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Executive Commitee Meeting The "ExCom" meets each month and any member is
invited to attend. Currently, meetings are at 7:00 on the second
Wednesday of each month. This can change. Please recheck this website to
be sure of the date and time. We meet at the Unitarian Universalist
Church on the corner of Center and Wall St. in
Bethlehem.
For information about summer programs: Please click this link for further details.
Contact: Michele Richards, Pennsylvania Institute for Conservation Education, 1D Teaberry Road, Bloomsburg, PA 17815,
July 10th @ 9:00am.
Excomm member Kristen Bryant will man a table at a USTA Pro Circuit tennis tournament to get the word out about the Sierra Club.
She would appreciate someone volunteering with her. Call 610-554-5637 or email her at kristenbry@gmail.com.
Canoeing the Lower Lehigh
Paddle from the Hope Rd. public boat launch to Turkey Island, and around Turkey
and then down to Island park and end with an excusion into the "gut".
This Trip is free thanks to the
generosity of the Wildlands Conservancy. Life jackets, paddles, canoes, and trash bags will be
provided to the participants at no cost. Meet at the Hope Rd. public boat launch 8am. Call Bill Sweeney
to register or for more information at 610 381-7588. Click
here to find out about past events. Order
Your Sierra Club Merchandise Help
support our group! Click
here to order Sierra Club products.
Once again,
the environmentally sensitive Blue Mountain and the Appalachian Trail
are threatened with large-scale development. A landowner in Ross and Eldred
Townships (identity unrevealed) is proposing a massive resort complex
be built on 1100 acres of undeveloped land on the north side of Blue Mountain
straddling the boundary between the two townships in Monroe County. Elliott
Building Group to develop 1100 acres on Blue Mountain. The proposed project
will include a new ski resort, a mini-golf course, a large hotel, indoor
and outdoor water parts, condominiums, and single-unit housing clusters.The
developer is asking for 1200+ housing units and expects to bring 4500
to 5,000 visitors to the area daily. This development
would be on 1100 acres on the north face of the Blue Mountain in Ross
and Eldred Townships at Smith Gap Road. The area borders the Appalachian
Trail and the Aquashicola Creek, a high-quality cold water fishery. It
is just west of the proposed Cherry Valley National Wildlife Refuge and
east of the Wildlife Information Centers restoration of the Lehigh Gap Ross
Township: Eldred
Township: Let the
supervisors of Ross and Eldred Townships know that you expect them to
uphold and enforce all existing Zoning, Subdivision and Land Development
Ordinances as well as ensuring that all development along the Blue Mountain
will be in accordance with the intent of the County and Regional Comprehensive
Plans. The
threat to Blue Mountain from a proposed racetrack/resort in Eldred Township,
Monroe County remains. This project has been the subject of years of litigation
related to the noise that would be produced by the facility and its impact
on the Appalachian Trail and neighboring residential communities. On
March 28, 2006 Blue Mountain Preservation, the Department of Environmental
Protection and Alpine Rose Resorts Inc. faced
off in the Courtroom of the Environmental Hearing Board in Norristown,
Pa., for the first of four days of testimony about storm water and waste
water plans for Alpine's ill-conceived racetrack proposal. What
You Can Do:
download and send the sample letter to the PA DCED telling them that this
project should not be financed with taxpayer dollars. Now
we need you to write, too! Write
to your state legislators to oppose development aid for this project.
Click
here to read about the Alpine Rose win We are
concerned about the development of a proposed radar tower on South
Mountain to serve the Lehigh Valley International Airport. The
targeted area is steeply sloped, wooded, and along migratory routes of
songbirds whose populations are in decline. The Sierra
Club has joined with local citizens and citizens groups to try to win
permanent open space protection for the approximately 50 acres of land
held by the Salisbury Township School District. Originally acquired by
eminent domain in the late 1960s to build a school, the land contains
many unique environmental features that should be maintained for the benefit
of the students of Salisbury Township, its residents, and the community
at large. In August
2005, the majority of Salisbury school board members voted in favor of
selling the land to a developer, Signature Homes, for more than $4 million
dollars. This vote came after several hours of testimony from residents,
Sierra Club members, Representative Karen Beyer, and many others, voicing
their wishes for the land not to be sold and developed. The Sierra Club
is continuing to work to save this land from development. Stay tuned as
the fight continues. To help
with this fight, contact out main activist on the issue: Deana
M. Zosky at dmzeverg@ptd.net On Tuesday,
August 25th, the impoundment that contained the fly ash slurry collected
from the two coal-burning generating units at the PPL facility at Martins
Creek breached and failed, allowing 100 million gallons of the slurry
to flow into the Delaware River. Sierra Club activists visited the Martins
Creek plant on September 7, observing first hand the ramifications of
the release and the efforts to clean up. Preliminary
tests of the water quality in the Delaware River and surrounding groundwater
wells show that pollutants such as arsenic, mercury, lead, selenium, chromium,
barium, cadmium and other heavy metals have been released in levels that
exceed national drinking water standards. At press time, the contaminant-laden
slurry still coated the river bottom for at least 8 miles, and was spreading
downstream as far as 40 miles. Dried toxic ash coated the river banks. The Sierra
Club is concerned that the two coal-fired units were not immediately shut
down after the breach. The DEP temporarily permitted slurry from the continued
operation of these units and the ash-laden clean up waters to be released
into unlined basin #1. When that basin started leaking, the coal-fired
units were finally shut down. For this
reason, the Sierra Club is supporting the Delaware Riverkeeper Network’s
