Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections
Personal tools
You are here: Home / Practitioners (individuals) / Maloney, Lori

Search results

346 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type


















New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
DEP strives to assist Pennsylvania communities experiencing the damage and disruption that flooding can cause. This webpage contains resources to help municipal officials, property owners, and others affected by flooding of local streams to better understand the regulatory requirements that apply to working in streams. When stream maintenance work is performed in a well-planned, environmentally responsible manner, the likelihood of future problems is reduced.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
A listing of several different land conservation programs in Maryland, and links to MD land trusts (hosted by Baltimore County website).
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Image The next generation of watershed stewards
Photo of a very young child with a measuring tape reel on the bank of a trout stream in Northern Pennsylvania.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
This brochure from CT DEEP explains the benefits of riparian buffers. Low Impact Development (LID) techniques manage stormwater runoff by mimicking the natural movement of water in the environment and preserving the pre‐development hydrology of a site. If your property includes or borders water features, one of the easiest and most cost effective methods for protecting water quality is to PLANT A VEGETATED RIPARIAN AREA.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Watershed Based Management Principles, CT Watershed Plans, CT's Watershed Management Program, and Watershed Management Planning documents produced in Connecticut
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
Video application/x-troff-ms Cattle don't grow in streams
Short video by Clemson University, interview with two South Carolina farmers about the advantages of streambank fencing and alternate water systems
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
This chapter provides non-structural and structural practices that stabilize and protect streambanks and shorelines from the negative effects of land erosion. For water quality purposes—bioengineering and non-structural practices using native vegetation are preferred over conventional “hard armoring” such as riprap, seawalls, and bulkheads.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
The Cooperative Agreement for Stream Bank Restoration Program assists landowners through public-private partnerships by offering advice and funding for habitat projects on private lands that restore and protect wetlands and other wildlife habitat that might otherwise go unprotected. The funding for this cost-share initiative is provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Program to GSWCC and provides incentives to install practices that improve riparian buffers and repair and protect stream banks. Project applications are prioritized in order to address priority watersheds and to provide maximum benefit to the 63 species on Georgia’s Threatened & Endangered Species List.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
File Troff document Wood is Good for Maryland Brook Trout
Brochure developed by MD DNR and MD Forest Service, to explain the benefits of riparian buffers and woody material to health of streams and brook trout.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources
The Stream Improvement Program offers assistance by designing and constructing small projects to restore stream channels damaged by high water or flooding events and to stabilize streambanks affected by erosion at sites where there are imminent threats to the structural integrity of homes, businesses and industries. The primary objective of this program is to provide increased public safety on a smaller scale than the larger flood protection type projects and to reduce high sediment loads and prevent them from being transported downstream and re-depositing elsewhere. For additional information on the Stream Improvement Program, please contact Bill Kcenich at 717-783-0369.
Located in The Story of Wild Brook Trout / Landowner Resources