Honored
SMITHFIELD, R.I. — Several local students were named to the Bryant University spring 2018 deans list: Jacob Theroux, '19, of Dayville; Benjamin Piche, '19, of Woodstock; Adam Piche, '19, of Woodstock; Michelle Michalik, '18, of Chepachet; Daniel Richardson, '21, of Chepachet; Joseph Prete, '21, of Pascoag; Taylor Chamberlin, ' 21, of Pascoag.
Attention woodland landowners: Funding is available to improve woodland habitat for important bird species and to manage your woods for wildlife and people. The Last Green Valley (TLGV), the MassConn Sustainable Forest Partnership (MassConn) and the Northern Rhode Island Conservation District (NRICD) are offering a new opportunity for woodland landowners to obtain forest management plans with bird habitat assessments.
The program is phase two of the $6.1 million Southern New England Heritage Forest conservation effort, an unprecedented three-state collaboration made possible through the Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) of the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). The NRCS funding is being matched, bringing the economic infusion into the region to $12.2 million.
A professional forester will walk your property and coordinate with the Audubon society in your state to produce a high-quality forest management plan with a bird habitat assessment of your woods. The plan will contain recommendations for management measures aligning with the landowner’s goals for the property. The plans will meet federal and state requirements and may be used to apply for property tax reductions at the local level (where applicable).
Grant funds are available to pay for most of the forester’s costs and to completely fund the bird habitat assessments. Landowners will be responsible for choosing a forester from an approved list and paying for a percentage of the total cost of the forest management plan.
This program is ideally suited for landowners who have never had a forest management plan and own more than 10 acres of woodlands.
Program requirements vary by state. To get started, contact the lead partner for the state the land is in. The partners can assist in the application process. The application deadline is Jan. 18, but it is recommended the process begin by early December to ensure the application is complete before the deadline.
Visit www.thelastgreenvalley.org for links to the application materials, including a list of communities in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island that are included in this program. The Connecticut contact is: Bill Reid, 860-774-3300;
Supporting partners for this project include: MA Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, Providence Water, Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, CT Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, Hull Forest Products, Thames River Basin Partnership, New England Forestry Foundation, Eastern CT Conservation District, Norcross Wildlife Foundation, RI Division of Forest Management, RI Woodland Partnership, Harvard Forest, Yale Sustaining Family Forests Institute, Audubon Connecticut, Mass Audubon and Audubon Rhode Island. The Southern New England Heritage Forest is a 1.49 million-acre unfragmented forest corridor stretching along the Connecticut and Rhode Island border to the Quabbin Reservoir in Massachusetts. Bounded by more heavily urbanized areas, with more than one million nearby residents, the SNEHF has an astonishing 76 percent forest cover and offers one of the last viable wildlife corridors from southern to northern New England.
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Rain Upside?
#1: It looks like diamonds were strewn on the ginkgo leaves in downtown Putnam. #2). It isn't snow. Linda Lemmon photo.
Holiday
Dazzle
Parade
set for
Nov. 25
The Holiday Dazzle Light Parade committee has named American Legion Post #13 in Putnam as this year’s parade Grand Marshal.
According to parade chairman Gary Osbrey, “The committee is proud to honor American Legion Post #13 as they celebrate 100 years of service to our community”.
The 17th annual parade is set to roll at 5 p.m. Nov. 25 in downtown Putnam.
Once again this year, the parade committee will present a “litter free parade.” Before the parade begins, an army of volunteers from High Pointe Church in Thompson will hand out trash bags donated by The Last Green Valley. At the conclusion of the parade, volunteers will walk the parade route picking up trash bags from the crowd and depositing the bags into a town of Putnam Public Works truck.
The parade will step off at 5 p.m. from the Grove Street monument and will follow Grove Street merging right onto South Main Street, left on Front Street (through the center of downtown Putnam), right onto Kennedy Drive (at Cargill Falls) and will travel past Rotary Park and Riverfront Commons on Kennedy Drive taking a right onto Providence Street and will end at the Owen Tarr Sports Complex at the corner of Providence and School streets.
The rain date is Dec. 2. Entry forms are available at WINY Radio, the Putnam Town Hall and online at www.winyradio.com.
For more information, contact parade organizer and chairman, Gary Osbrey at 860-928-1350 or
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