River Currents - Lackawanna River Corridor Association
Transcription
River Currents - Lackawanna River Corridor Association
River Currents Newsletter of the Lackawanna River Corridor Association Volume 20 Winter/Spring 2013 Number 1 LRCA’s “Rite of Spring” June 1st The Lackawanna River Corridor Association (LRCA) is proud to host RiverFest 2013 on Saturday June 1, 2013. We will have a full day with the 41st fun paddle and white water Canoe-A-Thon, the River Regatta, the ever popular DuckA-Thon, an afternoon of special music, educational & environmental displays, family activities and fun. All events finish or begin at the Olive Street Bridge across from 3 West Olive complex (formerly The Ice Box). Canoe and kayak paddlers prepare! Launch sites will be the traditional Archbald and Blakely locations. Canoes and kayaks are available for rent at the Blakely location or you can bring your own. The competitive and leisurely spirited are both encouraged to join us! To ensure preregistration and secure equipment rentals, please make sure registration forms (see inside or go to www.lrca.org) are completed and received by the LRCA no later than Wednesday, May 29, 2013. You can view the Canoe-AThon by stopping along the river at one of the many bridges over the Lackawanna River or walk along sections of the river bank to cheer them on or see the many dedicated paddlers arrive at the finish line. See You All There! The Lackawanna River Regatta was well received last year! We encourage businesses, community groups and family/friends to consider being part of the Regatta which is both a celebration and a rite. It can be simultaneously spectral and comedic. Creativity, zaniness, imagination, lunacy in decoration(s), skill in communicating message(s) and/or theme are part of this fun event. Registration and/or pre-registration gives you a launch berth for your floating beast or spectical! Prizes will be awarded by the “River Doge.” Registration forms are available at www.lrca.org or at our office located in the Silkman House. Call 570-347-6311. The courageous LRCA flock of ten “duckies” takes a mid-river launch near the Middle Street Pumping station next to the Farmers Market into the waters of the Lackawanna River, for an exciting race to the finish at the Olive Street Bridge. These fiercely competitive racers will slog it out for the pole position for that famous feathery dash to the checkered flag! Cash prizes of $500, $250, and $100 will be awarded to the sponsors of the first, second, and third place ducks, respectively, that cross the finish line. To sponsor a duck or a flock, stop by our offices, visit our website, clip and mail the form attached or purchase at the LRCA membership tent during RiverFest 2013. In addition to all the above mentioned activities, RiverFest has a plethora of finish line activities and entertainment that kicks off with a lineup of fantastic music. Family and children’s activities include a live wildlife presentation, an aquatic critter search, face painting and a river themed art project. Environmental exhibits will focus on water quality, alternative energy, invasive species and wildlife gardening. There will also be informational exhibits from local environmental organizations, food from local eateries and much more! Once again we will have special instructional kayak trips available at the finish line with Art Coolbaugh of Susquehanna Kayak & Canoe Rental based in Falls, PA. Here is your special opportunity to paddle the river in a safe and guided course with a minimum of whitewater. This course is designed for inexperienced paddlers or people looking for a short afternoon paddle along a historic reach of river through North Scranton. For $35.00 per person, 20 people per trip will be driven to a launch site in the Plot for a guided instructional paddle excursion along the river in Scranton. The excursions will depart the RiverFest site at Olive Street in Scranton at 1:30 P.M. and 3:30 P.M. The trips will last approximately 1 hour. Registration will be available on site at the LRCA membership tent beginning at Noon. Show the world you are supporting the work of the LRCA to help clean up, conserve and protect the Lackawanna River and its watershed. We need many volunteers for this annual event. Please consider becoming a LRCA Volunteer!!!! 