Academic literature on the topic 'Of Ohio Yearly Meeting'

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Journal articles on the topic "Of Ohio Yearly Meeting"

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Grundy, Martha J. P. "The Eye of Faith: A History of Ohio Yearly Meeting, Conservative (review)." Quaker History 76, no. 1 (1987): 68–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/qkh.1987.0015.

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Van Wagner, Alson D. "Minutes of Meetings of New York and Ohio Yearly Meetings, Conservative, Retrieved." Quaker History 77, no. 2 (1988): 122. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/qkh.1988.0017.

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Holden, David E. W. "The Genesis of Central Yearly Meeting." Quaker History 77, no. 1 (1988): 42–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/qkh.1988.0002.

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Of Science, The Ohio Academy. "The 2014 Annual Meeting Program." Ohio Journal of Science 114, no. 1 (July 14, 2014): 60. http://dx.doi.org/10.18061/ojs.v114i1.4390.

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DIAMOND, M. "Where should we hold the yearly meeting?" Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 76, no. 2 (August 1985): 246–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0091-6749(85)90711-0.

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Cazden, Elizabeth. "Rhode Island Monthly Meeting: An Evangelical Secession from New England Yearly Meeting." Quaker History 87, no. 2 (1998): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/qkh.1998.0014.

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Rathbun, Ann, Sharon A. Denham, and Craig C. McCarthy. "The Ohio Hospice Bereavement Study: Meeting NHPCO standards." American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine® 20, no. 6 (November 2003): 448–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/104990910302000607.

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Dunn, Floyd. "President’s Report on the Cleveland, Ohio ASA Meeting." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 80, no. 4 (October 1986): 1266. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.393782.

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Wang, Yuwei, Shang-Yin Yang, and Chia-Wei Chen. "The impact of directors’ liability insurance on board meeting attendance." Corporate Ownership and Control 19, no. 3 (2022): 92–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.22495/cocv19i3art6.

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We study the relationship between directors’ liability insurance and board meeting attendance. We find that directors’ liability insurance and board meeting attendance are positively associated. This suggests that directors’ liability insurance may actually serve a governance role because an insurer definitely has incentives to thoroughly scrutinize the insured. As a result, director’s board meeting attendance rate increases because more monitoring of directors leads to more responsible behaviors of directors. With 98,524 yearly observations at the director level and 8,968 yearly observations at the firm level of listed firms in Taiwan during the period from 2008 to 2015, our empirical findings suggest that, on average, the board meeting attendance rate of insured firms is 2.9 percent higher than that of uninsured firms.
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Han, Junping, Leslie L. Domier, Bryan J. Cassone, Anne Dorrance, and Feng Qu. "Assessment of Common Soybean-Infecting Viruses in Ohio, USA, Through Multi-site Sampling and High-Throughput Sequencing." Plant Health Progress 17, no. 2 (January 2016): 133–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/php-rs-16-0018.

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Multi-site sampling was conducted during 2011 and 2012 to assess the scope of virus disease problems of soybean in Ohio, USA. A total of 259 samples were collected from 80 soybean fields distributed in 42 Ohio counties, accounting for more than 90% of major soybean-growing counties in Ohio. A high-throughput RNA-Seq approach was adopted to identify all viruses in the samples that share sufficient sequence similarities with known plant viruses. To minimize sequencing costs, total RNA extracted from up to 20 samples were first pooled to make up regional pools, resulting in eight regional pools per year in both 2011 and 2012. These regional pools were further pooled into two yearly master pools of RNA, and sequenced using the Illumina's HiSeq2000 platform. Bioinformatic analyses of sequence reads led to the identification of signature sequences of nine different viruses. The originating locations of these viruses were then mapped with PCR or RT-PCR. This study confirmed the widespread distribution of Bean pod mottle virus, Soybean vein necrosis virus, Tobacco ringspot virus, and Tobacco streak virus in Ohio. It additionally revealed occasional association of Alfalfa mosaic virus, Bean yellow mosaic virus, Clover yellow vein virus, Soybean mosaic virus, and Soybean Putnam virus with Ohio soybean. This is the first statewide survey of soybean viruses in Ohio, and provides the much-needed baseline information for management of virus diseases of soybean. Accepted for publication 20 May 2016. Published 10 June 2016.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Of Ohio Yearly Meeting"

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Robinette, John Emerson. "Public School Funding and School Systems Meeting Adequate Yearly Progress in Tennessee." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2011. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/1314.

