Showing posts with label Landmark Engineering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Landmark Engineering. Show all posts

Monday, February 27, 2012

A Delaware First - The Nanticoke and Indian River Mitigation Bank

The 350-acre James Adkins Tract, previously a Loblolly Pine forest plantation in Sussex County, was purchased by Ecosystem Investment Partners (EIP) in an attempt to establish Delaware's first private wetland mitigation bank, and in 2010 LandmarkJCM conducted a wetland delineation to establish limits of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' jurisdiction.

Now in the final approval stage by the Corps of Engineers, you can contact EIP to discuss Nanticoke & Indian River Mitigation Bank credits available for reservation now and available for transfer in early 2012. The Bank will serve the wetland mitigation needs of Sussex County, Delaware in the Nanticoke and Indian River drainage basins. Mitigation credits generated by the Bank can be used for compensatory wetland mitigation under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act. Take a look at the Mitigation Bank Map or visit EIP at http://www.nanticokebank.com/.

LandmarkJCM is pleased to assist EIP with the transformation of this former paper plantation into a diverse wetland intended for future banking needs.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Nationwide Permits Set to Expire...Are you Ready?

ARE YOU AWARE that ALL Nationwide Permits (NP’s) issued by the Army Corps of Engineers are set to expire on or around March 18, 2012? The expiration of all NP’s occurs every five (5) years so that the Army Corps can re-evaluate and revise their allowable minor impacts (Nationwide Permits), permit language, and permit regional conditions.
DO YOU CURRENTLY HAVE a valid Nationwide Permit for impacts proposed on a property?
IF YOU HAVE BEGUN THE WORK involved with the impacts, or if you have the impacts under contract, signed by March 18, 2012, then you will have 12 months to conduct the work. (In other words, you will be “grandfathered” out of the immediate expiration of Nationwide Permits and you will have until March 18, 2013 to conduct the permitted activities).
IF YOU DO NOT HAVE THE PERMITTED ACTIVITY BEGUN or under contract to be conducted by March 18, 2012, your permit will be considered expired by the Army Corps and we will have to re-apply for a new permit.
THUS, IF YOU ARE ABLE TO GET THE WORK TO BE CONDUCTED UNDER CONTRACT, please make sure that you have some sort of written proof in your files that you have a contract (that is dated prior to March 18, 2012) in case the Army Corps follows up with you or your wetlands consultant.
IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO OBTAIN A CONTRACT by March, 18 2012, we can discuss with you your options of re-applying for your permit after the new Nationwide Permits are revised and released.


This does not affect the validity of your state permit from DNREC, if you have one.


Please feel free to contact me with any questions or concerns you may have and I'll be happy to assist.


Amy Nazdrowicz Environmental Scientist
(302) 323-9377
amyn@landmarkjcm.com

Friday, January 13, 2012

CPFCU Ground Breaking Ceremony January 12, 2012




With the strong growth of housing developments in the Bear area, the new Community Powered Federal Credit Union branch will be readily accessible to the many working class families who live around and transit the Route 40 area. CPFCU is a full service financial institution currently serving 9,000 families in New Castle County. This new facility will have an exponential effect on the number of families it serves.

The 10,000 sq. ft. modern facility to be constructed on Route 40 is all about being responsive to the New Castle County community in member services, design and cost. Community Powered FCU did two feasibility studies before deciding on this branch, one in 2006 and another in 2010. The results were very consistent—this was the location. The new branch designed by Crabtree Rohrbaugh & Associates-Architects is cost effective and responsive to the environment.