2012 Regatta Participants Heritage Explorer Bike Tour Keystone College “A Team” Executive Directors Notes: Winter 2013 be done for the Lackawanna River” in the Lackawanna Station Hotel in the summer of 1987. That big meeting and a series of follow up meetings led to the creation of the LRCA as a pro-active watershed conservation organization. We stressed the focus on Pro-action rather than Re-action to differentiate the LRCA from other environmental organizations. We developed a consensus that the best way to advance our mission to clean up the Lackawanna and involve the entire community with the river would be to focus on positive forward looking projects that involved people directly with their river and watershed. We continue to do that as we look ahead to the next 25 years. There are still legacy issues to deal with related to coal mining and urban development. There are also new issues as well. Twenty five years ago most people never heard of hydrolic fracturing, consumptive use or concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO’s), Combined Sewer Overflows (CSO’s), TMDL’s or Total Maximum Daily Loads and MS4’s Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems. CAFO’s are large concentrations of animals such as chicken farms, hog farms and beef cattle feed lots. Hydrolic fracturing more commonly known as “fracking” and consumptive use, that is taking water from our rivers, streams and lakes to use in an industrial process, for public water supplies or for agricultural and landscape irrigation such as watering golf courses are becoming more common as issues in Pennsylvania. LRCA remains very concerned that the individual and cumulative effects of fracking may have immediate and long term negative impacts on the waters of Pennsylvania. We are monitoring eight locations on key tributary streams around the perimeter of the Lackawanna Watershed to collect base line data on several indicators of possible impacts from shale gas drilling activities. Although there are not currently any active well drilling activities in the Lackawanna Watershed, there are several permitted well pads in the upper Lackawanna in Ararat and Pleasant Mount townships and several supply facilities in Carbondale and Duryea. LRCA has been monitoring for salinity, total dissolved and total suspended solids, TDS and TSS temperature and pH at eight locations including one each on the east and west branches of the Lackawanna River in Herrick township and one along the main stem in Carbondale. This year we continue celebrating the LRCA’s 25th anniversary as the premier river conservation organization in the northeast Pennsylvania area. We are completing plans that propose a major regional environmental project at the Confluence of the Lackawanna and Susquehanna Rivers. We are initiating an inventory of the Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System in Scranton and continuing work with the Scranton Sewer Authority to eliminate Combined Sewer Overflows. We are continuing collaboration with the Lackawanna Heritage Valley Authority to advance the further development of the River Trail. We’re collaborating with our affiliate the Lackawanna Valley Conservancy (LVC) to acquire an important river access site in Jessup. We are working with the Lackawanna Valley Trout Unlimited on a river access site development at Sweeney’s Beach off Poplar Street in Scranton, and we are celebrating it all with RiverFest on Saturday June 1st. Our community created the LRCA as a non-profit river advocacy organization on October 5, 1987. I have to say that I joked that the program committee that planned the LRCA’s 25th anniversary celebration was a bit off their rocker deciding to roast the LRCA Executive Director as the “Main Event” at a community dinner held at the Scranton Cultural Center last September 27th. I was almost speechless as the event was more toast than roast. I came armed and ready for bear! But the roasters either had only good things to say or made stuff up! Nobody had the really good stories. And I’m not telling now… A good time was had by all and I want to thank everyone for the opportunity to continue being the Executive Director of the LRCA. We have been working twenty five years now for a cleaner, better, safer Lackawanna River and we are starting to see some progress in that direction. It hardly seems possible, but it’s that long ago that a group of over 400 local residents gathered to “see what could Cont. on page 3 LRCA Board of Directors Anita Lohin, President; Sharon Yanik-Craig, 1st Vice President; Timothy Barrett, 2nd Vice President; Jack Finnerty, 3rd Vice President; Michelene Kennedy, Treasurer; Douglas Heller, Assistant Treasurer: Patrick O’Dea, Secretary; Patrick Cuff, Assistant Secretary; Bernard McGurl, Executive Director Paul Bechtel, Dominick DeFazio, John Gable, Joseph Grant, Michael Grant, David Gromelski, Sean Hanley, Deilsie Kulesa, Angela Lambert, Vincent Marshall, Ruthann Martin, Phil McCarthy, Michael Morin, Kate O’Connor, Kathleen O’Hara, James Williams Lackawanna River Corridor Association Post Office Box 368 Scranton, Pennsylvania 18501 570.347.6311 lrca@lrca.org www.lrca.org River Currents is published quarterly. Newsletter layout & edited by: Barb Semian, Program Manager 2 LRCA’s mission is to involve citizens of our watershed with conservation and stewardship of the River, its tributaries