Lone Star Healthy Streams workshop set for Aug. 30 in Industry

 

Lone Star Healthy Streams workshop on the Mill Creek watershed will be held Aug. 30 in Industry.


The free event is scheduled from 1-5:30 p.m. at the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, 15994 State Highway 159 West. To RSVP, visit https://tx.ag/LSHSAustinCounty.


The workshop is a joint effort between the Mill Creek Watershed PartnershipTexas A&M AgriLife Extension ServiceTexas A&M Natural Resources Institute and the Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board.


Two integrated pest management units are available for Texas Department of Agriculture private pesticide applicator license holders.


Watershed quality, best practices for livestock management


The workshop will focus on the quality of the Mill Creek watershed and best practices for managing grazing livestock and feral hogs to minimize bacterial contamination.


“The goal of the Lone Star Healthy Streams program is to protect Texas waterways from bacterial contamination originating from livestock, wildlife and invasive species that may pose a serious health risk to Texans,” said Leanne Wiley, AgriLife Extension program specialist and Lone Star Healthy Streams coordinator in the Texas A&M Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Bryan-College Station. “The aim is to increase awareness of non-point source pollution, provide education materials to Texas producers and landowners, and encourage implementation.”


Protecting the Mill Creek watershed


Annalee Epps, AgriLife Extension program specialist and watershed coordinator in the Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Bryan-College Station, will present the Mill Creek watershed protection plan and update participants on current water quality monitoring data.


For more information, contact Wiley at 979-321-5950 or leanne.wiley@ag.tamu.edu; Epps at 979-845-2862 or annalee.epps@ag.tamu.edu; or Stacie Villarreal, AgriLife Extension agriculture and natural resources agent in Austin County, at 979-865-2072 or stacie.villarreal@ag.tamu.edu.


Funding is provided through a Clean Water Act Section 319(h) nonpoint source grant administered by the Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.


By Rob Williams