Port Towns Community Development Corporation

Port Towns Community Development Corporation The Port Towns Community Development Corporation is a catalyst for positive social and economic change.

We use sustainable development and our existing assets to build a vibrant, beautiful and livable community and desirable destination.

01/16/2023

When Florence Merriam Bailey was born in 1863, birds were more often seen ornamenting women's hats than they were in the wild! In fact, on one walk through Manhattan in 1886, she counted 40 different species, stuffed and mounted for fashion. The pioneering ornithologist wanted to stop this trend, which killed an estimated five million birds a year. Her solution was to encourage people to go out and admire living birds through bird watching. "We won’t say too much about the hats," she declared. "We’ll take the girls afield, and let them get acquainted with the birds. Then of inborn necessity, they will wear feathers never more."

Bailey developed an early interest in birds, but when she went to Smith College in 1882, she learned that most ornithologists had little interest in bird behavior. Instead, they studied birds which had been killed, skinned, and mounted for private or museum collections. Bailey proposed that naturalists should learn to observe living birds in their habitats. She recommended an opera glass to allow bird watchers to see details: "The student who goes afield armed with opera-glass," she declared, "will not only add more to our knowledge than he who goes armed with a gun, but will gain for himself a fund of enthusiasm and a lasting store of pleasant memories."

In 1889, at the age of 26, she published "Birds Through An Opera-Glass." It was the first modern bird watching field guide: an illustrated guide to recognizing 70 common species in the wild, written for hobbyists and young people. Her approach of watching birds through magnification formed the basis of modern bird watching, which still uses binoculars today. Her book was also unusual because it was published under her own name, an uncommon practice at the time. Bailey's independent and feminist streaks come out in her writing about her beloved birds too. "Like other ladies, the little feathered brides have to bear their husbands' names, however inappropriate," she lamented. "What injustice! Here an innocent creature with an olive-green back and yellowish breast has to go about all her days known as the black-throated blue warbler, just because that happens to describe the dress of her spouse!"

Bailey went on to write over 100 journal articles and ten books, including the "Handbook of Birds of the Western United States," which remained a standard text for over 50 years. Bailey was named the first woman associate member of the American Ornithologists' Union in 1885; in 1929, she became its first woman fellow and received its Brewster Medal, which recognizes authors of exceptional work about birds, in 1931. In a fitting tribute to this trailblazing advocate for birds, eminent American biologist Joseph Grinnell named a subspecies of mountain chickadee after her in 1908: with the scientific name of Parus gambeli baileyae and the common name of Mrs. Bailey's Chickadee.

Florence Merriam Bailey's inspiring story is told in the lovely picture book biography, "She Heard the Birds," for ages 5 to 9 at https://www.amightygirl.com/she-heard-the-birds

Her book "Birds: Through an Opera-Glass" is also still available in print at https://amzn.to/3vLOY7s

For several great kids' books about Mighty Girls who love birds, we highly recommend "Bird Count" for ages 4 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/bird-count), "Who Gives a Hoot?" for ages 6 to 9 (https://www.amightygirl.com/who-gives-a-hoot), and "Stand on the Sky" for ages 9 to 12 (https://www.amightygirl.com/stand-on-the-sky)

To encourage children interested in birdwatching, we recommend the kid-friendly Kidwinz Binoculars for ages 3 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/binoculars) and the Bird Log for Kids for ages 5 to 12 (https://www.amightygirl.com/bird-log-kids)

Young birders will also love the "Beginning Birdwatcher's Book" for ages 7 and up (https://www.amightygirl.com/beginning-birdwatcher-s-book) and the field guide "The Young Birder's Guide to Birds of North America" for ages 9 and up (https://amzn.to/3lTAV7Q) -- and a colorful board book celebrating birds for toddlers at https://amzn.to/2VBv2oy

For more books, toys, gear, and clothing for kids who love birds, visit our blog post "Feathered Friends: Books, Toys, and Clothing for Mighty Girl Bird Lovers" at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=30089

12/14/2022

The COVID-19 Economic Recovery Quarterly Job & Resource Fair is HERE! Join us on this morning at Prince George's Community College in the Charlene M. Dukes Student Center from 10 am - 2 pm. Meet with hundreds of companies and resource partners who are ready to meet you, and may even hire on the spot!