LandmarkJCM is pleased to be part of the local Design & Construction Team:
- Crabtree Rohrbaugh Associates – Architects
- Joe Zebleckes/Brandywine Design Guild – Construction Admin
- Landmark JCM – Site/Civil
- Baker Ingram – Structural
- Furlow Associates – MEP
- Commonwealth Construction - GC


The Building Design: The design maximizes energy efficiency, and utilizes cost effective construction methods.
- Optimized Site orientation & sun exposure
- Roofs designed to reduce solar heat gain
- High performance building envelope
- Cost Effective and efficient HVAC systems
- Energy efficient Low emitting (Low E) materials for improved indoor air quality
- Maximized day lighting – numerous Low E windows
- Low flow & water saving plumbing fixtures
- High efficiency lighting
- Sustainable & regional plantings will help with storm water management
- Aesthetically appealing building by day or night along Route 40
- User friendly facility for community & employees


LandmarkJCM has performed the land surveys, environmental services, infiltration testing, civil engineering and site design, stormwater management (SWM), and the certified construction review for SWM structures.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Ted Williams Joins College of Fellows of ACEC


Ted C. Williams, P.E., FACEC, principal and EVP of LandmarkJCM, has been inducted into the College of Fellows of the American Council of Engineering Companies, an elite group of engineers who have made significant contributions to the engineering profession through their experience, knowledge and networking abilities.

Ted (second from right) was reconized by (from left) David Raymond, President and CEO of ACEC, Everett Cowan, Chairman of the Committee of Fellows, and Terry Neimeyer, Chairman of ACEC, during their Fall Conference held October 19-22, 2011 at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada. Ted currently serves as ACEC Chairman-Elect and will succeed Terry Neimeyer, who began his one-year term as ACEC Chairman in March, 2011.

ACEC is the voice of America's engineering industry. Council members – numbering more than 5,000 firms representing more than 400,000 employees throughout the country – are engaged in a wide range of engineering works that propel the nation's economy, and enhance and safeguard America's quality of life. The Council's mission is to contribute to America's prosperity and welfare by advancing the business interests of member firms.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Kent County Courthouse Grand Opening


Following its grand opening in June, the Kent County Courthouse sits in the heart of the historic City of Dover's Capitol Complex and will serve as an expansion and modernization of the justice system for Central Delaware.
LandmarkJCM performed the Site Engineering services for this project which was completed ahead of schedule and under budget. Areas of design included stormwater management, sanitary sewer systems and a pump station with force main. With offices in Dover, New Castle, and Georgetown, LandmarkJCM is well positioned to provide engineering, environmental and surveying services statewide.
Solomon McCloskey, P.E., Project Engineer

Friday, August 5, 2011

New Brownfield Task Force formed in Cecil County

John Gonazalez, PE and Kevin Hansen, PG, LEED AP, of LandmarkJCM, on August 2, 2011 were named to a new Cecil County Brownfield Task Force.



The Brownfield Task Force members, selected by Cecil County's Commissioners, will consider draft ordinance for Brownfield overlay zoning and make recommendations to the Commissioners based on their review.


As a resident of Cecil County and branch manager of LandmarkJCM's Havre de Grace office, John Gonzalez says he's
"very interested in seeing the County have a tool to help get economic development going." He says "this type of ordinance can help redevelop sites within the growth corridor, and the County can get properties back on the tax roles."

Kevin Hansen, Director of LandmarkJCM's Science Division, brings years of knowledge and experience in remediation of Brownfield sites and says he is
"excited to have the opportunity to share my experience in helping the County find ways to encourage owners to clean up sites that are contaminated."

The outcome of this Brownfield Task Force can be a Win-Win for all!

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

New Wetlands Guidance

EVERYTHING IS CHANGING……















……AGAIN!

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the EPA have issued Draft Guidance that would, once again, change which wetlands and waters are considered Jurisdictional.

Where does your project stand?

What do you need to do to protect your value?

Call Jim McCulley at LandmarkJCM for more information and look for our breakfast seminar coming up in June.

(302) 323-9377

www.LandmarkJCM.com


Thursday, May 12, 2011

Federal Wetlands Guidance Out for Comment


It took a little over a year to get the guidance from the Federal Government after the Rapanos Case was heard in the Supreme Court. This guidance addressed the Rapanos case as well as the earlier SWANCC case and gave us all complicated but clear rules about what waters were regulated by the Federal Government and which weren't.

