April 5, 2006

  Volume 4, Number 14

Published in Wake Forest, NC

  Carol Pelosi, Publisher and Editor
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 For more fun – and to raise funds – you can ‘Tour de Neuse’

            You never know what those wild and crazy guys, the Neuse Riverkeepers Dean Naujoks and Larry Baldwin, will do, but in April they have a new stunt. They will paddle the 280 miles of the Neuse River from Durham to Pamlico Sound over a three-week period, April 7 to 29.

            And you can join them, either symbolically through a donation or in a canoe right next to them.

            During their trek, Naujoks and Baldwin will beach their canoes at towns and cities along the Neuse to visit schools, talk with local government officials and talk with reporters to bring their message that the Neuse River is a vital source for drinking water, recreation and fishing, both commercial and recreational.

            People can sponsor the riverkeepers by pledging an amount for each mile traveled. A pledge of 20 cents a mile times 280 miles would result in a donation of $56. People can also solicit pledges from family, friends, neighbors and co-workers. All pledges are tax-deductible and allow the Neuse River Foundation to continue its work.

            People can also join the riverkeepers and canoe or boat a leg – or several legs – of the journey.

            The journey will end on Saturday, April 29, when Naujoks and Baldwin will trade canoes for a riverkeep boat and travel from New Bern to Oriental for a celebration there. They hope to be joined by a flotilla of boats that day.

            For complete information about the “Tour de Neuse,” go to the Neuse River Foundation web site at http://www.neuseriver.org.

            One of the recent successes of the riverkeeper program is the agreement reached this January with Smithfield Foods (operating as Murphy-Brown LLC in North Carolina) to enhance environmental protections at about 275 hog farms in the state. The agreement stems from two lawsuits filed in 2001 by Waterkeeper Alliance, the Neuse River Foundation and the Lower Neuse Riverkeeper against two farms.

            Under the agreement, Murphy-Brown will fund programs to identify risks that the hog-waste lagoons might pose for groundwater, monitor runoff from areas where the hog waste is sprayed and increase stream buffers and wetlands and increase other protections for streams and rivers. The company will also use a computerized alert system to prevent spraying the liquid hog waste before, during and after rainstorms and will use other devices to shut down spraying when wind speed is more than 15 mph.

 
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The Wake Forest Gazette
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