March-April 2006

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Looking Beyond the Job Site at EC06

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By Janice Kaspersen

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s many of us are heading toward Environmental Connection 2006, IECA’s 37th annual conference and expo in Long Beach, CA, it’s a good time to take a step or two back and look at what we’re accomplishing, as well as what our colleagues around the world are doing. Not every country has the same rules; NPDES is an American phenomenon, and environmental regulations don’t take exactly the same form anywhere else. The differences in approach often seem to divide countries—what does a SWPPP for a construction site in Texas really have in common with a no-till farming project in Jordan, after all?—yet we’re all striving toward more or less the same goals.

What are we working toward? C.R.R. Varma, in his editorial on page 110 of this issue, calls for IECA to become the leading organization that spans all regions of the world and ties together organizations that have an environmental focus. Regulations and individual techniques used may be different from place to place, but as he illustrates with the stanza he quotes, which children for centuries have been taught to recite, respect for the land is an age-old and deep-seated and nearly universal concept.

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Erosion and sediment control, as much as any discipline and more so than most, involves paying close attention to local, specific conditions, and by necessity we are usually focused on very specific tasks: complying with local regulations, managing a particular site. But as we work to meet day-to-day deadlines, often not looking much further ahead than the span of a particular project, that idea of respect and stewardship underlies what we do.

In the 1970s, the biologist Richard Dawkins popularized the term “meme”—analogous to the word “gene”—to describe ideas that are passed from generation to generation. A meme is an idea or a pattern of information. A person may or may not pass along genetic material—the physical continuity of oneself—but he or she can still pass along an idea that will be more far-reaching and outlast a single lifetime. Next Page >

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