A22-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 28, 2001 Award Winners (Continued from Page A 1) tices that ensure the agricultural viability of the land and the health of nearby waterways. The Buchers are actively involved with public and private organ izations in conservation educa tion, water quality monitoring, and streamside improvement projects. • Watershed Protection Award Swatara Creek Watershed Association. Founded in 1970, the Swatara Creek Watershed Association monitors water quality along the Swatara Creek and its six major tributaries in Lebanon, Berks, Dauphin, and Schuylkill coun ties. The association has worked with various state, federal, and local agencies on many stream and wetland restoration and awareness projects, including an annual two-day canoe and river cleanup. They have also devel oped a Swatara Creek Rivers Conservation Plan, a longterm management approach for the watershed. • Special Conservation Ser vice Award Harry Meyer, Al legheny County. Meyer serves as an associate director with the Washington, Beaver, Lawrence, and Westmoreland county con servation districts, and has worked with many conservation districts since 1955. Now retired, Meyer was an employee of vari ous state agencies for 32 years and worked with landowners and conservation districts throughout western Pennsylva nia in erosion and sediment con trol, land reclamation, and groundwater preservation pro grams. Meyer lives on a farm in McDonald, Washington County, where he was born and continues to operate its orchard. • Ann Rudd Saxman Conser vation Volunteer Award W. Ray Ketner, Berks County. A lifelong resident of Berks County, Ketner is chair of the Berks Conservation District Board and a retiree of the Penn sylvania Game Commission. He is an active participant in state and national conservation dis trict association events and helps to coordinate local district programs such as the Don Hart man Conservation Leadership School, the county Envirothon, and the annual seedling sale. Ketner is a retired Army major who served in the Battle of Nor mandy during World War 11. • Conservation Organization of the Year Award Broken straw Fish and Game Club, Warren County. The club works with public and private agencies throughout the year in conserva tion education and hunting safety programs. The club also conducts the Warren County Youth Conservation Camp, a three-day camp for boys and girls between the ages of 12-14. Participants learn about wildlife and aquatic ecosystems, water quality, hunting and boating safety, and astronomy. • Media Conservation Award Grant Heilman Photography, Lancaster County. For more than 25 years, Grant Heilman Photography has worked with the Lancaster Conservation Dis trict, providing stock and custom photography. Recently, the firm assisted in the district’s watershed awareness campaign and in capturing images for soil stewardship and farm coopera tor awards. The firm’s presi dent, Sonia Wasco, has donated hundreds of volunteer hours as an associate director with the district as and co-director of the Lancaster County Youth Con servation School. Grant Heil man Photography is recognized nationally as a premier firm in agricultural, natural science, horticulture and wildlife pho tography. • Conservation Educator of the Year Award James A. Edwards, Bucks County. Ed wards is an environmental stud ies and biology teacher at Neshaminy High School in Langhorne an adviser to the school’s Environmental Action Club. Edwards and his students have participated in Earth Week programs, recycling proj ects, habitat activities, water quality monitoring, and stream bank stabilization projects at local environmental centers and within their community. • M.K. Goddard Forest Re source Management Award Robert Long, Cambria County. Robert Long and his family op erate George Long and Sons Lumber Company in Patton, Cambria County. As a profes sional forester, Long prepared and implemented a manage ment plan, enhancing wildlife habitat and the wa(er quality of nearby waterways. The woodlot contains broad ecological diver sity which the Long’s share with their community; most of their properties are open for public use. • William Lange Urban Con servation Award R. Jeanne Sonntag, Lancaster County. Sonntag is a former Lancaster Conservation District public di rector and worked with the dis trict for more than nine years. She also served as chairman oi the Lancaster County Planning Commission Water Resource Task Force. Among her other achievements, Sonntag was in strumental in raising funds for the Shuts Environmental Center in Lancaster and for initiating a yearly legislative breakfast tour between elected officials and state and local conservation dis trict representatives. • Legislator Recognition Award Gary Haluska, Cam bria County. Haluska has been an invaluable advocate for the Cambria Conservation District. He has helped to secure funding for district programs, such as those which address acid mine drainage and other point sources of pollution in local waterways, and in preserving recreational opportunities with out compromising the environ ment. Haluska is also a dedicated community volunteer, working with local firefighter associations, sports booster or ganizations, and tourism initia tives. • Erosion and Sedimentation Pollution Control Award RNS Services, Cambria County. RNS mines, transports, and re cycles coal refuse and fly ash. They have been involved with numerous abandoned mine rec lamation projects in Cambria, Indiana and Somerset counties. RNS has worked with the Cam bria Conservation District and local farmers, using fly ash as a soil substitute in barnyards and feedlots to help prevent nutrient and sediment runoff into nearby waterways. RNS also works with local organizations in other abandoned mine drain abate ment and wetlands restoration initiatives. • Annual Report of the Year Award Adams County Con servation District. This award is presented to the conservation district that submits the most in formative, concise, readable, and