and water resources. Four goals define our mission: clean up the River environment; aid in the development of the 40-mile Lackawanna River Heritage Trail; create partnerships among local, state, and federal agencies, businesses and community groups promoting conservation and recreation; and develop partnerships with schools, universities, and the general public to promote environmental and conservation education to better understand our relationship with the local environment. LRCA continues to monitor activities and sites associated with the shale gas industry as we monitor all aspects of various industrial, commercial and individual actions and activities that may adversely affect the Lackawanna River and its watershed resources. We can’t do it alone. We can use your help in our River Watch Program. If you’d like to volunteer, please contact us to get involved. If you see something along the River or out anywhere in the Lackawanna Watershed, that you suspect may be of concern, please call the LRCA at 347-6311. There is a whole new alphabet of acronyms that relate to water pollution that we have a lot of responsibility for as individuals. In the urban and suburban environment, the decisions and lifestyle choices that each of us makes as individuals, families, small businesses and municipalities, is increasingly critical to the quality of the water that flows through our lives. Twenty five years ago you probably hadn’t heard of WIP’s, TMDL’s CSO’s or MS4’s. Today and tomorrow these acronyms will become increasingly important in our relationship with every drop of water that falls out of the sky and passes through our community on its way to the Chesapeake Bay. Check out the article “CSO’s, MS4 AND ALL THAT” for the latest on your connections to the Chesapeake. River Basin Commission (SRBC). We have just published a report on this work titled “The Lower Lackawanna River Watershed Restoration Assessment Plan” (LLRWRAP). It is available on our website at www.lrca.org in our Special Projects section. We are now looking for funding to carry this work on to the next level to involve state and federal agencies and private industry interests. We expect that this Plan will foster the start of a multi-year program that will see the Lackawanna/ Susquehanna Confluence Area undergo an environmental and economic revitalization. This transformation will be centered on the development of a mine drainage treatment plant and the recycling of the surrounding abandoned mine lands and culm dumps as an eco-industrial park: cleaning up the orange river, providing openspace habitat and recreation while providing sustainable employment and investment opportunities. We are looking to involve local residents with backgrounds in engineering, science, resource management, conservation and economic development to participate in a stakeholder’s task force to help advance the outcomes of the Lower Lackawanna Plan. Please contact director@lrca.org for further information on this initiative. CSO’S, MS4 AND ALL THAT SAGA OF THE ORANGE RIVER CONTINUES You may have seen the Lower Lackawanna River as it flows out of Old Forge and passes in to Duryea. The rocks on the riverbed are stained orange with iron oxide that precipitates out of the 60 million gallons of water flowing into the Lackawanna River through the Old Forge Bore Hole. This mine drain was constructed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the summer of 1962 to stabilize the flooded mine voids under the Lackawanna Valley. This has been polluting the Lackawanna and Susquehanna Rivers with over 6000 pounds of iron oxide every day for the past 50 years. The LRCA believes that there are resources and technologies available that can stop this pollution. In order to advance a project to treat this mine water flow and remove the oxides from the rivers, LRCA has initiated a partnership of stakeholders and is conducting an assessment study to collect data on the mine water flows and get the site qualified for state and federal funding to assist with development of a mine water treatment plant. LRCA has been conducting this work in collaboration with the Eastern Pennsylvania Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation (EPCAMR) and the Susquehanna 3 Combined Sewer Systems (CSS), Combined Sewer Overflow’s (CSO’s) and Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems (MS4’s) are terms which describe the systems of pipes under the streets of our communities that carry storm water and sewage. Some of these systems are combined and carry sewage to the sewer treatment plant and also carry storm water from rain and snow storms. These are the CSS or combined sewer systems. When the CSS receive too much storm water during peak storm events they are designed to overflow into a nearby stream or river to prevent back flooding of combined stormwater