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The Verde
Connections Web site is a service Web site for the Verde Valley, featuring a
variety of community-oriented topics.


Click here to see photos
of the mapmaking classes.
Learn How to Make
Watershed Maps on Your Home or Office Computer
Two Classes will
be offered Friday, Sept. 5. Register by Aug. 18.
Click
here for NEMO Watershed Mapping Class Registration Form Interactive Word File, to be saved and then emailed to
mayor@dianejoens.com) or printed and
mailed to Diane Joens, NEMO Project, 312 W Mesquite Dr. Cottonwood, AZ 86326.
Make checks payable to the Cottonwood Chamber of Commerce.
Note, if for some reason there
is a problem sending email to
mayor@dianejoens.com, you may also use (either/or)
dianej@sedona.net to email the
registrar.
Click here for Agenda for
Watershed Mapping Classes (.pdf)
Click
here for NEMO Mapping ANNOUNCEMENT (.pdf)
- Press Release
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- Contact: Diane Joens,
mayor@dianejoens.com or 928-634-4112
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Kristine Uhlman,
kuhlman@ag.arizona.edu or 520-792-95951 ext. 51
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- An exciting
opportunity for area residents to learn watershed mapmaking skills for use
on their home or office computers is planned by Cooperative Extension’s
Arizona NEMO, the city of Cottonwood, Yavapai College, and the Cottonwood
Chamber of Commerce.
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- Community members who
are interested in learning how to locate lakes and streams in the Verde
Watershed, or residents who would like to print USGS topographical maps of
their neighborhoods, may learn skills in two planned mapmaking classes.
Hikers may learn how to design and print maps featuring their next
hikes—maps that show geology, vegetation types, and soils. Maps that show
precipitation, average annual temperature, or USGS stream gauges can be
created and printed on home or office computers. Grant writers may learn
to create maps to attach to their next grant applications.
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- Cottonwood Mayor
Diane Joens is working with NEMO officials to bring the Internet map
services (IMS) classes to the Verde Valley. Mapping instructors are
Kristine Uhlman, assistant area agent for Cooperative Extension and NEMO
program coordinator with the University of Arizona Water Resources
Research Center, and Erin Westfall, geographical information systems
analyst for UA’s Water Resources Center. “This is not MapQuest or Google
Maps, this is watershed exploration,” emphasizes Uhlman. “The program
works on all personal computers—home and office,” she says.
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- There is something
for everyone. Register no later than Aug. 18 for one of two classes
offered on Friday, Sept. 5. A choice of an afternoon class scheduled from
2 to 4 p.m., or an evening class from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. is available.
Classes will be held at the Yavapai College Verde Valley Campus, 601 Black
Hills Drive, Clarkdale, in Building M, Rooms 211 and 212. A campus map is
available at
www.yc.edu. Attendance is limited to the first 40 registrants. The $15
registration fee covers snacks and a donation to the Verde River Day
event. Download a registration form, class agenda, and informational
poster at
www.verdeconnections.com. Download the registration form and mail with
a check made out to the Cottonwood Chamber of Commerce to class registrar
Diane Joens, 312 West Mesquite Drive, Cottonwood, AZ. 86326. Or, download
the registration form and email it to
mayor@dianejoens.com, and pay the $15 registration fee at the door.
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- This two-hour
training course introduces an ArcIMS Internet Map Server. Course content
includes how to access the NEMO ArcIMS site, review basic ArcIMS functions
like panning, zooming and display, review how to do attribute and spatial
queries, and teach watershed mapmaking on home or office computers.
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- NEMO stands for
Non-point Education for Municipal Officials. The mission of the NEMO
Network is to help communities protect their natural resources while still
accommodating growth. NEMO is concerned with any issue related to water
quality or quantity in the state of Arizona.
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- The goal of NEMO is
to educate land use decision makers to make choices and take actions to
lessen nonpoint source pollution and protect natural resources. This is
accomplished by non-regulatory, research-based education using geospatial
information and other advanced technologies for outreach, education,
analysis, and research.
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- Registration fees
will help this year’s 20th annual Verde River Day event scheduled Sept. 27
from 9 to 3 p.m. at Dead Horse Ranch State Park in Cottonwood. Some of the
day's events include a climbing wall, organized canoe and kayak rides,
sand castle building, and nature-based exhibits. Guests of all ages are
welcome to fish in the lagoon that is loaded with hundreds of pounds of
catfish. Poles, bait and tackle are provided for all ages. No fishing
license is needed. Visitors may also experience nature's history through
guided nature walks. There will be a wide range of entertainment
throughout the day. Verde River Day promotes preservation and care of the
environment by showcasing informative exhibits on the Verde's unique
riparian habitat. Learn more at
http://verderiverdays.com.
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- Cooperative
Extension’s NEMO, the city of Cottonwood, Yavapai College and Cottonwood
Chamber of Commerce for Verde River Day are collaborating to bring the IMS
classes to the Verde Watershed. For more information contact Diane Joens,
(928) 634-4112,
mayor@dianejoens.com or Kristine Uhlman, (520)792-9591 ext. 51,
kuhlman@ag.arizona.edu. The NEMO Web site is
www.ArizonaNEMO.org.
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- Check out the new League
of Women Voters' Web site!!
- (Leaving this Web site--click on back button to return)
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- Community
Landscape Vision to be Topic of Public Workshop
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League of Women Voters of
Sedona-Verde Valley, P.O. Box 966 - Sedona, AZ
86339
Contact: Robyn
Prud’homme-Bauer 639-1045
LWV
Releases Landscape Vision Workshop Report
The
League of Women Voters of Sedona-Verde Valley, has released “Creating a
Landscape Vision of the Verde Valley”, its report of a public workshop held
in Cottonwood on November 8, 2007. The 18-page report summarizes the
workshop process and results and features a preliminary discussion draft of
a proposed landscape vision statement for the Verde Valley Community
Resource Unit, as defined by the Prescott National Forest. The vision
statement is based on review and analysis of comments received at the
workshop; and it now is available for further public review and comment.
The
November workshop was co-sponsored by Yavapai County Supervisor Chip Davis,
the Prescott National Forest, Stewards of Public Lands, Verde Valley
4-Wheelers, Verde Valley Land Preservation Institute and Verde Watershed
Association. There were about 60 participants and observers, who worked in
small groups to make individual comments, then summarize and prioritize by
topics. The results were compiled and a further content analysis was
conducted by the League.
The LWV
will present the report at the January 16 meeting of the Verde Valley
Regional Land Use Planners (VVRLUP) and will be circulating the document via
e-mail through co-sponsors for further review and discussion until late
February. “Verde Valley citizens and groups now have the opportunity to
look at the preliminary draft, say what they think,” said Judy Miller, LWV
project coordinator. “Anyone who has an interest can help create a vision
of the overall Verde Valley landscape--from Jerome to Camp Verde and
including the east face of the Black Mountain range west of the Verde
River,” she added. The League’s goal is to submit a landscape vision
statement to the Prescott National Forest for its future planning purposes
by early March 2008.
The
report may be viewed at
www.verdeconnections.com. For more information, contact LWV Coordinator
Robyn Prud’homme-Bauer at 639-1045 or
rcpbauer@aol.com; or Judy Miller at 649-1916 or
dvnjdymlr@cableone.net.

