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    • [New Video] OUR BLUE PLANET – National Ocean Service

      Our lives depend on the ocean. “Our Blue Planet” helps remind us how important a healthy ocean is to all life and highlights NOAA’s mission to protect and explore it.

       

      Ocean Today

      Our Blue PlanetInspire your students this Earth Day with our NEW VIDEO!

      Our lives depend on the ocean. “Our Blue Planet” helps remind us how important a healthy ocean is to all life and highlights NOAA’s mission to protect and explore it.

      Bookmark “Our Blue Planet” and “The Ocean We Love” collection for Earth Day!

      The Ocean We Love Collection


      OCEAN TODAY FOR TEACHERS – Want to learn more about the Smithsonian/NOAA Ocean Today program? 

      Click here if you are a teacher or museum/aquarium/zoo educator.

       

      April 21, 2022

      Let's Get Started!

      Celebrate Earth Day with Symone (1:30)

      Watch the Earth Day “Let’s Get Started” video with Symone Barkley, then start your ocean exploration with our curated Earth Day collection.

      The Ocean We Love Collection 

       

      Needs Assessment      NOAA needs your help!

      NOAA Education has created a new needs assessment for educators working with elementary through university-level students. Its goal is to help NOAA learn about the types of STEM multimedia and distance-learning tools educators want to use with their students and for their own professional development.

      Help us by taking this short survey as well as distributing it to your education colleagues and networks


       

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    • 9 ways to get involved with Earth Day

      Earth Day is almost upon us, and EARTHDAY‍.ORG is bringing you all the information you need to participate and spread the word.

      We’ve got a map full of events and a toolkit with graphics and social media posts so you can reach out to your networks to plan your Earth Day. We also have fact sheets and quizzes for you to wow your friends and family with climate and environmental tidbits.

      Check out our resources below and we’ll see you on this weekend!


      Find your Earth Day event

      Earth Day is fast approaching. Do you have your event planned for this weekend? Check out our map to find one near you.


      Join the Great Global Cleanup!

      Cleanups are some of the most attended Earth Day events. Find a cleanup or register your own.


      Spread the word: Earth Day 2022 Toolkit

      We’re bringing you a toolkit with social media copy and graphics. Let’s get everyone to #InvestInOurPlanet.


      Plant trees with The Canopy Project

      Reforestation is one of our best hopes for restoring our Earth.


      Wear your support

      Can’t make an event this year? You can still support the movement with a gift from our new store. Take 10% off through Sunday with the code EARTH10.


      Earth Day Livestream: Nature in the Race to Zero

      EARTHDAY.ORG and our partners are streaming a live event on Friday, April 22nd. Join us for the event starting at 8am Eastern.


      52 ways to take action for the planet

      Check out our 52 ways to take action every day for the planet. Earth Day is every day!


      Environmental Fact Sheets

      Newly updated for 2022! Our fact sheets cover plastics, biodiversity, and agriculture.


      Test your knowledge

      How much do you know about threats to the environment?


       

      Donate | Store

      EARTHDAY.ORG · 1752 N St NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20036, United States

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    • Nautical Sayings: “Pipe Down”

      Our thanks to Winston Fowler for forwarding this nautical saying.


      Monday Motto – Facebook

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    • April 22nd Earth Day Celebrations Abound along NC Coast

      For decades, organizations and groups across the country and worldwide have hosted festivals, celebrations and activities as part of Earth Day in an effort to educate the public on the importance of protecting our planet.

      Children enjoy getting their hands dirty during Wilmington Earth Day in 2018. This year’s event will be from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday at Long Leaf Park in Wilmington. Photo: Alan Cradick

      Earth Day celebrations abound along NC coast by Jennifer Allen
      CoastalReview.org

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    • 12 Boat Safety Tips that Might Just Save Your Child’s Life

      SafeBoatingCouncil.org

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    • LNM: Cape Canaveral Rocket Launch Schedules

      For cruisers in the Cape Canaveral area wishing to view launches, the schedule link is found below.