and sewage into streets and homes. The locations where the overflows occur are known as CSO’s. The overflow events are also referred to as CSO events. MS4’s refer to the system of pipes, culverts, drainage swales, collection basins, ponds and stream corridors that separately collect and convey storm water from our community and are not connected to a sanitary sewer system. The MS4 system includes all of the impervious surfaces such as roofs, parking lots, driveways, sidewalks, streets, roads, bridges, and highways. The undeveloped natural surfaces of our community are also part of the MS4 system. These natural areas, woodlands, agricultural lands, suburban and urban lawn and garden areas and commercial and institutional landscape beds are the basic green infrastructure that is critical to helping our communities meet our responsibilities for clean water. All of the towns along the Lackawanna River have both combined and separate sewer systems. The combined systems are typical of many similar communities in the northeast United States. There are new requirements under the Clean Water Act that address CSO’s Cont. on page 4 Looking for something to do? Volunteer with the LRCA or the LVC!!! Call 570-347-6311 or email lrca@lrca.org and MS4’s. Our sewer authorities and local municipalities are now responsible for greater compliance with these new Clean Water Act regulations. SCRANTON SEWER AUTHORITY COMPLETES NEW CSO CONTROL PLAN LRCA SECURES FEDERAL FUNDING TO ASSIST SCRANTON AND DUNMORE ON MS4 INVENTORY The Scranton Sewer Authority, which serves the City of Scranton, the Borough of Dunmore and small portions of Dickson City, Taylor and Moosic has just completed the design of a Long Term Control Plan to reduce and eliminate up to 90% of the CSO events in a given year. The plan calls for some separation of sewers but it primarily relies on the installation of an extensive system of concrete box culverts to act as storage containers for combined storm and sanitary flows. This will allow the flows to be held in the system and treated at the sewer plant after the storm event passes. The plan is estimated to cost about $140 million dollars when fully built. In order to help make the plan more affordable to the residents of Scranton and Dunmore, the plan will be carried out over the next 25 years. The Authority will seek low interest loans and grants from Penn Vest and finance the balance with long term bonds. The plan also provides the potential to use green infrastructure to help reduce flows of storm water into the combined sewer system. Homeowners, businesses and institutional campuses will have opportunities to redirect stormwater into the separate storm system by way of rain gardens, green roofs and the redesign of parking lots and roadways to capture and redirect storm flows away from the combined system. The Final Draft of the Long Term Control Plan was approved by the Board of the Scranton Sewer Authority on October 23, 2012 and submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency. As of January 2013 the plan has been approved through a consent decree in Federal District Court. A copy is available for your review and comments on the LRCA web site, www.lrca.org or on the Scranton Sewer Authority web site at www.scrantonsewer.org. A printed copy is available in the reference department of the Scranton Public Library. While the work to eliminate the Scranton CSO’s moves ahead the LRCA will work with the Authority and the residents of Scranton and Dunmore to help involve the community with ongoing activities that will help improve the overall quality of the Lackawanna River and its environment. Your comments, questions and your involvement are always welcome and encouraged! Please visit our websites listed above or contact the LRCA at 570-347-6311 or lrca@lrca.org for information. Like us on FaceBook!! Go to www.facebook.com/LRCAandLVC Scranton and Dunmore are also looking at new federal mandates that address the MS4 system. All of the towns along the Lackawanna are also now required to develop a plan and get their storm sewer system permitted through the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System also known as NPDES. LRCA has just initiated collaboration with the City of Scranton through the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and the Environmental Finance Center of the University of Maryland to develop a plan for the Scranton/Dunmore MS4 system. Just what is the MS4 system? We will first need to define the system. It is more than a network of catch basins, pipes, culverts, swales and retention ponds. It also includes all of the lands that drain into and through the basins and culverts as well as the creeks and river that receive the storm water. The “impervious surfaces” such as the roofs of our homes and commercial buildings and our parking