We have been hearing the rumor for over a year now that the Obama Administration was going to release their new guidance because the "Bush era" guidance didn't regulate enough waters. That day is finally here and the guidance is out for comment (see link at bottom of this blog).

The new Draft Guidance appears to try to grab more waters as jurisdictional, especially isolated waters that were clearly excluded by the SWANCC case and the subsequent guidance. Jim McCulley of LandmarkJCM will be meeting with leaders from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the EPA next week in Washington DC to discuss this guidance and to get clarification.

LandmarkJCM will be scheduling a breakfast seminar in June to discuss what this guidance means to our clients.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Chesapeake Bay WIP Decision Expected Tomorrow


The inside scoop from EPA is that the Watershed Implementation Plan (WIP) reviews for all of the States will be available tomorrow.

According to EPA, there may be some backstop measures implemented for some States.

The Chesapeake Bay TMDL will be finalized and go into effect on December 31, 2010 (in 3 days).

Stay tuned for the news on the State WIPs and what it means to you.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Congratulations to our Friends and Colleagues

























The Homebuilder's Association of Delaware (HBADE) celebrated a Leadership and Legacy Ball on Saturday night.

Mark Gandy of Bath, Kitchen and Tile was honored as Associate of the Year.

Shari Hendley of J.S. Hovnanian was given the President's Distinguished Service Award.

Bob Thornton of Silverstock Builders was honored as the Builder of the Year.

Congratulations to them and to all of the Executive Committee Members and Board Members who were sworn in (see list here).


Thursday, November 18, 2010

Don't You Want to Hire the Experts?





















Amy (Alsfeld) Nazdrowicz (pictured here, immersed in her work) is truly the expert when it comes to Wetland Mitigation. Amy had her second paper published earlier this month on Wetland Mitigation in Delaware. You can view the paper here.

Amy is one of the many experts you can rely on at LandmarkJCM.

You can reach Amy and any of our other experts by contacting LandmarkJCM.


Thursday, November 11, 2010

This is about the future....Thanks Mick!

















































Mick McLaughlin of LandmarkJCM has conducted dozens of hands-on demonstrations for schools and other youth focused groups. Mick is a teacher at heart and loves sharing his extensive knowledge about reptiles and amphibians.

His latest program was held last week at Appoquinimink High School. Here is the nice note he got.

Dear Mick McLaughlin and LandmarkJCM,

I wanted to personally thank you for coming and speaking to our high school classes on Friday November 5th. Our students thoroughly enjoyed the ability to learn from an expert, and see where their interests in animals and nature can lead in future careers. The students had a life changing experience they will never forget. It means so much to us as faculty and students to have people from our community come and give their time and support. Your presentation was invaluable and we hope you will be able to visit again soon.

Sincerest Thanks,

Ms. Karen Wiener and Jen Taylor

Appoquinimink High School

Agriculture Department

Sincerely,

Ms. Karen Wiener

AHS Agriculture

FFA Advisor

EXT 4127 Room #D127



Thanks Mick for being such an ambassador for LandmarkJCM.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

FED Will Crack Down on Green Washing

The Federal Trade Commission has new guidelines out for comment on Green Claims in Advertising.


Builders can be sure they are safe in advertising Green Homes by getting those homes "Certified Green". The National Green Building Standard is the ONLY Green Building Standard in the country. This standard requires third party verification of all green claims and issues a certificate for each home to verify that it meets the requirements of the standard.

There are four levels of green recognized by the Standard (Bronze, Silver, Gold and Emerald), each with a higher level of energy efficiency, resource efficiency, indoor air quality and water conservation.

For more information, contact Howard Fortunato at LandmarkJCM.


Monday, October 18, 2010

EPA recommends VETO of EXISTING Corps of Engineers Permit


EPA administrator recommends veto of existing Corps of Engineers Mountaintop Mining Permit

EPA Regional Administrator Shawn Garvin has recommended that his boss, Administrator Lisa Jackson, veto a Clean Water Act permit for the proposed Spruce Mine No. 1 in West Virginia.

