| Harrisburg,
PA — The Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission recognized significant accomplishments of conservationists
in Pennsylvania and took action to approve grants, regulation changes, and property acquisitions affecting
the Commonwealth at its spring quarterly meeting yesterday.
Barbara Yeaman of Milanville in Wayne County,
Pennsylvania, has been named the recipient of the Ralph W. Abele Conservation
Heritage Award for 2007.
The honor is the highest recognition the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission can confer on persons
who distinguish themselves in the cause of conservation.
Yeaman earned recognition as the 2007 Abele
Award winner through her work on the upper Delaware River. She believed in the preservation of such
special lands, wildlife habitats, and prime scenic properties. Her major accomplishments include founding
the Delaware Highlands Conservancy (DHC), conserving thousands of acres of Pennsylvania land through
conservation easements and securing millions of dollars in funds to protect property for species of special concern,
endangered species, and their habitats.
Several Fish and Boat Commission staff and a McKean County partner received
the Greiner Award at the Fish and Boat Commission meeting for their work on the Norfolk Southern
legal case and settlement of $3,675,000 for the disastrous environmental effects of a rail car derailment.
The accident spilled liquid sodium hydroxide into wetlands, Big Fill Run, Sinnemahoning-Portage Creek, and the Driftwood
Branch of Sinnemahoning Creek in McKean County, contaminating soils, sediments, surface water, groundwater, and wetlands.
It also killed or injured fish and other aquatic life and terrestrial plant and animal life.
The award
is a memorial to Waterways Conservation Officer Gerald L. Greiner who effectively enforced pollution
laws that brought many violators into compliance. Recipients of the 2008 Greiner Award are Chief
Counsel of the Fish and Boat Commission Laurie Shepler, Waterways Conservation Officer William Crisp, Waterways Conservation
Officer Robert Mader, Chief of Aquatic Resources for the Fish and Boat Commission Mark Hartle, and McKean County
District Attorney John Pavlock.

Commission Executive Director Doug Austen (left) and President William Sabatose (far right) with Greiner Awards winners
(from left) Robert Mader, John Pavlock, Laurie Shepler, Mark Hartle and William Crisp
Boating-at-large Commissioner Steve Ketterer of Harrisburg received recognition from
the National Water Safety Congress for his involvement in saving a person who fell through the ice
on the Susquehanna River in March 2007. Commissioner Ketterer was recognized for this heroic action
at the International Boating and Water Safety Summit held in San Diego, California, last week.
The Commission approved
the Boating Infrastructure Grant (BIG), administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in the
amount of $1.35 million to the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh. The grant is for construction
of a 525-foot tie-up facility for transient boaters and day dockage uses for up to seventeen 26-foot or larger non-trailerable
boats. The main purpose of the project is to provide transient recreational boaters with access to
the South Shore Riverfront Park and the SouthSide Works, a major mixed-use development, along with multiple sites
of scenic, cultural and historic significance in Pittsburgh.
The Commissioners also approved a grant to Pennsylvania
Trout, Inc. in the amount of $10,000 per fiscal year for the next three fiscal years totaling $30,000,
for the purposes of expanding the national Trout in the Classroom (TIC) program in Pennsylvania.
TIC provides students with the opportunity to raise trout from eggs (or fry) to fingerlings and then release their
fish in approved trout waters. Teachers use this experience to teach students about trout biology, ecology and water
quality, and fish management.
In other action, the Commission approved:
- The
property easement at Opossum Lake in Cumberland County.
- The land acquisition along Crooked Creek
in Erie County.
- The publication of a notice of proposed rulemaking for the use of long bows and
crossbows to take catfish.
- Adding additional waters to the Class A Wild Trout Waters list.
- Adding
additional waters to the list of Wild Trout Stream sections.
- Adjustments to the guidelines for
the Ralph W. Abele Conservation Heritage Award.
- The increase of the grant amount to the Pennsylvania
Cooperative and Wildlife Research Unit.
- The
grant for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Phase II Lehigh River Recreational Enhancements Study
affecting F.E. Walter Dam and the Lehigh River.
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