Proceedings from the 6th National Volunteer Monitoring Conference-Moving Into the Mainstream
Austin, Texas
April 26th - 29th, 2000
In the papers and presentation overviews that follow, two-part and repeated sessions appear once within the concurrent session in which they first appear (see the Conference-at-a-Glance for further clarification).
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- Cover Page (PDF , 2 pages, 119 KB, about PDF)
- Introduction to these Proceedings (PDF , 6 pages, 383 KB, about PDF)
- Conference-at-a-Glance (PDF , 2 pages, 17 KB, about PDF)
- Field Trips (PDF , 2 pages, 17 KB, about PDF)
- Concurrent Session 1 (PDF , 2 pages, 432 KB, about PDF)
- Michele L. Tremblay, Guerilla Outreach Tactics for Volunteer Monitoring Programs
- Leah Graff, Successes and Challenges of a Nation-wide Wetland Monitoring Handbook and Training Session
- Tom Danielson, Evaluating Wetland Health
- Klaus Richter, King County's Wetland-Breeding Amphibian Monitoring Program
- Charlotte Shover, Dakota County Wetland Health Evaluation Project
- Jeff Schloss, Murky Waters: Gaining Clarity on Water Transparency Measurements
- Bob Craycraft, ViewScopes and Secchi Disk Measurements: What's the Difference
- Jennifer Klang, Using the Transparency Tube in Minnesota's New Citizen Stream Monitoring Program
- Marie-Françoise Walk, Developing a Data Presentation Plan
- Joan Martin, Creating Engaging and Effective Creek Reports
- Concurrent Session 2 (PDF , 42 pages, 410 KB, about PDF)
How State Agencies Use Volunteer Data
- Stacey Brown, Cooperation and Partnerships: Virginia's Citizen Monitoring Program, Getting Data to Use
- Diane Wilson, Pennsylvania Citizens' Volunteer Monitoring Program
- Esperanza Stancioff, The Maine Shore Stewards Program Use of Data
- Karen Font-Williams, Oregon's Volunteer Monitoring Program
- Connie Fortin, Minneapolis–St. Paul Area Volunteer Monitoring: A Coordinated Approach
- Ric Lawson, Coordinating Monitoring in the Lake Michigan Basin
- Eric Mendelman, Coordinating Monitoring in Texas
- Mary Enstrom and Sherry Dawson, Underwater Citizen Science in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary
- Peter Milholland, Test Kits: Tricks of the Trade
- Lori Scinto, The Shoreline Alteration Citizen Monitoring Protocol – A Project Developed by Island County/Washington State University Beach Watchers
- Riley Young-Morse, Real-Time Detection of Toxic Phytoplankton
- Jeff Schloss, Data Management Systems: Some Basic Considerations
- Marty McComb, Patrick Detscher, Alice Mayio, The STORET Approach
- Presenters: Geoff Dates, Angie Reed
- Concurrent Session 3 (PDF , 19 pages, 92 KB, about PDF)
- Presenter: Michele Witten
- Presenters: Ned Meister, Allan Stokes, Steve Taylor
- Leah Graff, Volunteer Monitoring of Stream Restoration: Muddy Branch Case Study
- Wenley Ferguson, From Fill to Phragmites: How Community Groups Can Assess and Restore Their Tidal Marshes
- Donna Meyers, Helpful Hints: Designing a Complete Monitoring Plan for Your Restoration Project
- Elizabeth Herron, Excel-Based Data Management
- Presenters: Geoff Dates, Tom Danielson, Jim Harrison
- Concurrent Session 4 – Regional Breakouts (PDF , 12 pages, 108 KB, about PDF)
- Introduction to Regional Breakout Discussions
- Notes from Region 1
- Notes from Regions 2 and 3
- Notes from Region 4
- Notes from Region 5
- Notes from Region 6
- Notes from Region 7
- Notes from Region 8
- Concurrent Session 5 (PDF , 33 pages, 479 KB, about PDF)
- Sharon Clifford, What's New on TMDLs?
- Jim Harrison, Lullwater Fork Improvement Project: Integration of Innovative Urban Watershed, Hydrology and Planning Approaches with the "Usual Monitoring"
- Ben Barber, UrbanWatch: Bringing Citizens, Scientists, and Cities Together
- Josh Clemons and Martha Conklin, A Comparative Study of GLOBE and USGS Water Quality Monitoring Data
- Yvette de Boer, Citizen Volunteer Monitoring of Forest Resources in the New York City Watershed
- Nancy Mesner, Bear River Watershed Education Project
- Steve Amos, Cyberways and Waterways: High School Students as Stakeholders and Monitoring Online
- Pete Schade, Creating Your Own Web-Based Interactive Stream Site
- Christos Michalopoulos, Students as Volunteer Monitors: Lessons Learned from the GLOBE Program
- Discussion Leaders: Elizabeth Herron, Jerry Schoen
- Concurrent Session 6 (PDF , 23 pages, 119 KB, about PDF)
- Scott Kishbaugh, Volunteer Monitoring and Government Environmental Data Reporting: Smooth Fit or Square Peg in Round Hole?
- Donna Meyers, Volunteer Monitoring and TMDLs: San Lorenzo River Watershed Case Study
- Presenters: Linda Green, Abby Markowitz, Mike Bira
- Diane Wilson, Capture the Moment–Pennsylvania's Watershed Snapshot
- Steven Hubbell, Earth Day Monitoring in Texas: From Seed to Harvest
- Bob Craycraft and Jeff Schloss, Community Mapping– Improving Natural Resource Conservation Through GIS Technolog
- Concurrent Session 7 (PDF , 17 pages, 97 KB, about PDF)
- Presenter: Gerri A. Miceli
- Mary Carchrie, Forming a Senior Environment Corps
- Gary Comer, The Master Watershed Stewards Education Program
- John McCoy, Waterwatch – Data Use, Data Confidence, Australian Style
- Robert Williams, The Rivers Project
- Bill Fleming, Watershed Planning and Monitoring By Local Student Stakeholders
- Torrey Lindbo, Advantages of Student Versus Agency Monitoring
- Ann Lyon, Schools/Townships Unite to Protect Water Quality
- Concurrent Session 8 (PDF , 5 pages, 34 KB, about PDF)
- Bryan Parker, Web-Based Systems
- Mellini Sloan, EDAS: Facilitating the Analysis and Archiving of Ecological Data
- List of Participants (PDF , 16 pages, 78 KB, about PDF)
Volunteer Outreach Tactics that Work
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From Sampling to Sustainability: Using Indicators to Connect Monitoring to Growth Management
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An Introduction to the Clean Water Act and TMDLs
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The Role of Volunteer Monitoring in TMDLs
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Measuring Bacterial Contamination
Student Volunteers Taking Action
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Data Management in Action 2: Web-Based Systems and EDAS Demos