attractive annual report. Each district’s annual report is judged by representatives of the State Conservation Commis sion, Department of Environ mental Protection, Natural Resource Conservation Service, and the PACD. Second place was awarded to the Berks Con servation District. Snyder Con servation District captured third place. • County Commissioner Dis trict Director of the Year Award Randy Degenkolb, Indiana County. This award, which will be presented at the annual meet ing of the Pennsylvania Associa tion of County Commissioners, is given to a county commis sioner member of a conservation district board who has made an outstanding contribution to the advancement of conservation districts at the local, state, and national levels. Each year, PACD also hosts a poster contest for school chil dren in grades K-12. The PACD Auxiliary sponsors the poster contest. The winning entries are sent to the National Association of Conservation Districts’ poster contest forjudging on a national level. This year’s winners are: Brigid Duggan, Cumberland County, kindergarten to first grade division; Melina Webb, Bradford County, second to third grade division; Felicha Koscheck, Greene County, fourth to sixth grade division; James Lincke, Delaware County, seventh to ninth grade division; and Anna Spoor, Dela ware County, 10th to 12th grade division. The PACD Auxiliary also presented its annual scholarship award to Sean C. Sweeney of Newmanstown, Lebanon County. Sean is a student at Penn State University, majoring in agriculture and bioengineer ing. For more information on the awards, visit PACD’s Website at http://www.pacd.org. Farmers Honored With Clean Water Farm Award DEP and the Pennsylvania Association of Conservation Districts Inc. (PACD) are hon oring two farms in the Chesa peake Bay -watershed that have excelled in water-quality protec tion. “These awards celebrate our farmers who are at the forefront in pursuing better farm management practices and working hard to protect local stream, groundwater and soil re sources,” DEP Secretary David E. Hess said. “Good stewards make good neighbors, and our BUY, SELL, TRADE OR RENT THROUGH THE CLASSIFIED ADS IN Lancaster Farming 1 neighbors downstream in the Chesapeake Bay appreciate their efforts.” The Pennsylvania Chesa peake Bay Clean Water Farm Awards highlight the positive practices farmers are using in the watershed to help protect water quality, and to spread the word to other farmers about the benefits of water-quality protec tion. “The efforts of these farmers complement Gov. Tom Ridge’s ‘Growing Greener’ program by helping to protect and restore waterways that are part of larger watersheds,” Hess said. The award recipients are from Lebanon and Luzerne counties. They were recognized at the PACD annual Conservation Awards Program in State Col lege, Centre County. Farmers must meet criteria regarding soil testing, manure testing, nutrient management, pesticide management and con servation practices. They are nominated by county conserva tion districts. Farmers who demonstrate outstanding farm management receive a large “Clean Water Farm Award” sign to erect on their property, demonstrating their commitment to protecting local and Chesapeake Bay water quality. Recipients are: • Lebanon County Charles and Marlene Bomgardner of North Annville Township. The Bomgardners manage 177 acres of cropland, and an additional two acres of pasture on their Lebanon County farm. Crops produced include corn, alfalfa, soybeans, wheat and barley. They also raise hogs (300) and replacement heifers (50). The Bomgardner Farm is pre served under the Lebanon County Agricultural Land Pres ervation Program. As part of the program requirements, the Bomgardners implement a soil conservation plan that calls for conservation practices, includ ing contour strip cropping, mini mum tillage, no-till corn farming, cover cropping and grass waterways. In addition to the plan re quirements, the Bomgardners have voluntarily taken measures to help protect water quality. They have fenced off a spring near their farm’s exercise lot and allowed the area to grow into a vegetated buffer and sta bilized a walkway built above the spring to help prevent water contamination. The Bom gardners also chose to adopt an Act 6 nutrient-management plan for their farm, although their farm is not considered a Concentrated Animal Operation (CAO), and is not required to have a nutrient-management plan; and • Luzerne County Mark Verbyla of Sweet Valley Ver byla manages a 120-acre dairy farm with 65 Holstein cows and SS replacement animals. He also grows silage, oats and hay. The headwaters of Hunting ton Creek flow directly through the Verbyla Farm, and, in recent years, significant steps have been taken to improve water quality in the creek. In 1997, Verbyla voluntarily developed a nutrient-management plan. The plan is followed to ensure the proper applications and use of manure and waste nutrients, and has drastically improved the quality of Huntington Creek, as well as Verbyla’s farming op erations. “The nutrient-management plan has made a 100 percent im provement on the well-being of the cows and the health of the stream running through the farm,” Verbyla said. “Basically, the plan has changed the whole appearance of the farm. The cows aren’t in the mud anymore, the water is protected by a buffer zone, and the farm just looks better.” The farm features two dairy cattle exercise lots, between the bam and Huntington Creek. A buffer strip has been installed between the lots and the creek to filter any excess nutrients that may leave the lot. Verbyla also has installed roof runoff-control devices to divert clean water away from the exercise lots. He has installed additional water control structures and con structed a stone-centered walkway to carry water to the filter area. Another device critical to pro tecting water quality is the farm’s milkhouse waste system that collects water used for dairy farm procedures and discharges it into a manure spreader to be spread onto the fields.