Water and Our
Changing Landscape
Perspectives from the Wild and Scenic White Clay
Watershed
April 14, 2005
Clayton Hall, University of Delaware
Biographies of
Conference Presenters
Charles Barscz, Topic: National
Park Service Perspective
Manager, National Rivers, National Park Service
Chuck
Barscz joined the National Park Service as a professional
planner in 1989, working primarily in the area of river conservation. Since that time Chuck has worked on several
partnership wild and scenic rivers including the Great Egg Harbor River and
Maurice River in New Jersey; the White Clay Creek in Pennsylvania and Delaware;
the Upper, Middle and Lower Delaware River in Pennsylvania, New York and New
Jersey and the New River in WV. Part of
Chuck’s responsibilities includes developing and implementing river management
plans to protect the outstandingly remarkable natural, cultural and
recreational resources associated with wild and scenic rivers. Before joining the National Park Service
Chuck was the Assistant Town Planner for Wilton,
Connecticut. Prior to that Chuck was a land surveyor for Chandler, Palmer and King, Architects and Engineers, Norwich, Connecticut. Chuck received an MLA in Landscape
Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania, a BS in Geography from the University of Idaho, and an AAS in Forestry/Forest
Recreation from Paul Smith’s College.
Linda Stapleford Topic:
Wild and Scenic White
Clay Creek
Report
River Administrator, White Clay Creek
Watershed Management Committee
Linda’s
love for nature led her to work in the environmental and education arena for
the past twenty years. Prior to her
appointment as the White Clay Wild and Scenic program River Administrator, she
did public outreach and program administration for the Delaware Nature
Society’s natural resources conservation department for 12 years. Her interest in environmental education was a
primary focus for an earlier career teaching sciences at the secondary school
level. She has a Bachelor of Arts in biology and education from Denison University
and a Master of Applied Sciences in environmental engineering from the University of Delaware.
Dr. Bernard Sweeney Topic: White Clay Creek:
A Historical and Scientific Perspective
Executive Director, Stroud Water Research Center
Bernard W. Sweeney is presently Director, President, and
Senior Research Scientist at the Stroud
Water Research
Center, an independent research
institution focused on stream and river ecology located in Pennsylvania. He is also President of the Asociacion Centro de Investigacion
Stroud, a non-profit Costa Rican corporation established to facilitate research
and educational programs related to tropical stream ecology. He has an adjunct Professor appointment at
the University of Pennsylvania in the Biology Department and School of Veterinary Medicine. His research interests include the ecology of
stream invertebrates, the role of streamside forests in the structure and
function of streams, the genetic structure and secondary production of aquatic
insects, stream pollution assessment, and stream restoration. He received the 2003 National Award of
Excellence in Conservation from the USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service
for his research and work on the restoration of streams and their riparian
corridors.
Rick Darke Keynote: The Livable Landscape
President, Rick Darke, LLC
Rick Darke is a widely
published author, photographer, educator, and consultant focused on regional
landscape design, planning, conservation, and enhancement. Blending art,
ecology, and cultural geography, Darke is dedicated
to the design and conservation of the livable landscape, and has been profiled
on National Public Radio. He has been studying and photographing the White Clay
Creek watershed for nearly thirty years, and this work is reflected in many of
his articles and books, including The
American Woodland Garden: Capturing the Spirit of the Deciduous Forest,
which received the American Horticultural Society's Book Award, the Garden
Writers Association Golden Globe Award for book photography, and the National
Arbor Day Foundation's Certificate of Merit.
A University of Delaware graduate and current Vice President of the
London Britain Township Land Trust, Rick lives in Landenberg,
PA, a short walk from the White Clay Creek.
Frank Piorko Topic: Stormwater Utilities
Environmental Prog.
Administrator, Drainage Section, Div.of Soil and Water Conservation, DNREC
Frank Piorko
is an Environmental Program Administrator with Delaware's Department of Natural Resources
and Environmental Control, Division of Soil and Water Conservation. Frank has been involved with Stormwater Management Programs at the local, county and
state level for 19 years. Frank is responsible for the State Drainage, Sediment
and Stormwater Program and participates in land use
and environmental committees throughout the State. Frank is a graduate of the University of Delaware
holding a Bachelors of Science Degree in Agricultural and Natural Sciences and
a Masters of Science in Public Administration from Wilmington College.
Jeffrey Bross
Topic: Recharge
and Facility Design
President, Duffield Associates
As President of Duffield
Associates, Inc., a geoscience consulting
firm, Mr. Bross has administrative, consulting, and
project management responsibility for, water resources, coastal engineering,
environmental, solid and hazardous waste, and regulatory agency projects. He has authored numerous technical articles
and papers and is a featured national speaker on issues involving environmental
and construction matters. Mr. Bross is a Registered Professional Engineer in Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania
and Nebraska. He is the Past-Chairman of the Board of
Directors for the New Castle County Chamber of Commerce. He serves on the Boards of Directors of the
Committee of 100 and the Associated General Contractors of Delaware as well as being National Chair of
the American Council of Engineering Companies and Associated General
Contractor’s Construction Liaison Committee.
He is an appointed member of the State of Delaware
Workforce Investment Board, the State of Delaware
Surface Water Taskforce, and the State of Delaware Wastewater Facilities Advisory Council. He is also an instructor for the Department
of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Delaware.
Wesley Horner Topic: Pennsylvania’s Initiative: New Stormwater Manual
AICP, Principal Planner, Cahill
Associates
Mr.
Horner has 30 years of experience in environmental planning and management,
with specialization in all aspects of water resources in both the private and
public sectors. Prior to returning to
Cahill Associates in 2001 and serving as project manager for PADEP’s new stormwater BMP
manual, he served as Associate Director of the Brandywine Conservancy’s
Environmental Management Center and directed the Municipal Assistance Program
and was responsible for the Water Based Land Use Regulation program. He directed preparation of a
the State of Delaware’s
Conservation Design for Stormwater Management. At Cahill, he has been a principal designer
of the Sustainable Watershed Management Plan and Program for Northern Chester
County and developed the concept of “Minimum
Disturbance/Minimum Maintenance,” a non-structural approach to stormwater management. His other experience covers numerous
environmental impact projects and studies across the country. Mr. Horner received his Masters Degree in
City and Regional Planning from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design in 1975,
his undergraduate degree from Haverford
College, and is
registered in the American Institute of Certified Planners.
Daniel J. Greig Topic: Chester County Initiatives
Director, Chester County
Conservation District
Dan
is the manager of the Chester County Conservation District. He is a graduate of
West Chester University with a BA. in
Geography. He has worked for the Conservation District for 26 yrs. Dan major
conservation district experiences have been involving stormwater
management BMPs, and the installation of mushroom and
other agricultural BMPs. Dan lives in East Fallowfield PA, in the heart of Chester County’s
Brandywine Watershed.
John Harrod Topic:
Backyard Habitats/SMARTyards: A Municipal
Outreach Tool
Backyard
Habitat Coordinator, Delaware
Nature Society
Mr. Harrod administers the Delaware Nature Society’s Backyard
Habitat Program, promoting habitat enhancement and biodiversity conservation
and cultivating a stewardship ethic. John has a B.S. degree in horticulture
from Texas A&M
University and M.S. degree in public
horticulture from the University
of Delaware. John has
worked in design-build nursery and landscape businesses, and in botanical
gardens including Lady Bird Johnson
Wildflower Center
in Austin, Texas. He also writes and lectures on
environmentally responsible gardening.