a position of strength. We anticipate a staff of 30 by the end of 2025 who, along with our Board of Directors, includes some of the country’s leading Great Lakes advocates, experts and communicators. The Alliance has a well-regarded record of recent and historic successes dating to 1970. The Alliance’s capacity stands tall among state and regional environmental advocacy organizations across the country, with assets of more than $12 million by the end of 2024 and an operating budget of $6.8 million for 2025.
The VP serves as Strategist, Program Leader, and Staff Manager.
Strategist
Program Leader
Staff Manager
_________________________________________________________________
Please e-mail a cover letter, resume, references and writing sample to: hr@greatlakes.org. Include job title in the subject line.
Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Materials should be compatible with Microsoft Word or Adobe Acrobat. Applicants will receive confirmation of receipt of their materials and further guidance and updates about the hiring process by e-mail, with interviews provided for finalists. No phone inquiries please.
About the Alliance for the Great Lakes
The Alliance for the Great Lakes is an Equal Opportunity Employer. The search process will reinforce the Alliance’s belief that achieving diversity requires an enduring commitment to inclusion that must find full expression in our organizational culture, values, norms, and behaviors.
Our vision is a thriving Great Lakes and healthy water that all life can rely on, today and far into the future. We aspire to be a voice for the lakes, and to support the voices of the communities that depend on the lakes and their waters.
The mission of the Alliance for the Great Lakes is to protect, conserve and restore the Great Lakes ensuring healthy water in the lakes and in our communities for all generations of people and wildlife. We advance our mission as advocates for policies that support the lakes and communities, by building the research, analysis and partnerships that motivate action, and by educating and uniting people as a voice for the Great Lakes.
To achieve our vision and mission, everyone in our organization will live our values of Community, Relationships, Courage, Integrity and Optimism, and weave the principles of Justice, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion into all our work. Each value and principle is backed by measurable goals and expectations for our Board of Directors and staff.
For more information about the Alliance’s programs and work, please visit us online at www.greatlakes.org.
The post Vice President for Programs appeared first on Alliance for the Great Lakes.
News - Alliance for the Great Lakes
News - Alliance for the Great Lakes
https://greatlakes.org/2025/01/vice-president-for-programs/
Grace Armstrong, a chemist with the USGS Mercury Research Laboratory (MRL) located in the Upper Midwest Water Science Center, served as an Embassy Science Fellow with the U.S. Embassy in Accra, Ghana, sharing her knowledge on mercury sampling and analysis techniques with Ghanaian scientists and professionals.
Upper Midwest Water Science Center
Upper Midwest Water Science Center
https://www.usgs.gov/international-programs/news/exploring-how-gold-mining-impacts-mercury-releases-western-ghana?utm_source=comms&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=news
Green Bay, WI
https://www.weather.gov/grb/newsletter2024
By Daniel Wanschura
Points North is a biweekly podcast about the land, water and inhabitants of the Great Lakes.
This episode was shared here with permission from Interlochen Public Radio.
Meghan Hetfield and Roni Pillischer drove across New York to witness their first total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/01/points-north-squeaky-sand-phenomenon/
Part of “A Year in the Wild Kitchen of the Great Lakes,” a series in partnership with expert forager Lisa M. Rose, with the mission of nurturing a deeper connection with the natural world through foraging. To get started with your foraging journey, begin here with our “Framework to Sustainable and Safe Practices” and check out Part 1 of “Winter Wellness Pantry” for tips and tricks to stay healthy this winter with wild herbs of the Great Lakes.
Great Lakes Now
https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/01/winter-wellness-pantry-elderberry-elixir/
Humans once hunted caribou on a land bridge that’s now submerged under Lake Huron. Research in this area has uncovered new findings, including a peat bog containing preserved prehistoric DNA. However, with long-term funding in question, these discoveries could end before researchers can unlock more of Lake Huron’s secrets. Read the full story by Bridge Michigan.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-huron-secrets
Since the 1950s, chemical lampricides have kept invasive sea lamprey populations at bay, but the lampricides will eventually become ineffective. Michigan State University is studying lamprey breeding habits, hoping to find a way to sterilize the invasive fish. Read the full story by Bridge Michigan.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-lamprey-reserach
In 1878, a 178-foot ship full of rye encountered fierce winds, stuck a shoal, and sank. A shipwreck enthusiast found the ship and 36,000 bushels of rye that went down with it which is now being reintroduced in Michigan to create craft whiskey. Read the full story by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-rye-seed-recovery
Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Northeast Ohio is turning 50, and celebrating the milestone by highlighting decades of expansion, development and environmental preservation. Read the full story by Ideastream Public Media.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-environmental-stewardship-anniversary
Ohio Division of Wildlife officials have released their 2024 trawl survey indexes for Lake Erie’s two most-sought sportfish: yellow perch and walleye. This year’s results bring an end to a streak of wildly successful hatches for walleye. Read the full story by Great Lakes Now.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-walleye-population-down
The U.S. National Ice Center released its 2024-2025 seasonal outlook, predicting slightly below to near normal ice conditions across the Great Lakes — a turnaround from last season’s record-breaking absence of ice. Read the full story by USA Today.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-ice-forecast
After experiencing its largest oil spill since 2012, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources is navigating cleanup and increasing opposition for Enbridge’s line 5 plans. Other Wisconsin energy news includes coal plant operation extensions and a new bill concerning how nuclear energy is labeled. Read the full story by Great Lakes Now.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-wisconsin-energy-news
Michigan’s 40-page annual State of the Great Lakes report outlines several accomplishments as well as issues to be tackled in the future in order to improve the environment of the Great Lakes and the well-being of the people who drink, fish, and swim in the region’s waters. Read the full story by WCMU – Mount Pleasant, Michigan.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-michigan-report
A mapping initiative dubbed Lakebed 2030 supports ongoing efforts to make the Great Lakes region more resilient to climate change. The project is working to identify areas prone to erosion, flooding or damage from shifting lake bed sediments that are caused by extreme weather events. Read the full story by WPR – Madison, Wisconsin.
Great Lakes Commission
https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20250103-mapping-efforts
NCEI News Feed
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/december-2024-regional-climate-impacts-and-outlooks
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https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/december-2024-regional-climate-impacts-and-outlooks
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NCEI News Feed
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