If allowed to go forward as currently envisioned, the Spruce Mine would be “one of the largest mountaintop mining projects ever authorized in West Virginia. If it is fully constructed, it will disturb approximately 2,278 acres and bury approximately 7.48 miles of streams,” the recommendation, dated Sept. 24 but released today, said.

The region had asked for public comment in April on a proposed determination “to prohibit,
restrict or deny” authorization for Mingo Logan Coal Company to discharge mining waste in the Seng Camp Creek watershed.
“Region III took this step because it believed, despite the regulatory review intended to protect the
environment, that discharges authorized by [the permit] could destroy wildlife habitat and cause significant degradation of downstream aquatic ecosystems and therefore could have unacceptable adverse effects on wildlife,” the region’s recommendation document said.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Storm Water Permitting Changes


It seems like new regulations, policies, mandates and guidelines are coming at us from all sides.

Here is the latest in the line of:

1. Chesapeake Bay TMDL
2. State Watershed Implementation Plans
3. State Sediment and Storm Water Regulation Updates
4. Post Construction Storm Water Rulemaking
5. Effluent Limitation Guidelines and Numerical Standards for run-off
6. Zero Discharge, Zero Net Effective Impervious, Low Impact Development


Jim McCulley serves on the NAHB Environmental Issues Committee and is following all of these developments. Contact him for more information.

Maryland Brownfield Breakfast a Success

LandmarkJCM hosted a Brownfield Breakfast yesterday at the Vandiver Inn in Havre de Grace Maryland (just down the street from our office on Congress Street).

Speakers included Priscilla Carroll of Bowie and Jensen, Jim Carroll (no relation) from MDE, Doug Seavey and John Gonzalez from LandmarkJCM. The event was moderated by Mark Parker of LandmarkJCM.

All of the builders, developers and government officials in attendance learned a little more about the opportunities available through the development of brownfield properties.

For more information, please contact Mark Parker at LandmarkJCM.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Nutrient Trading is the Answer to Clean Up the Bay

Reposted:

Nutrient trading to clean up the bay

August 31, 2010, The Baltimore Sun

The "waterkeeper" and "riverkeeper" who argue against the use of nutrient trading are missing the point and misleading Baltimore Sun readers ("Cardin bill undermines Clean Water Act," Commentary, Aug. 25).

Both the science and economics of cleaning the Chesapeake Bay make it clear that using nutrient trading programs will be necessary to prioritize pollution reduction measures that match high environmental benefits and lower costs of compliance.

The U. S. Environmental Protection Agency is in the final months of setting binding caps on the amount of nitrogen, phosphorous and sediment that can enter the Chesapeake Bay. In the years to come, Maryland and the other bay states will be required to identify and implement all manner of actions that will permanently reduce these pollutants and improve bay water quality.

In May, Maryland implemented the next generation of storm water management regulations on new land developments that require the permanent post-development storm water runoff to have the same characteristics as the runoff from a healthy forest. This means that new development will always maintain existing conditions or, when building on grassland, agriculture or existing urbanized lands, new developments will permanently improve the existing environmental conditions.

How the rest of the mandated pollutant reductions will be achieved is a difficult problem that is being worked out now in Annapolis and other state capitals. It is easy to write that "polluters" should be accountable, but we all are polluters. When we drive our cars, flush our toilets, wash clothes, buy local sweet corn, or fertilize our lawns, we all contribute to bay pollution. Most Marylanders live in a county or town that must make changes that further reduce storm water and wastewater pollutants as dictated by EPA.

The science of bay pollution argues strongly that nutrient trading programs be part of the clean-up strategy. Take nitrogen as an example. One pound of nitrogen that runs off your yard does not always stay in your local creek or river, it migrates downstream until it reaches the main stem of the Chesapeake Bay where it is concentrated with nitrogen from as far away as Cooperstown, N.Y., creating the oxygen-starved "dead zone" that has come to symbolize the decline of the bay.