lots, driveways, streets and highways all shed water. The pervious surfaces in our community such as natural woodlands, parklands, floodplains, fields and areas with lawns or meadows all have a capacity to absorb and hold large amounts of stormwater and allow it to infiltrate into the earth to become groundwater and feed the springs that are the sources of water in our creeks and rivers. As we define, map and inventory the various natural and manmade aspects of the MS4 system, we will look at the ownership patterns of the system and develop a series of recommendations to better manage those portions that are on private property and those that are publicly owned. We will also look at areas of the community where there were creeks that no longer exist. They may have been filled in or put into a system of brick and stone culverts during the days of coal mining. These areas are often the source of flood damage to nearby homes and businesses. The MS4 plan will look at long term ways that the natural water drainage patterns can be restored and the quality of the storm waters that flow through our neighborhoods to the Lackawanna River can be improved over the next generations. Do you have a stormwater problem in your neighborhood? Are there areas where stormwater ponds up on properties or along roadways? Are the catch basins on your street functioning? Are there culverts or other pipes that you have concerns about in your neighborhood? If you have concerns about stormwater problems, let the LRCA know about them by phone at 347-6311 or email us at lrca@lrca.org. 4 Cont. on page 5 Visits April, 2012. Bernie and I were invited to represent the LRCA and the Lackawanna Valley Conservancy (LVC) at West Point , New York for the annual Thaddeus Kosciuszko celebration. We joined Carol Gargan and her family for the Parade of Cadets and the celebratory service at the Kosciuszko Monument overlooking the Hudson River. The weather was clear with blue sky and plenty of sunshine. Walking down the steps and ramp to visit the Kosciusko Garden, constructed by him in 1778, one can only be astonished when arriving at the location. Built on a steep rock bank above the Hudson River, it is a place of great peacefulness! The fountains and plants only enhance the beauty and comfort one feels. August 6, 2012. The LRCA, LVC and Carol Gargan welcomed Simonas Satunas, Chief of Mission Lithuanian Embassy and Evaldas Stankevicius, First Lithuanian Cultural Attache to the U.S., for the dedication of the Kosciuska Healing Garden. All gathered were treated to food and beverages that contained ingredients representing the native plants and shrubs THE LRCA KAYAK EXCHANGE The LRCA is pleased to announce that we are hosting a Kayak Exchange through our newsletter “Lackawanna River Currents”, on our website, lrca.org, on our FaceBook pages and via our e-mail alerts. The LRCA Kayak Exchange is a forum for our members to offer their used Kayaks, Canoes, paddles, pfd’s and any other related paddling gear for sale or trade. We are also encouraging members to write brief stories about their paddle trips AND to post the dates and times when they are planning a paddle on the Lackawanna or other nearby streams in Northeastern Pennsylvania. We are doing this both as a service to our members and to promote the Lackawanna as a Paddling Destination by linking paddlers together to share ideas, equipment, experiences and a sense of the fun and enjoyment a day on the river can provide! So, if you have a kayak, canoe or paddling gear for sale, or if you are looking for used equipment, the LRCA Kayak Exchange is the place to go. It can also be a go-to place to find a paddling partner or share your next paddling excursion with like-minded folks. We are also looking for experienced paddlers to relate paddling advice about the Lackawanna. We are looking for advice on good “put-in” and “take-out” locations, information on good passages across riffles, and where there are particular rocks, obstructions, and strainers to avoid and how to avoid them. If there are groups of paddlers planning a series of runs and shuttles and you’d like to spread the word, the LRCA Kayak Exchange is the place to post your event. You can send your post to lrca@lrca.org subject line “LRCA Kayak Exchange”, or call LRCA at 347-6311. that have been reintroduced in this garden by the beautiful Lackawanna River. Have some stories, tales, pix about your time on the Lackawanna? Let us hear & see! All welcome!! Written by: Barb Semian, LRCA Program Manager Great American Cleanup PA May 2012 Great American Cleanup PA March 1 to May 31, 2013 The LRCA will have cleanups during this time. April 20, 2013 “Bridge to Bridge Cleanup” 9AM - 3PM Plot Section in North Scranton Meet at the Shawnee Avenue Pumping Station “Sweeney’s Beach” above; Contact the LRCA to Volunteer!! Coxton Point, right 