NAPS Welcomes You

Home
History
Membership
Officers
Events
Stewardship Tips
Sewage Sludge
Officials
Radio Scripts
Newsletters
Books
Links/Contacts
Wildlife Preserves

 

NORTHUMBERLAND

ASSOCIATION

for

PROGRESSIVE

STEWARDSHIP

Dedicated to: 

bullet

Improving the environmental quality of the Chesapeake Bay

bullet

Retaining the unique quality of life in Northumberland County

bullet

Advocating and monitoring sound land use policies

bullet

Preventing and/or reducing all forms of pollution

bullet

Promoting educational programs aimed at achieving these goals

Highlights of the Site:

 

bullet

Five articles addressing the need for updating the 1974 zoning ordinance have been published recently in local newspapers. In the interest of making the articles more widely available, and to draw attention to the need for zoning reform, NAPS is posting the articles with the author's permission.

 

bullet

Stables Chosen 2007 NAPS Distinguished Citizen

Northumberland Schools Superintendent Clint Stables was chosen NAPS Distinguished Citizen for 2007. He has demonstrated outstanding leadership for Northumberland County Schools during the 6 years he has held the office of Superintendent. Not only has he encouraged a number of innovative programs within the schools, targeting at risk students, but he has lead the movement to replace totally two aging structures and provide the children of our county with state-of-the-art facilities, appropriate to the educational needs of the twenty-first century.

The award was presented during the NAPS Fall Social, September 22nd.  Stables has served the county since 1983, starting as Assistant Principal at the Middle School and subsequently holding positions of Middle School Principal, General Supervisor, Assistant Superintendent and Superintendent. This year he has been honored by his peers with the award of Regional Superintendent of the Year.

Under Stables’ leadership, the schools have implemented a number of successful and nationally recognized programs: Reading Partners, Read Aloud Virginia, Peer Mediation and the Northumberland High School Teacher Advisor Program. Each of these programs aims at targeting groups of students who are, in some way, falling behind, and assisting them to realize their potential through early intervention.  Standards of Learning (SOL) scores throughout the school system have shown marked improvement during Stables’ term of office, as have graduation rates and the number of high school seniors continuing to further education.  However, Stables’ most memorable achievement will be the construction of a new academic campus for Northumberland County.

Recognizing that renovating ancient, crumbling  and inefficient buildings could, at best, represent a short-term economy, Stables pushed for the construction of a combined high school/middle school building to serve the community for many decades to come. Persuading all parties and the community at large of the wisdom of this move was a major undertaking. Leading county officials through the process of financing the undertaking and then selecting all elements of the new buildings was an even greater challenge. As the walls of the new schools take shape, Stables’ vision is becoming reality, and Northumberland County can look forward to a day – not so far away – when our children can attend classes in a building that demonstrates the value we place on education.  In addition, the county’s citizens can anticipate enjoying those facilities which the new schools will make available to the community at large.

 

bullet

Adopt-A-Highway Program

bullet

NAPS adopted the stretch of VA Route 200 between Tipers Bridge over the Great Wicomico River and Wicomico Church in the early 1990's. A crew of NAPS volunteers, under the leadership of Ann Belanger, picks up highway litter several times each year. Ann Belanger also serves as liaison between NAPS and the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) Adopt-A-Highway program, not only in promoting the program, but in signing up a number of church, high school and other volunteer groups. From time to time, NAPS has been asked to conduct cleanups of particularly bad spots, usually illegal dumps.

bullet

Nitrogen Pollution from Animal Waste, December 2006 Bay Journal

bullet

Bay Journal web site www.bayjournal.com

bullet

Web Sites with information about Chesapeake Bay Issues:

 Warming is hurting bay, report says
Richmond Times Dispatch - Richmond,VA,USA
By LAWRENCE LATANE III A massive die-off of saltwater eel grass beds during the summer of 2005 gave the Chesapeake Bay a taste of what's to come with global ...
http://www.inrich.com/cva/ric/news.apx.-content-articles-RTD-2007-07-20-0173.html
 
 
Report links farmers, the bay
Baltimore Sun - United States
By Frank D. Roylance | sun reporter July 20, 2007 The Chesapeake Bay Foundation says the agricultural community is on the front lines of the fight against ...
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.warming20jul20,0,3949483.story
 
 
Changed farm practices essential to bay's health
Daily Press - Newport News,VA,USA
Recent reports on the health of the Chesapeake Bay paint a dismal picture. An Environmental Protection Agency Chesapeake Bay Program report noted that water ...
http://www.dailypress.com/news/opinion/dp-op_chesbay_col_0721jul21,0,2066375.story?coll=dp-opinion-editorials
 
 
Bay help found in farming practices
Delmarva Daily Times - MD,USA
... rising waters throughout the Chesapeake Bay region, said Beth McGee, a lead author of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation's 18-page report on climate change. ...
http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070720/NEWS01/707200301/1002
 
Warming Poses Threats To Chesapeake, Group Says
Washington Post - United States
By David A. Fahrenthold Climate change has already begun to alter the Chesapeake Bay, warming and raising its waters in a way that could unbalance delicate ...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/19/AR2007071901112.html?hpid=topnews
 
 
House May Double Funds for Cleanup
Washington Post - United States
By David A. Fahrenthold The languishing effort to clean up the Chesapeake Bay could get a huge boost in federal money -- $80 million a year to reduce ...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/20/AR2007072002150.html
 
 
With Less-Expensive Asian Suppliers,
Wall Street Journal - USA
Bypassing traditional crab suppliers in the increasingly troubled Chesapeake Bay region, Mr. Sneed, Phillips Foods Inc.'s president, turned to Asian sources ...



 

 

 

 

Webmaster:  Rita Wright Johnson
Technical Advisor:  Tom Ryals