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Glacier Bay Alaska 2003

Dr. Alice L. Jones
Planning Program Coordinator
Department of Geography
Eastern Kentucky University
201 Roark Building
Richmond, KY 40475
alice.jones@eku.edu

"Our understandable wish to preserve the planet must somehow be reduced to the scale our competence-- that is to the wish to preserve all of its humble households and neighborhoods." 
Wendell Berry


South Rim, Grand Canyon

Midatlantic Ridge
, Iceland


Rock City, Tennessee

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Research/Professional Interests
My primary research interests are environmental planning, urban and regional sustainability, and citizen participation in environmental policymaking. As a geographer, I am interested in patterns of land use and how human social, political, and economic processes shape the built forms of cities and regions. As an environmental planner, I am particularly interested in how these human processes work with--or against--the natural ecological processes over which they are superimposed.

My environmental planning research and practice--as well as my personal community activism-- has focused on developing watershed-based policy approaches to managing the competing interests among multiple users of limited water resources, and educating local policymakers about stormwater management options.

Education
1998 Ph.D. City & Regional Planning /Ohio State
1992 Master of Applied Geography/ Southwest Texas State
1986 Bachelor of Journalism /University of Texas at Austin
 



Recent Activities

 

 


treeplanting04
EKU students help plant trees along the

Muddy Creek during Earth Days, 2004

EARTH DAYS IN THE CUMBERLANDS 2005

Click here for the 2005 Earth Days calendar

An annual month-long long celebration of the natural environment in Eastern and Central Kentucky featuring lectures, activities, films and fun

 

Reforest Richmond – April 15 & 16 2005

A Stream restoration and riparian buffer planting project along Silver Creek in Madison County.

Collaboration of the City of Richmond and the Center for Appalachian Studies. A $5,550 Bluegrass PRIDE Community Grant was used to fund the planting of native trees for a mile-long riparian corridor along Silver Creek to prevent erosion and reduce sediment pollution downstream of the Silver Creek wastewater treatment plant.

 

Over the past four years, we’ve planted more than 25,000 trees over about 3 miles of riparian buffer with the help of more than 500 volunteers from elementary school to college.


 

 

Kentucky Riverkeeper, charter member. (since 2002) The Kentucky Riverkeeper is a  local member of the international  Waterkeeper Alliance--a network of community-based nonprofits committed to the notion that clean water makes strong communities. The Kentucky Riverkeeper seeks to protect, conserve, and restore the Kentucky River and its tributaries through education and advocacy.


Escorting Robert Kennedy Jr, Kyra Kennedy, 
& Kevin Richardson to the Kentucky Riverkeeper 
launch  event, May 2002


 

 

OUT-STANDING IN THEIR FIELD
Students in the Environmental Land Use Planning 
class (Spring 2002) participate in the Muddy Creek
Project by mapping stands of native prairie grasses 
found on the Bluegrass Army Depot.  The data is
being used to document how changes in land 
management affect the health of the prairie remnants 
and, in turn, how the health of the prairie affects 
water quality in the Muddy Creek.

“Linking Land Use to Water Quality in the Muddy Creek subbasin, Kentucky River Watershed” March 2002-March 2003.  A project funded through the Kentucky Water Resources Institute /National Institutes for Water Research and featuring a unique partnership between Danita LaSage (Earth Science), Diane Vance (Chemistry), Mark Wiljanen (GIS), and Tom Edwards of the Kentucky Dept of Fish & Wildlife /Nature Conservancy

Central Kentucky Grasslands Team member. Spring 2002 Kentucky Chapter of the Nature Conservancy's Efroymson Fellowship Program for Landscape-Scale Conservation Planning. 
 

 


 

 

Headwaters Project--Letcher County, Co. Fall 2001-Spring 2002. Center for Appalachian Studies, EKU. A collaborative place-based participatory teaching/ research project examining the relationship between healthy watersheds and health communities with Alan Banks, Professor of Sociology and director of the Center for Appalachian Studies funded by the Appalachian Regional Commission and Kentucky's ARC Flex-E-Grant program. Click here to view & download the final report (caution: 4 MB file)


Students survey mountaintop removal coal 
mine sites across the valley from their perch 
at the peak of Pine Mountain, the watershed 
divide separating Kentucky and Virginia 


 

 

Kentucky River Watershed Watch, Volunteer Water Tester and local area coordinator for Madison/Clark/Estill Counties (since 2001) KRWW  is a network of more than 200 volunteers who take water samples several times a year throughout the Kentucky River Basin. (That's me in the Richmond Register June21, 2002 passing out Watershed Watch information at the Boonesborough Boat Club's Kentucky River Fest.)



 

updated 8/8/03