Around the South Pacific Division

South Pacific Division joined partners from The Port of San Francisco at the historic Ferry Building Jan. 26, to announce release of the draft San Francisco Waterfront Coastal Flood Feasibility Study for a 60-day review and public comment. SPD...
Leaders from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers San Francisco District and East Bay Municipal Utility District signed a milestone project partnership agreement Jan. 26, 2024, paving the way for construction of the first recycled water pipeline to...
Danny Baldwin, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers contractor, checks a dozer arm for proper operation at Folsom Dam Dike 1 in Granite Bay, California, November 15, 2023. The USACE Sacramento District is raising the dike up to 3.5 feet in accordance with...
Doug Chitwood, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Los Angeles District lead project engineer, left of center, talks with Col. James Handura, commander of the Corps’ South Pacific Division, right, during a site tour Jan. 18 on the Rio Hondo side of...
Three eagles perched in a tree are seen through a telescope at John Martin Reservoir, Colo., during the annual mid-winter bald eagle survey there, Jan. 12, 2024.

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Growing from STEM to STRAW at the Hamilton Wetlands Biological Restoration Project

South Pacific Division Public Affairs
Published Feb. 28, 2014
Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains in front of the events board to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif. Lt. Col. John Baker explains the important role that McWhorter plays with partnering with local stakeholders. “This is one of our valued STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) opportunities within the District as seen here by the photos from events held at the nursery,” said Baker.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains in front of the events board to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif. Lt. Col. John Baker explains the important role that McWhorter plays with partnering with local stakeholders. “This is one of our valued STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) opportunities within the District as seen here by the photos from events held at the nursery,” said Baker.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

 McWhorter helped to design and transform the building from a water treatment facility to the native plant facility that it is today.

Lt. Col. John Baker explained the important role that McWhorter plays with partnering with local stakeholders. “This is one of our valued STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) opportunities within the District as seen here by the photos from events held at the nursery,” said Baker.

Building off the STEM concept, the team at the nursery incorporates a new acronym – Students and Teachers Restoring the Watershed (STRAW) which brings together many, diverse volunteer groups that assist at the facility in growing the plant material and overseeing some of the field operations; including producing some highly biological and genetically diverse experimental plants.

STRAW, just one of the many collaborators on the project, is comprised of hundreds of  local school groups, with students ranging from kindergarten through 12th graders to community college students from the College of Marin.

“We are the nexus for our connection to the local community,” said McWhorter. “Boy scouts, local professional groups, retirees, plus 35 to 40 individuals in addition to the schools who come in weekly.”

Formerly a U.S. Army airfield, Hamilton is a 988-acre site and one of the largest wetland restoration projects on the West Coast.


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Growing from STEM to STRAW at the Hamilton Wetlands Biological Restoration Project

South Pacific Division Public Affairs
Published Feb. 28, 2014
Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains in front of the events board to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif. Lt. Col. John Baker explains the important role that McWhorter plays with partnering with local stakeholders. “This is one of our valued STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) opportunities within the District as seen here by the photos from events held at the nursery,” said Baker.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains in front of the events board to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif. Lt. Col. John Baker explains the important role that McWhorter plays with partnering with local stakeholders. “This is one of our valued STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) opportunities within the District as seen here by the photos from events held at the nursery,” said Baker.

Christine McWhorter, San Francisco District contractor at Hamilton Native Plant Nursery, explains to Brig. Gen. Dave Turner, South Pacific Division commander and Lt. Col. John Baker, San Francisco District commander, the benefits gained by volunteer groups from the local community that assist with planting vegetation on the Hamilton Wetlands Restoration Project, Feb. 27, 2014, Novato, Calif.

 McWhorter helped to design and transform the building from a water treatment facility to the native plant facility that it is today.

Lt. Col. John Baker explained the important role that McWhorter plays with partnering with local stakeholders. “This is one of our valued STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) opportunities within the District as seen here by the photos from events held at the nursery,” said Baker.

Building off the STEM concept, the team at the nursery incorporates a new acronym – Students and Teachers Restoring the Watershed (STRAW) which brings together many, diverse volunteer groups that assist at the facility in growing the plant material and overseeing some of the field operations; including producing some highly biological and genetically diverse experimental plants.

STRAW, just one of the many collaborators on the project, is comprised of hundreds of  local school groups, with students ranging from kindergarten through 12th graders to community college students from the College of Marin.

“We are the nexus for our connection to the local community,” said McWhorter. “Boy scouts, local professional groups, retirees, plus 35 to 40 individuals in addition to the schools who come in weekly.”

Formerly a U.S. Army airfield, Hamilton is a 988-acre site and one of the largest wetland restoration projects on the West Coast.