570-347-6311 lrca@lrca.org www.lrca.org www.facebook.com/LRCAandLVC 5 2012 LRCA and LVC Activities Misty Ridge Dedication April 2012 Downspout Disconnect Workshop May, 2012 Lackawanna River Recon June 2012 “Arts on Fire” June 2012 EnviroScape Demos “Go with the Flow” August 2012 Fishing the Lackawanna River June 2012 6 Remember When????? 7 LRCA 25th Anniversary Highlights 8 Lackawanna River Regatta 2013 Registration Form Name of Vessel: _________________________________________________________________ Theme of Vessel (optional): _________________________________________________________ Name of Family or Sponsor Group: ____________________________________________________ Name of Business Sponsor: _________________________________________________________ Please Print Clearly Captain ________________________________ Bosun _________________________________ Address _______________________________ Address _______________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ Phone _________________________________ Phone _________________________________ e-mail _________________________________ e-mail _________________________________ First Mate _____________________________ Seaman ________________________________ Address _______________________________ Address _____________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ ______________________________________ Phone _________________________________ Phone _________________________________ e-mail _________________________________ e-mail _________________________________ Yeoman ________________________________ Date Received: __________________ Address _______________________________ ______________________________________ Staff Initial: ___________________ ______________________________________ Phone _________________________________ Assigned Regatta Number: _________ e-mail _________________________________ I/We hereby register for and state our intentions to participate in the Lackawanna River Regatta 2013. I/We hereby acknowledge that participation in the River Regatta will require some physical exertion and exposure to some dangerous conditions. I/We agree to hold the Lackawanna River Corridor Association (LRCA) harmless from any liabilities which may arise from or in connection with the use of any form of the ridiculous, sublimely absurd or sardonically evocative nature of our Regatta entry, its methods of navigation, communication, decoration or our techniques in the use of duct tape; whether or not we use duct tape or admit that we use duct tape. I/We certify that I/We are physically fit and have trained sufficiently for this event. I/We also acknowledge that we are aware of Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission regulations requiring all small craft crew and passengers to have a Personal Floatation Device and a whistle or horn at hand. This release is signed voluntarily and is binding upon the below signed, his/her heirs, executors or assigns. By signing this release I acknowledge that I have read the LRCA River Regatta rules and agree to abide by them. Signature: ____________________________________________________ Date: ___________________ RF ‘13 “Currents” Regatta Reg. 9 REGISTRATION LRCA RIVERFEST CANOE-A-THON SATURDAY June 1, 2013 1. CHOOSE YOUR CATEGORY (Competitive deadline May 30, 2013. Placed in competitive Heats Only!) _____ COMPETITIVE - competitive canoeists/kayaks will be placed in a heat and timed _____ RECREATIONAL - will not be timed/not competing Office use only PARTICIPANTS: CHOOSE YOUR DIVISION _____ TWO MALE _____ YOUTH/YOUTH* _____ MALE KAYAK _____ TWO FEMALE _____ ADULT/YOUTH* _____ FEMALE KAYAK _____ MALE/FEMALE *Youths Categories Age 12 to 17. Youths Under Age 12 Not Allowed. CASH $ _______ CHECK $ _______ #_______ 2. CHOOSE A LAUNCH SITE: Rentals are available at Blakely site only. ____ ARCHBALD TO SCRANTON - 12 MILE (experienced paddlers only) ____ BLAKELY TO SCRANTON - 8 MILE 3. Canoe-A-Thon REGISTRATION FEE: INDIVIDUAL_____ $40 NonMember Rental Fees CANOE RENTAL _____ $60 KAYAK RENTAL _____ $50 TEAM OF 2 Member Rental Fees CANOE RENTAL KAYAK RENTAL _____ $70 _____ $55 _____ $45 CANOE & KAYAK RENTAL DEADLINE WEDNESDAY MAY 29 TOTAL Registration & Rental ________________ PA DRIVERS LICENSE NUMBER (for canoe & kayak rentals only):_________________________________________ 4. REGISTRATION - PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY! CAPTAIN _____________________________________ MATE____________________________________________ ADDRESS__________________________________ADDRESS_________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ PHONE_________________________AGE_______PHONE_______________________________AGE________ E-MAIL____________________________________E-MAIL___________________________________________ 5. WAIVER-RELEASE: Read and sign to acknowledge agreement. I/We hereby