What most people find surprising is that a pound of nutrients from, say, the Susquehanna, Potomac or James Rivers, the three largest sources of bay pollutants, impacts the bay differently. For example, every pound of nitrogen that leaves the Susquehanna has three times the impact on deep water oxygen concentrations in the middle bay than does a pound of nitrogen originating from many parts of central Maryland located much closer to the bay. Because of differences in geographic impact, it makes sense to concentrate pollution control efforts in areas of Maryland's Eastern Shore, as well as northeast and southern Pennsylvania, where controls will have the greatest effect and achieve the most rapid improvement to bay water quality. One of best ways to do this is through nutrient trading programs.

Economics also argues for nutrient trading. In the 2003 report, "The Cost of a Clean Bay: Assessing Funding Needs Throughout the Watershed," the Chesapeake Bay Commission (CBC) projected that meeting the less rigorous 2000 Chesapeake Bay Agreement goals would cost governments $18.7 billion across the three Bay Commission states (Maryland, Virginia, and Pennsylvania). But much of bay cleanup will be achieved by pollution control regulations that impart enforceable obligations on private interests. The costs of these measures are not borne by government but by individuals and entities in the watershed, making the total cost to the public many billions more than the CBC's $18.7 billion estimate of direct government costs.

The CBC encourages the application of strategic spending in order to reduce bay pollution in the most cost-effective manner. The five most cost-effective ways to reduce nitrogen pollution are agricultural practices that range in cost from $1.57 to $4.41 per pound of nitrogen removed. In contrast, the six most commonly applied urban nitrogen reduction practices carry a direct cost of $280 to $2,698 per pound of nitrogen removed.

Nutrient trading does not allow more pollution than the EPA limits, but it does present the potential for cities, counties, individuals and wastewater treatment plants to be matched with low cost water quality improvements in other locations and do their part for bay clean-up by providing more environmentally beneficial mitigation at far lower cost. Without nutrient trading, most Marylanders will have only the most prohibitively expensive options available when deciding how to comply with EPA's bay cleanup mandates.

Tom Ballentine

The writer is vice president for policy and government relations at the National Association of Industrial and Office Properties in Baltimore.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Labor Day Thoughts


From Seth Godin:

Whatever happened to labor?

Not Labor with a capital L, as in organized labor unions. I mean labor as in skilled workers solving interesting problems. I mean craftspeople who use their hands, their backs and their heads to do important work.

Labor was a key part of the manufacturing revolution. Industrlalists needed smart, dedicated, trained laborers to solve interesting problems. Putting things together took more than pressing a few buttons, it took initiative and skill and care. Labor improvised.

It took thirteen years to build the Brooklyn Bridge and more than twenty-five laborers died during its construction. There was not a systematic manual to follow. The people who built it largely figured it out as they went.

The Singer sewing machine, one of the most complex devices of its century, had each piece fitted by hand by skilled laborers.

Sometime after this, once Henry Ford ironed out that whole assembly line thing, things changed. Factories got far more complex and there was less room for improvisation as things scaled.

The boss said, "do what I say. Exactly what I say."

Amazingly, labor said something similar. They said to the boss, "tell us exactly what to do." In many cases, work rules were instituted, flexibility went away and labor insisted on doing exactly what they had agreed to do, no more, no less. At the time, this probably felt like power. Now we know what a mistake it was.

In a world where labor does exactly what it's told to do, it will be devalued. Obedience is easily replaced, and thus one worker is as good as another. And devalued labor will be replaced by machines or cheaper alternatives. We say we want insightful and brilliant teachers, but then we insist they do their labor precisely according to a manual invented by a committee...

Companies that race to the bottom in terms of the skill or cost of their labor end up with nothing but low margins. The few companies that are able to race to the top, that can challenge workers to bring their whole selves--their human selves--to work, on the other hand, can earn stability and growth and margins. Improvisation still matters if you set out to solve interesting problems.

The future of labor isn't in less education, less OSHA and more power to the boss. The future of labor belongs to enlightened, passionate people on both sides of the plant, people who want to do work that matters.

That's what Labor Day is about, not the end of a month on the beach.