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The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a relationship between level of funding and achievement of school systems in Tennessee based on the standards of the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2001. This study focused on Tennessee school systems and their adequate yearly progress (AYP) status of "targeted" or "good standing" from 2007 through 2009. Federal, state, and local funding, as well as per-pupil expenditure, average teacher salary, and number of students, were used as variables. All data were gathered from the Tennessee Department of Education website. The researcher performed 6 independent samples t-tests and one chi square analysis. The study showed significant differences in the means of federal, state, and local funding levels between targeted systems and systems in good standing. Targeted systems received more federal, state, and local funding than systems in good standing from 2007 through 2009. The study showed no significant difference in mean per-pupil expenditures between targeted systems and systems in good standing. The study showed a significant difference in the mean teacher salaries. Targeted systems had higher teacher salaries than systems in good standing from 2007 through 2009. The study also showed a significant difference in the mean number of students between targeted systems and systems in good standing. Targeted systems had more students than systems in good standing. The findings indicate that targeted systems are receiving as much funding as systems in good standing. To help control for the number of students in each system, the two groups (targeted and in good standing) were compared using per-pupil federal, state and local dollars. The analysis indicated no significant difference between targeted systems and systems in good standing for federal money. The analysis did indicate a significant difference between the two groups for state and local money. However, for state money systems in good standing had the higher mean and for local money, targeted systems had the higher mean. Mean per-pupil expenditures were relatively equal between targeted systems and systems in good standing. System size, based on the number of students, showed a significant relationship with the NCLB status of a system. The mean number of students in targeted systems was more than 3 times as large as systems in good standing (17,656 to 5,284). Also, a group of systems with over 4,445 students had over 5 times the number of targeted systems than a group of systems with fewer than 2,094 students.
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Loney, Susan Calibo. "Stakeholders' Perceptions of English Language Learners Meeting Adequate Yearly Progress in Reading." ScholarWorks, 2016. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/2451.

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English language learners (ELLs) in a Midwestern urban elementary school have not been meeting the local school's adequate yearly progress (AYP) in reading in 3 consecutive years on statewide test scores. Meeting school standards is important because failing to meet AYP for 6 consecutive years can result in the restructuring or closing of any public school in the nation. The rationale for this qualitative case study was to examine the perceptions of stakeholders, 7 parents, teachers, and school administrators, all of whom have demonstrated knowledge of and proximity to the school's AYP decisions, to develop vocabulary strategies that may increase students' state test scores in reading. The conceptual framework was based on Gardner's multiple intelligences. The research questions focused on understanding stakeholders' perceptions of the proficiency of ELLs in reading, professional development for reading teachers of ELLs, recommendations for helping ELLs improve reading proficiency, and the challenges reading teachers face in ELL classes. Semi-structured interviews with each participant were transcribed, color-coded, and analyzed using holistic and typological analysis techniques to search for and develop themes and patterns. Findings revealed a need for teachers to receive professional development training related to improving ELLs' vocabulary to improve their reading proficiency. A 3-day professional development curriculum project was developed to focus on teaching effective vocabulary strategies. This study has implications for social change focused on improving teachers' capacity to work with ELLs and to improve their reading scores which have lasting impact on students' lives.
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Grimes, Mary Ellen. "A study of elementary schools in Illinois not meeting adequate yearly progress in 2003-2004 /." Available to subscribers only, 2006. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1147184421&sid=16&Fmt=2&clientId=1509&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Southern Illinois University Carbondale, 2006.
"Department of Educational Administration and Higher Education." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 88-94). Also available online.
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Strickland, Carole Elaine. "What works in Georgia high schools with small students enrollement in meeting annual yearly progress." Click here to access dissertation, 2007. http://www.georgiasouthern.edu/etd/archive/spring2007/carole_w_strickland/strickland_carole_w_200701_edd.pdf.

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Thesis (Ed.D.)--Georgia Southern University, 2007.
"A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Georgia Southern University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Education." Under the direction of Walter S. Polka. ETD. Electronic version approved: May 2007. Includes bibliographical references (p. 114-119) and appendices.
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Thomason, Krista A. "Trends Analysis and a Yearly Comparison of Point Sources of Atmospheric Mercury Using HYSPLIT Back Trajectories Focused in Athens, Ohio." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2019. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1557161272706908.

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Evans, Owain Gethin. "Benign neglect : the activities and relationship of London yearly meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) to Wales, c.1860-c.1918." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2009. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.532312.

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This thesis outlines the activity of London Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Wales in the late Victorian and Edwardian periods [c.l860-1918], examining its understanding and sympathy to Wales and Welsh identity. It explores the Quaker understanding ofnationalism, issues of Quaker self-identity, whilst locating the Yearly Meeting within the national life of Wales, at a time of renewal in Welsh national consciousness, with a confident Welsh nonconformity, and a hegemonic 'Welsh' Liberal Party. Undetpinning this the problematic of Welsh and British identity, and ofthe way the nature ofleadership and authority was exercised within the Yearly Meeting, is examined. The prism for analysis is through three themes: political issues, Quaker mission and spiritual awakening in Wales. In Welsh political affairs L YM was an . observer taking no active part compared to the Welsh nonconformist bodies, as evinced for example in activity around the disestablishment of the Anglican Church or the 'Welsh Revolt' in response to the 1902 Education Act. The home mission work ofthe Yearly Meeting proved crucial to the continuance of Quakerism in Wales without this the Society would have disappeared but this was geographically restricted to the urban English speaking urban areas of the South and Radnorshire, and never touched the industrial valleys or North Wales; general neglect and inability to use Welsh demonstrates this. The Welsh Revival of 1904-05 proved to be a stimulant to Friends some of whom saw it as the precursor to a broader Quaker awakening. This awakening was never realised as such, although in 1912 this seemed still to be a hope amongst some Friends as they conducted mission work amongst the 'Children of the Revival.' The study is enhanced by consideration of the contribution and lives of three Quakers living in Wales; Henry Tobit Evans (1844 -1908) a convinced Quaker publisher and minor politician of the Unionist cause; John Edward Southall (1855 -1927), an English birthright Quaker who proved to be a champion for the Welsh language and nationalism, and Hercules David Phillips (1869 -1944) a convinced Quaker and home mission worker who loyally witnessed as such in Radnorshire for all of his life. The thesis challenges and adds to the small amount of previous research in this area in highlighting the specifics of ~e Welsh context. The principal conclusion of the study is that by the nineteenth century, ~n rel:~tion to Wales, London Yearly Meeting was by default an English institution, living Its WItness there as an observer through an attitude of benign neglect. .
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Menz, William Thomas. "Effectiveness Of Ohio Teacher Education Programs For Meeting The Educational Needs Of English Language Learners." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1236201223.