The Stewards' new Web site is up and running. Please click here for current information:
www.verdestewards.org.
We will leave this Web site online with historical data of three years'
worth of projects.
Nov. 13, 2006 E-Letter and
Information about Nov. 18 Cleanup
| Verde Connections:
Serving the Verde Valley in Arizona |
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HELP WANTED!
- Great partnerships enable, empower, and
encourage people
- to work together toward achieving success.
--Prescott
and Coconino National Forests
WE'RE HELPING TO
PREVENT WILD LAND FIRES
ON RURAL/URBAN INTERFACE LANDS!
WE'RE HELPING TO KEEP OUR WATERSHED CLEAN! 
WE'RE HELPING TO
PREVENT WILD LAND FIRES
ON RURAL/URBAN INTERFACE LANDS!
WE'RE HELPING TO KEEP OUR WATERSHED CLEAN!

Clarkdale Police Chief
Pat Haynie, retired Verde District Ranger Tom Bonomo and Cottonwood Community
Development Director Jerry Owen collaborate on a Stewards of Public Lands
cleanup. Community members assisted in the removal of illegal dumping that
filled three large roll-off dumpsters and several dump trucks on their
very first cleanup. Efforts to clean up public lands in the Upper Verde
Valley continue. WE'RE
HELPING TO
REDUCE
RISK from WILDLAND FIRES! WE'RE HELPING TO
KEEP OUR WATERSHED CLEAN!
Quote:
“Why do we do this hard work? Because it feels so good to get an ugly mess
cleaned up and then see the natural Arizona beauty that belongs to us all.”
Jess Tyler, Stewards Co-Chair.
- *We welcome new volunteers! Come and help
keep our watershed healthy!**
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Like to volunteer to help? Questions? Email
Cochair
Diane Joens
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"The activist is not the person who says the
land is trashy.
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The activist is the person who cleans up the
land." Cochair Diane Joens
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A big supporter of the Stewards, retired Verde District Ranger Tom Bonomo surveys the West Mingus Avenue area and proclaims, "Ah, it's clean!" |
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Jess Tyler and Fred Rees enjoy a visit before the big job begins |
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The Stewards of Public Lands clean up trash in the watershed |
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Debbie Lafrance and Margaret Thede find a discarded sign during the Fossil Creek Cleanup. |
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Almost
all copies of the Verde River Almanac, a special community project, have
been distributed to the public. There are a few copies remaining-- for sale at
the Prescott National Forest office in Camp Verde. For more information, click on
www.almanac.verderiver.info or
go to the Forest Service Office.

Take Care of Public Lands....
Tread Lightly!

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