Events This Week, Wednesday Edition

February 24, 2010
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Newsworthy and interesting things to do from today through Sunday.

WEDNESDAY:

Wild and Scenic Environmental Film Festival

Join Cascadia Wildlands and University of Oregon Outdoor Program for an evening of captivating, award-winning, not-to-be missed film. Sit back and enjoy stunning landscapes, inspiring activism and learn about the people’s campaigns working to keep the Earth’s wild places wild! Win raffle items (raffle ticket comes with admission) donated by Tactics and other fine local businesses. Tickets at the door. $5 for OP and Cascadia members and students/$7 general public. All proceeds go to efforts to protect imperiled species and landscapes in Cascadia.

  • 7pm -10pm
  • 180 Prince Lucien Campbell, University of Oregon, Eugene

THURSDAY:

Symposium On Light Pollution

Published studies are revealing that the light pollution generated by our 24/7 lifestyle is beginning to wreak havoc on human health and safety, plant and wildlife behavior and mortality, our energy resources, and our heritage of dark sky observation. This luncheon symposium is designed to initiate a discourse on light pollution — its menace to a sustainable Portland Metropolitan Area — and the measures available to reduce its adverse effects. Three speakers from the wildlife, astronomical, and lighting community who are active participants in the campaign to promote more responsible outdoor lighting will “efficiently enlighten” the audience on this important issue.

Sponsored by AMEC Earth & Environmental. Moderator Dawn Nilson asks that you register with her via e-mail at dawn.nilson@amec.com.

  • 1130am – 1pm, Free
  • Auditorium, Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI), Portland

Urban Reserves

The Metro Council – finally- takes a vote on Urban and Rural Reserves. This is a plan to guide where the metro area will grow over the next 50-years. Conservation and farming groups tried to limit how much land will be set aside for development, recommending about 15,000 acres of urban reserves. But the plan before the council calls for 28,000 acres, almost twice as much.

  • Meeting starts at 2pm
  • Council Chambers, 600 NE Grand Ave., Portland

Coho in the Tualatin

Tom Murtagh, ODFW Fish Biologist, will present results of the 2009 Coho radio telemetry project aimed at providing baseline information on the distribution and movement of coho upstream of Willamette Falls. A record number of 25,000+ coho salmon passed through the ODFW counting facility at Willamette Falls in the 2009. ODFW biologists tagged 80 individuals with radio telemetry tags and tracked their upstream movements using mobile (boat and airplane) and fixed receivers. Tom swill show maps of the distribution of the tagged coho within Willamette River tributaries including the Tualatin River.

Sponsored by Tualatin Riverkeepers. RSVP to brian@tualatinriverkeepers.org.

  • 630pm -830 pm
  • Fanno Creek Brew Pub, 2562 SW Main St, Tigard


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