Show up interview ready and have plenty of resumes on hand. If you need a few tips, or a little refresher, don't fret! There will be a resume and interviewing skills workshop on site to make sure you put your best foot forward.

See you soon!

12/12/2022

Those on fixed or low incomes have struggled to keep pace after New Jersey-based Schweb Partners LLC bought the property in late March and raised monthly costs.

12/02/2022

An official website of the State of Maryland.

"The Environmental Justice Journalism Initiative and the Chesapeake Legal Alliance are accepting applications for our in...
12/02/2022

"The Environmental Justice Journalism Initiative and the Chesapeake Legal Alliance are accepting applications for our inaugural Fred Tutman Fellowship in Environmental Justice Law and Journalism.

The fellowship is named in honor of Fred Tutman, the longtime Patuxent Riverkeeper and the only Black riverkeeper in the nation. Tutman, a longtime journalist with a background in law, has fought tirelessly for clean water in Maryland’s longest river, which abuts a diverse array of communities. He has taken on power plants that have endangered human and aquatic health, developers who have pumped excess sediments into the water, and government agencies who have been slow to act to protect residents from water-borne infections stemming from pollution."

Check out some of the pieces written by our investigative environmental journalists at EJJI! To learn more, visit us in Baltimore, MD, or call (240) 388-0761.

"The Chesapeake Bay Trust, US EPA Region III, and WV DEP are excited to announce that the Green Streets, Green Jobs, Gre...
12/02/2022

"The Chesapeake Bay Trust, US EPA Region III, and WV DEP are excited to announce that the Green Streets, Green Jobs, Green Towns Grant Program is now open!

This grant program aims to help communities develop and implement plans that reduce stormwater runoff, increase the number and amount of green spaces in urban areas, improve the health of local waters and the Chesapeake Bay, and enhance quality of life and community livability. Example projects include design and construction of green streets, rain gardens, green roofs, tree plantings, white papers/tools on green infrastructure, and more.

Attend our virtual Information Session on 12/20 from 5pm to 6:30pm on Zoom. Register at https://bit.ly/g3grantinfosession.

Eligible Project Tracks and Funding Request Amounts:

Track 1: Conceptual Plans for Green Streets/Green Infrastructure Projects (generally less than $15,000)
Track 2: Engineered Designs for Green Streets/Green Infrastructure Projects (generally less than $30,000)
Track 3: Implementation/Construction of Green Streets/Green Infrastructure Projects (generally less than $150,000)
Track 4: Community Greening (generally less than $50,000)
Track 5: White Papers (generally less than $20,000)
Track 6: Green Street Charrette/Technical Planning Assistance

This program can support projects within the Chesapeake Bay watershed portion of EPA Region III. This includes the entire state of Maryland and portions of Delaware, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington D.C., and West Virginia.

Applications Deadline: March 8, 2023, at 4pm EST.

View the Request for Proposals attached or at https://cbtrust.org/grants/green-streets-green-jobs-green-towns/.

For questions and technical assistance, contact: Nguyen Le at [email protected] or (410) 974-2941 x110. If a meeting is needed, schedule one with Nguyen at https://calendly.com/nle_cbtrust.

https://cbtrust.org/grants/green-streets-green-jobs-green-towns/ "

The G3 grant program supports design projects, financing strategies, and/or implementation of green street projects. The goal is to help communities develop and implement plans that reduce stormwater runoff, increase the number and amount of green spaces in urban areas, improve the health of local s...