acknowledge that participation in the LRCA RiverFest—Canoe-A-Thon will require extreme physical exertion and exposure to dangerous condition. I/We hereby assume all risk of injury or damage to person or property resulting from or in connection with the use of any of the facilities, equipment, or premises of the course or associated areas. Specifically, I/We recognize that the race sponsors and organizers have little control over road, traffic or river conditions. I/We hereby release the LRCA, local municipalities, their agents, officers, employees, representatives and insurers, and agree to defend, indemnify and hold them harmless of and from all claim, demand, action, or cause of action for injury, damage, or loss to person or property asserted by or accruing in favor of me. I/We certify that I/We are physically fit and have trained sufficiently for this event. If I am renting a canoe or kayak, I agree to be held financially responsible for any loss, theft or damage incurred to a rental canoe or kayak or any company. This release is signed voluntarily and is binding upon the below signed, his/her heirs, executors or assigns. CAPTAIN SIGNATURE _____________________________________ MATE SIGNATURE ____________________________________ DATE _____________________________________________________ DATE _________________________________________________ PARENTS SIGNATURE IF UNDER 18 YEARS OLD SIGNATURE ____________________________________SIGNATURE _______________________________________________ DATE __________________________________________DATE _____________________________________________________ By signing this release I acknowledge that I have read the LRCA Canoe-A-Thon rules and agree to abide by them. MAIL THIS FORM AND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER PAYABLE TO: LRCA ● P.O. BOX 368 ● SCRANTON, PA ● 18501 ● (570) 347-6311 RF ‘13 “Currents” Canoe Reg. 10 Thanks to all Our New and Renewing Member from January, 2012 to December 2012 Pat & Will Acker John & Pam Addeo Irwin Adler Eunice Alexander Michael Andres William Antognoli Lori D. Armbrust Matthew Armstrong & Cynthia Zujkowski Jeanne Atlas Irving & Edyth Grossman Foundation Harry Baldan Michele & Stan Balon Andrew J. Baron Jr. Eugene & Sally Barrett Tim & Kathleen Barrett Scranton Sewer Authority Joseph Barron Paul & Jessica Bechtel Edward & Joni Benintende John Bogdanovicz Don & Rose Broderick Rodney D. Brown Joseph Burinsky Robert Burke Terrence & Eileen Burke Austin & Marianne Burke William V. Burke William and Grace Byrne Patrick Calpin Sandy Cameli Cindy Campbell Barbara L. Carey Charles & Daurice Castelli Joe & Donna Cavagnaro Thomas Cawley Peter W. Chapla Walter Checefsky Ted Chickey Col. Gene N. Chomko, USA (Ret) Joseph F. Cimini Esq. Joan E. Ciotti Brian Clark Robert & Jane Clark & Family Victor & Stacy Cognetti Mitchell S. Cohen Mary Judith Colleran Russell Collins William & Judith Collins Dale Collins & Family Richard P. Conaboy Bill Conlogue Jim & Judy Conroy Paul & Michele Cooper William Cosgrove Cosgrove N.E.P. Norman Coyle Jim & Kate Crowley Janet Crowther Katherine Cullen Dolores Davis Robert E. Decker Dominick DeFazio Russ & Patti Delaney Margaret Dermody Marc Dewaele & Family Maurya Dillon Dayle I. Dobroski Phileshia Dombroski Hal & Marg Donahue Eric & Tracey Duffy Michael Dunio Bob Durkin Scott Dustman Eloise Dwyer T. Shawn & Jacqueline Earle Richard & Linda Eckersley Jim and Ann Elliott Robert & Beverly Elvidge Robert Emmi Carolyn English John and Patricia Evanchyk Wayne Evans Joe & Meg Evans Ronald J. Fabri Paul & Rosemarie Fahey Mary Felley Patty Ferguson Bridget Fitzpatrick Lackawanna College Edward & Nina Flanagan Bob & Gretchen Fleese & Ludders James & Amy Fleming Sonia Forry Edward J. Fortuna Ruth Freidenburg Christian Fronduti Jane Frye John & Marianne Gable Leonard Gable Beth Gallagher Eugene Gallagher Leonard R. Garner Jr. Joe & Fran Garvey David & Regina Garvey John Paul Gehrens Natalie Gelb Lackawanna Heritage Valley National & State Heritage Area David Gibson Elizabeth Gilboy Marty Gilgallon Pennsylvania Tectonics, Inc. Ed Giombetti John Grabowski Keystone Propane Service, Inc. Philip & Kathleen Graff Joseph Grant Patricia Green John Grill Michael J. Grobosky Richard & Sandra Guman Joyce Hatala Joyce Hatala Associates David & Ann Hawk Oren B. Helbok Douglas Heller Walter Herrmann Alan & Cynthia Heyen Jack Hiddlestone Joseph P. Holland Mary Beth Holmes Ed & Theresa Hughes Ellie Hyde Len & Gerry Janus Kathy Jeffrey Vance & Melissa M. Jones Arthur J. Jordan Tom & Janice Joyce Kathy Judge Sue Kashuba Kevin Kays Dominic Keating Bill & Harriet Keim Gerald Kelly Lawrence & Judith Kennedy John & Michelene Kennedy Michael Kerrigan Thomas Kilcullen Michael Klobucar Mark & Pamela Koberecki Ed Kocis Jill Koczwara Arlene F. Kohl Andy & Debbie Kohut Michael J. Korzemba Chester Kowalski Paul & Amy