request for a Preliminary Assessment under the Comprehensive Environmental
Recovery Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) of the threats to public
health and the environment associated with the breach and failure of the
impoundments. We believe that the damage to the Delaware River is extensive
and requires the attention of the federal EPA. If you’d
like to help with this issue, please contact Barbara
Benson, group conservation chair. Many Vera
Cruz citizens are opposed to Upper Milford Township’s rush to adopt
a sewer plan that doesn’t make environmental or economic sense to
them. They are forming a group called CASS (Citizens for Affordable Sensible
Sewage). The group is not opposed to either an Act 537 Plan for the township
or sewers where they are needed and they are sensitive to the need to
protect the Leibert Creek Watershed. The entire
area of Vera Cruz has a high water table and the proposed gravity sewer
would require trenches eight to 12 feet deep that would constantly have
to be pumped out. CASS wants the township to explore a low-pressure or
hybrid system that is 15 to 30 percent cheaper and requires much less
excavation. Such a low-pressure system would limit future development. We urge
Upper Milford citizens to inspect the plan (township building or library),
call and write letters urging officials to explore more environmentally
friendly and more affordable alternatives to the proposed gravity sewer,
and attend supervisors’ meetings. If you’d
like to help with this issue, please contact Barbara
Benson, group conservation chair. Although
the numbers of members in our local group are high, the numbers of active
members are perilously low. This year alone, we accomplished a lot, but
our small core of fighters is growing weary. We desperately need energetic
and fresh faces because so much more needs to be done. The
Lehigh Valley group of the Sierra Club’s executive committee meets
once a month from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Unitarian Universalist Church on
Center and Wall Streets in Bethlehem. This
9-member board decides what issues the local group should pursue, which
local candidates to endorse, and which projects to carry out. Please consider
donating two hours of your time each month to serve in this important
role. If
this doesn't appeal to you, but you are still trying to figure out what
you can do to help protect the environment, the Lehigh Valley Group is
looking for volunteers in many other areas. Click
here for other volunteer opportunities If
you don't see the opportunity you want, call an executive committee member
and start your own committee. Remember, think
globally and act locally. We need you! Click
here to find out how you can help In August,
the Sierra Club—on a local, state, and national level—began
working with citizens of Emmaus to convince its borough council not to
privatize its public water utility. The borough
had been considering privatization, along with a number of options, to
find the money needed to make necessary upgrades to the utility. Emmaus citizens
spoke loud and clear. Roughly 260 of them showed up to oppose the privatization
during an August public hearing. Ruth Caplan, Chair of the National Sierra
Club Water Privatization Task Force, traveled from Washington D.C. to
the Emmaus hearing. “If
water is a public trust, then there is a parallel human right to water
necessary for health and survival itself,” she told the council.
“Over the last decade corporations have seized the opportunity to
profit from the scarcity of clean water. Our concern and that of many
others around the globe is that this leads to a justification for the
commodification of water—having the price determined by the marketplace.” Thanks
to unprecedented mobilization by the citizens of Emmaus PA, the Borough
Council voted unanimously on September 6, 2006 to take water privatization
off the table! The
Bethlehem Authority held a public meeting on August 10 to discuss its
proposed program for spraying herbicides on about 200 acres of its Poconos
watershed. The Authority is responsible for the watershed that supplies
water to Bethlehem and ten other municipalities.
Sierra
Club activist Dave McGuire has been monitoring most meetings of the Authority
since 2001, when a destructive proposal for extensive timbering in the
watershed was exposed and killed by public involvement by the SC and citizens.
Now,
a new master plan for protection of the natural resources of the watershed
has been developed. It identifies the need for action to give remaining
stands of high quality trees the chance to regenerate their seeds. This
involves spraying the area with EPA approved herbicides to kill ferns,
thinning the tree stands to increase sunlight on the forest floor, and
then fencing the area to keep out the deer herd, which would eat the emerging
saplings.
The
Authority considered this action a routine matter and did not plan to
notify the public. McGuire pointed out this oversight, noting that extensive
outreach to the public was a key point of the watershed management plan.
The Board agreed and directed that a public meeting be held to explain
and discuss the program.
If you’d like to help with this issue, please contact our main activist
on the matter, Dave McGuire.
Click
here to read an article about protecting the watershed Sign
up for Lehigh Valley Group E-mail Updates Our newsletter
only goes out a few times a year, and environmental issues don't always
arise on our newsletter schedule. Therefore, we are starting an e-mail
alert service. When there is information about important environmental
events in the Lehigh Valley, outings, programs, news from the group, and
actions you can take to support the local environment, we will send out
e-mail alerts to all who subscribe. To become
a member of the Lehigh Valley e-mail alert list, click on mailto:listserv@lists.sierraclub.org?body=SUBSCRIBE
PA-LEHIGH-ALERTS Send us
an email at lhv@pennsylvania.sierraclub.org Find older
articles and issue write-ups in our Archives.
View photos
from Sierra Club events in our picture
gallery. Contact
information for your committee members is in the committee
section. If you have
feedback or problems with this site, or wish to make a comment or suggestion,
please contact: Site last updated on
December 1, 2007
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