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Robson, Kelly. "Factors That Can Make a Difference in Meeting the Needs of Homeless Students in Schools| Perceptions of District Homeless Liaisons in Ohio." Thesis, The George Washington University, 2016. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10138515.

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The needs of homeless students are significant and varied. The McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act helps ensure homeless students can access a quality education. One of the key provisions is the requirement that all LEAs identify a liaison to be in charge of meeting the needs of homeless students. The purpose of this study was to understand the perceptions of district liaisons in regard to the needs of the homeless students they serve and the factors that facilitate and hinder their ability to meet these needs. The study was designed as a qualitative study relying primarily on interviews with 20 liaisons from a representative sample of districts in the state of Ohio.

The findings indicate that homeless students face a number of needs, including access to basic necessities like food, clothing, shelter, and transportation, and to social services including mental health services and drug treatment centers. Liaisons indicated that they played a less direct role in supporting students’ academic needs, instead relying on school-based staff members to support homeless students’ academic needs.

Liaisons identified a number of factors that facilitate and hinder their ability to meet the needs of their homeless students. The availability or lack of district resources like funding and personnel were especially important. In some districts, superintendents had prioritized hiring additional social or community workers. Liaisons indicated they relied a great deal on the support of these personnel. Further, the availability (or lack) of community-based service agencies greatly impacted liaisons’ work.

Finally, liaisons faced a number of competing demands that made their roles challenging. The vast majority of liaisons held another full-time role in the district, meaning they had limited time to devote to the role of liaison. Liaisons also indicated that navigating both community perceptions of homelessness (whether identified families were “truly” homeless or deserving of support) and the proper role of the school in the community were added challenges.

These findings suggest that additional personnel to help meet the needs of homeless students and greater coordination between schools and social service agencies would benefit both liaisons and the homeless students they serve.

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Blount, Cyndee R. "Special education and No Child Left Behind : exemplary principal perceptions of effective strategies in Meeting Adequate Yearly Progress /." 2007. http://wwwlib.umi.com/dissertations/fullcit/3260674.

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Books on the topic "Of Ohio Yearly Meeting"

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Taber, William P. The eye of faith: A history of Ohio Yearly Meeting, conservative. Barnesville, Ohio: Representative Meeting of Ohio Yearly Meeting, Religious Society of Friends, 1985.

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Ohio Yearly Meeting of Friends (Conservative : 1854- ). Transcription and index to the minutes of Ohio Yearly Meeting of Friends held at Stillwater, P.O. Barnesville, Ohio (1907). Houston, Tex: Today's Genealogists, 1997.

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Cooper, Wilmer A. Growing up plain among conservative Wilburite Quakers: The journey of a public Friend. Richmond, Ind: Friends United Press, 1999.

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Committee, Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends Records. Guide to the records of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. [S.l: s.n.], 1989.

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Perkins, Theodore Edison. Marriages in Contentnea quarterly meeting of Friends, North Carolina yearly meeting, 1737-1891. Greensboro, N.C. (P.O. Box 9693, Greensboro 27429-0693): Guilford County Genealogical Society, 1988.

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Marsh, Callie. A lively faith: Reflections on Iowa Yearly Meeting of Friends (Conservative). Philadelphia PA: FGC, QuakerPress, 2011.

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NHSC/MCH Residents' National Meeting (1st 1984 Columbus, Ohio). NHSC/MCH Residents' National Meeting: October 22-24, 1984 Columbus, Ohio. Edited by Stokes Deborah J, Quilty James F, Ohio. Division of Maternal and Child Health, United States. Bureau of Health Care Delivery and Assistance. Division of Maternal and Child Health, and National Health Service Corps (U.S.). [Rockville, Md.?]: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Health Resources and Services Administration, 1985.

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Meeting, Industrial Relations Research Association Spring. Proceedings of the 1988 Spring Meeting, March 23-25, 1988, