Florida Assessment of Coastal Trends (1997)

Florida Assessment of Coastal Trends (1997)
Author: Gilbert T. Bergquist
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1999-02
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780788176562

The first scheduled update and revision of the original environmental indicator system produced in 1995. It provides a comprehensive perspective of the important environmental, growth management, economic, and social values associated with the coast. It provides a means of evaluating Florida's progress in protecting its coastal areas; a basis for making strategic decisions about programs and financial resources; and information about coastal issues and problems to other decision-makers and the general public. Includes: updating the data in the indicators; deleting indicators with poor or nonexistent data sources; and adding new indicators.

Florida Assessment of Coastal Trends (FACT)

Florida Assessment of Coastal Trends (FACT)
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 266
Release: 1997
Genre: Coastal ecology
ISBN:

In 1995, the Florida Coastal Management Program contracted with the Florida Center for Public Management to develop Florida Assessment of Coastal Trends (FACT), the nation's first environmental indicator system. This document (FACT 1997) is the first scheduled update and revision of the original indicator system. This revision includes updating the data in the indicators; deleting indicators with poor or nonexistent data sources; adding new indicators to improve the system; and reformatting the individual indicator sheets to improve their graphic effect.

Handbook of Crisis and Emergency Management

Handbook of Crisis and Emergency Management
Author: Ali Farazmand
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 816
Release: 2001-06-22
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781420002454

Including contributions from sixty international authors, this book examines emergency responses to environmental dangers such as chemical fires, hazardous material and oil spills, nuclear reactor accidents, and earthquakes, and crises in the environment, global public service, and politics. It covers a wide range of international issues and topics, using various analyses, including critical, descriptive, empirical, quantitative, and normative methods. The book discusses approaches to natural disasters, resolutions to cultural, religious, and political tensions, terrorism and the potential use of biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons, the role of crisis public relations, and more.

Monitoring Ecological Condition at Regional Scales

Monitoring Ecological Condition at Regional Scales
Author: Shabeg S. Sandhu
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 593
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9401149763

The Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program was created by EPA to develop the capability for tracking the changing conditions of our natural resources and to give environmental policy the advantages ofa sound scientific understanding of trends. Former EPA Administrators recognized early that contemporary monitoring programs could not even quantify simple unknowns like the number of lakes suffering from acid rain, let along determine if national control policies were benefiting these lakes. Today, adding to acidification impacts are truly complex problems such as determining the effects of climate change, of increases in ultraviolet light, toxic chemicals, eutrophication and critical habitat loss. Also today, the Government Performance and Results Act seeks to have agencies develop performance standards based on results rather than simply on levels of programmatic activities. The charge to EMAP of ecosystems is, therefore, the same today as it was a with respect to measuring the condition decade ago. We welcome the increasing urgency for sound scientific monitoring methods and data by efforts to protect and improve the environment. Systematic nationwide monitoring of natural resources is more than anyone program can accomplish, however. In an era of declining budgets, it is crucial that monitoring programs at all levels of government coordinate and share environmental data. EMAP resources are dwarfed by the more than $500 million spent on federal monitoring activities each year.