"The study monitored natural gas methane emissions in the Boston area between 2012 and 2020. It found that an average of...
10/26/2021

"The study monitored natural gas methane emissions in the Boston area between 2012 and 2020. It found that an average of 49,000 tons of methane leaked into the air each year. That amounts to an estimated 2.5 percent of all gas delivered to the metro area and is equivalent to the carbon dioxide emissions of roughly a quarter-million cars operating for a year."

New research shows that methane emissions in the Boston area were up to six times higher than reported. That could make the greenhouse impact of natural gas “equivalent to coal.”

"Maryland has substantially underestimated the amount of greenhouse gases produced from its landfills, according to a ne...
06/11/2021

"Maryland has substantially underestimated the amount of greenhouse gases produced from its landfills, according to a new report by an environmental watchdog organization.

The Environmental Integrity Project, in a report issued this week, estimated that municipal landfills in Maryland released about 51,500 tons of methane and 500,000 tons of carbon dioxide in 2017.

But the Maryland Department of Environment estimated that in 2017 those landfills emitted just 12,500 tons of methane and 136,00 tons of carbon dioxide — amounts that are roughly one quarter of what the Environmental Integrity Project calculated.

After looking through a federal database on greenhouse gas emissions, Ryan Maher, a co-author of the report, said that he realized that the state had excluded five landfills and included one nonexistent landfill in its greenhouse gas emission estimations."

Maryland has substantially underestimated the amount of greenhouse gases produced from its landfills, according to a new report by an environmental watchdog organization. The Environmental Integrity Project, in a report issued this week, estimated that municipal landfills in Maryland released about....

This article from 2012 gives a perspective on the effects of a large sustained weather event and flooding on our region....
05/01/2021

This article from 2012 gives a perspective on the effects of a large sustained weather event and flooding on our region. It is a not a matter of if, but when this will occur again. Remembering the flood of this past September 2020, what are our communities doing to prepare and mitigate?
https://www.washingtonian.com/2012/06/19/deluge/?fbclid=IwAR1mYYaXJq9E4weRwbpzJ_PAheLyOmlxjzfxlCbWmaL8fbfgXv0Wae4Uq_U

When James Michener needed to conjure an epic storm for his 1978 novel about the Chesapeake Bay, he could draw on all of recorded history—not to mention his considerable imagination. But much of his material for the book’s fictitious...

"Nearly every source of the nation’s most pervasive and deadly air pollutant disproportionately affects Americans of col...
04/29/2021

"Nearly every source of the nation’s most pervasive and deadly air pollutant disproportionately affects Americans of color, regardless of their state or income level, according to a study published Wednesday. The analysis of fine-particle matter, which includes soot, shows how decisions made decades ago about where to build highways and industrial plants continue to harm the health of Black, Latino and Asian Americans today."

Nearly every form of the nation’s most pervasive deadly air pollutant disproportionately affects Americans of color, regardless of their location or income level, according to a peer-reviewed analysis published Wednesday.

"(Abel) Olivo says, as a Latino-led environment group, built on Latino values and culture, Defensores de la Cuenca is po...
02/17/2021

"(Abel) Olivo says, as a Latino-led environment group, built on Latino values and culture, Defensores de la Cuenca is positioned to attract Latinos who have largely been ignored by the white-centric environment movement. “We’re reaching out [in Spanish] to churches, schools, community gathers spots, on social media, on the radio, and work to remove all barriers.”

Defensores promotes cleanups, family-friendly activities, and plans to start a leadership academy, that would begin, with Prince George’s County residents. The program, modeled after the Anacostia Watershed Stewards Academy, would create new watershed stewards among Latinos, who, Olivo says, become, “future environmental champions who engage in stewardship activities on their own and impart knowledge of how the health of our watershed impacts personal health with others.”"

It comes as no mystery to Serenella Linares why Latinos have been sidelined by the mainstream environmental movement. “For the longest time, it was a matter of perception, that Latinos didn’t care, or were unaware of the environmental issues that we face today,” she says. “These [are] really...

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4930-A Annapolis Road
Bladensburg, MD
20710

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