Kowalski Delores Kownaski Dave & Debra Krewson John Krisa Krisa & Krisa, PC J. Dennis Kryzanowski Chester & Deilsie Kulesa Mike & Angela Lambert Linda & J Llewellyn Miller Ted & Justine Lengyel Scott Linde Linde Corporation Carol M. Lizell Marigrace Loftus Charles and Jean Lohin Anita & David Lohin Lorraine Lupini Jennifer & Paul Macknosky James & Maryann Mangan Diane Marinchak Ralph J. Marino Ruthann Martin Leslie & Gretchen Martin Robert Marx Mike Matso Richard Maurer Robert A. Mazzoni Janet T. McCabe Eveline McCloskey James McDonnell Guy McGinnis Patti McGrane Maureen McGuigan Bernard McGurl Tim & Cathy McGurl Sharon Meagher Edward Michalski Teresa Michalski Elizabeth Milder-Beh Mike Miller Thomas & Shirley Misiura Norma Moreiko Jack & Gayle Muller Linda Munley Frank & Anne Marie Muraca Shawn Murphy Richard Murphy Frank Naughton Jim & Alice Noone Maggie O’Brien & Anna Aebli Patrick & Ann O’Dea Kathleen Kelly O’Hara Barbara O’Malley Helen E. Oravec Grace Oravec Priscilla Pancoast Dennis Panusky Maggie Parsons Leni Piasky John Piepoli J.T.P. Services, Inc. Joan Piersimoni John Pocius CECO Associates Patrick & Wendy Poinsot Joe Polansky John J. Price Price Insurance Jeremy Prostka John B. Pryle Bob & Judy Quinlan Mike Quinlan Emily & Lee Rancier Colleen Reardon Robert & Mary Ellen Reese Reeves Rent-A-John, Inc 11 Ron & Catherine Refice Carl Reichart & Jason Smith Margaret Rempe Jane E Risse Paulette Robbins Henry Robinson Michael Rock Nancy Ross James & Gloria Ross Ross Family Foundation Michael Roth Roth & Dempsey, P.C. Francis P. Ruane Leah Rudolph Ron & Christine Ryczak Mary Ann Savakinus Lackawanna Historical Society Robert & Mary Ann Savakinus Patrick & Dorothy Scanlon Christine Schaefer Aynl & Judy Scheatzle Joan Scheuneman Dan and Lisa Schreffler John H. Schultz Gerald Schwarztrauber Elsie Schweitzer William & Mary Scranton Ernie & Kathleen Searfoss Ron Semian Joan Sharpe John & Shirley Shaw Timothy Shean Lackawanna Bicycle Club James & Barbara Shuta Edwin Simoncek Rita Skechus Peter & Liana Smith Kenneth Srebro Srebro Construction Jude Stambone Justin Taylor Jeannie Telech Thomas & Ann Marie Tell William & Lorraine Tersteeg Martin A. Toth Dan & Karyn Townsend Barbara Turock George Wagner Charles & Ann Walker Phillip B. Watkins Jr. Jeff Webb John J. White III Roy Whitman & Family Tracey A. Williams Arthur Wilson Alice Witkoski Megan Wolfe Maribeth Woody & David Perry Brooks Wrightnour Paula K. Yaggi Sharon Yanik-Craig William J. Young Alexandra Younica A special thank you to everyone who participated in the fundraising efforts for the LRCA’s 25th Anniversary celebratory events of 2012. The Lackawanna Historical Society, ArtWorks Studio & Gallery, Memory Book Ad/ Tribute contributors, the Dinner Committee and the many supporters of the LRCA. THANK YOU!!! 16th Annual Duck-A-Thon June 1, 2013 Sponsor Lackawanna County Arts & Culture Program Stream Grant Be a RiverFest 2013 Sponsor Gold, Silver, Bronze or Friends of the Lackawanna Contact the LRCA 570-347-6311 or lrca@lrca.org or www.lrca.org The LRCA is now affiliated with Duck $5 each or 8 Ducks for $20! Grand Prize: $500 Second Prize: $250 Third Prize: $100 It’s so easy!! No ticket or stub needed to win. When we receive your order, numbered ducks will be assigned to you. The Ducks Do All The Work! Single Duck: _____ $_________ Ducks (8): _____ $_________ Name: __________________________________ Address: ________________________________ _________________________________________ Contact TobyFCU at 1-866-862-9328 or www.tobyhannafcu.org or visit the Scranton Branch Staff at 315 Franklin Avenue, Scranton, PA Phone: __________________________________ E-mail: _________________________________ Please make check payable to LRCA and send to: LRCA, P.O. Box 368, Scranton, PA 18501 Not a member yet? JOIN US! ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Name __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Address __________________________________________________________________________________________________ CityStateZip __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Phone HomeMobile __________________________________________________________________________________________________ Email Choose Your level (Any Amount Gladly Appreciated) Senior $15 ___ Student $15 ___ Individual $20 ___ Family $30 ___ Sojourner $50 ___ Trail Blazer $100 ___ Riverkeeper $250 ___ Complete & mail this form today! Make Check or Money Order Payable to LRCA: Lackawanna River Corridor Association • P.O. Box 368 • Scranton, PA 18501-0368
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to visit the Kosciuska Garden page at www.lrca. org for updates on the garden and we invite you to e-mail lrca@lrca.org or call the LRCA at 570-3476311 to inquire about volunteer opportunities with...
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