      ATLANTIC OCEAN – FLORIDA – CAPE CANAVERAL: Rocket Launch Activity

      Mariners making plans to transit offshore Cape Canaveral Florida are advised of frequent rocket launch activity and associated launch hazard areas which may include free falling debris and/or descending vehicles or vehicle components under various means of control. Mariners should contact Coast Guard Sector Jacksonville at (904) 714-7558 for more information. Specific launch schedule information and Marine Safety Information Bulletins (MSIB) can be found at the following website https://homeport.uscg.mil/port-directory/jacksonville.
      Upcoming launch information and Launch Hazard Areas are also posted on the following Patrick Air Force Base website

      Comments from Cruisers (1)

      1. R J Norman -  April 17, 2022 - 8:18 am

        Once you manage to penetrate the USCG Jacksonville website to the LNM page you find several notices of rocket launches but none of them has an actual date/ time associated with it. Therefore, no useful information.

        Reply to R
    • Aerial Views of Fort Pierce Inlet, Fort Pierce, FL, AICW MM 966.5


       Fort Pierce City Marina 1 Avenue A, Ft. Pierce, FL 34950 (772) 464-1245 Facsimile (772) 464-2589

      Fort Pierce Inlet leads directly to Fort Pierce City Marina, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR. Fort Pierce City Marina’s entrance channel runs to the west, just south of the Fort Pierce high-rise bridge, and well north of AICW marker #188. Photos courtesy of Coastal Society.

      Click Here To View the Cruisers Net Eastern Florida Marina Directory Listing For Fort Pierce City Marina

      Click Here To Open A Chart View Window, Zoomed To the Location of Fort Pierce City Marina

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    • AIWA April 2022 Newsletter

      Cruisers Net is proud to be a member of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association whose lobbying work is crucial to keeping the Waterway navigable and safe. Your membership dollars directly support their vital work. Please join and encourage your boating neighbors to do likewise, regardless of their homeport.
       

      April 2022 Newsletter
       
      A Deep Dive on FY22 and FY23 Federal Appropriations
      We have big news regarding federal funding for the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway and New Jersey Intracoastal Waterways this month! The FY23 Omnibus Appropriations Bill was signed into law and the FY23 President’s budget has been released. Both of these appropriations bills include substantial funding for the waterway and build on the allocations provided from the first year of the Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act that was released earlier this year. In addition, the allocations in year two from the Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act were announced this month. 

      Let’s dive into what this all means for the waterway with an in-depth description of each piece of funding below and next steps starting with the FY22 Omnibus Appropriations bill. A breakdown of each funding stream by state is included in the chart below.
       
      FY 22 Omnibus Appropriations Bill

      In early March, Congress passed the FY22 omnibus appropriations bill to fund the federal government. With votes of 260-171 by the U.S. House of Representatives and 68-31 by the U.S. Senate, Congress forwarded the bill to President Biden and it was signed into law on March 16. With the federal government operating under its third continuing resolution, this agreement was a much-needed resolution to the FY22 Appropriations process. The appropriations bill included funds for all federal agencies. The AIWW/IWW will receive a total of $24.773 million and the NJIWW will receive $985,000.

      In addition, the FY22 omnibus bill included funding for Additional Dredging Needs. These are funds that the AIWA requests Congress to include in their Energy & Water Appropriations Bill. The list below reflects the amounts the Corps will allocate via a workplan and the AIWW will compete with other projects to receive:
      Navigation: $21 million
      Inland Waterways: $34.558 million
      Small, Remote or Subsistence Navigation: $45 million
       
      The workplan will include project specific allocations and we will know our FY22 final appropriations for each state once the workplan is released in May 2022.
       
      Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act Allocations for Year 1 and Year 2
      (FY2022 and FY2023)

       
      In January 2022, the Corps of Engineers released the USACE Work Plan for year one of the Infrastructure Investment & Jobs Act of 2022 (also known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill or Infrastructure Bill) that became law in November 2021. This bill included three years (FY22 through FY24) of funding for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Operations & Maintenance Account in the amounts of $2 billion in FY22 and $1 billion each in FY23 and FY24.

      For year one, it has been reported that USACE used this excess funding to focus on projects that do not typically receive funding in the normal appropriations process, and if a project is included in the FY22 Appropriations Bill for USACE, it was not included in this IIJA funding. In the FY22 allotment, we received a total of $22.02 million for Florida, South Carolina and North Carolina, which is roughly equal to one complete appropriations year for the AIWW.  In addition, the NJIWW received $14.35 million. This is a substantial amount as they typically get less than $1.5 million and the funding will be used for a variety of rehabilitation projects in addition to dredging.

      This week, we learned that we have not received funding for the AIWW/IWW in the FY23 allocation of the IIJA and $151,000 for the NJIWW. This is not surprising when compared with the funding we received in year one and the President’s FY23 Budget discussed next!

      FY23 President’s Budget

      On March 28th, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers made available their Press Book for the President’s FY23 Budget request with a breakdown of the programs and projects that the Administration wants to see funded by Congress in the FY23 Energy & Water Appropriations Bill. This funding would cover federal agency actions from 10/1/22 through 9/31/23. We typically have much lower amounts in the President’s budget and then work with Congress to add money into the budget through the Additional Dredging Needs funding pots. This year is starting off with much higher funding amounts totaling almost $40 million for the AIWW/IWW and $1.06 million for the NJIWW.
       
      The waterway hasn’t surpassed $20 million in the President’s budget for at least a dozen years, if not longer, and the budget request includes funding for every state. We are thrilled with this dramatic shift in additional funding for the waterway and it is an impressive start in the appropriations process, but Congress will have the last word in their appropriation bills over the summer. 
       
      Looking ahead, we will be tracking the completion and release of the FY22 Appropriations Work Plan, the FY23 Appropriations process, and advocating for increased funding from Congress and supporting our federal partners in the execution of the current funding allocations. It is through your financial support and membership that we are able to present such a strong Voice for the Waterway!

       

      Operations & Maintenance Needs for the Waterway
      Update from USACE

      In March, our colleagues at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers provided us with a 2022 update on the Operations & Maintenance needs for the AIWW/IWW. 
      Their summary is offered below: 

      “It is estimated that in order to achieve the authorized dimension of the waterway it would cost approximately $63,500,000, with most of the effort being within the Charleston and Wilmington District boundaries due to deteriorating upland placement sites. Significant progress has been made with the funding received in regular appropriations and IIJA funding. Maintenance dredging projects have reduced this backlog by over $50 million from 2016 to 2022.

      In addition, if we assume a fully constructed waterway at authorized dimensions, it is estimated that approximately $49,500,000 in funding would be required annually to provide for operation and maintenance activities. In FY22, all appropriations totaled $46,535,000 which is significantly increased from FY21 total of $6,184,000. The current FY23 President’s Budget for the AIWW has $39,483,000 with Work Plan and IIJA funds still TBD.”

      The AIWA is grateful for our ongoing partnership with the Corps of Engineers and we will be using this updated information in our outreach efforts to the federal Congressional delegation. 

      Click graphic below for full-size PDF.

       
      ©️Boats moored at Manteo, North Carolina. 
       
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      Copyright © 2022. Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association. All rights reserved.

      The AIWA is a national non-profit organization with the mission of securing funding and support for the maintenance of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway. We are the only organization dedicated to ensuring the future of the AIWW and proudly represent all stakeholders of the waterway. 

      Contact:
      5A Market
      Beaufort, SC 29906  

      (843) 379-1151 ⚓️ atlanticintracoastal.org

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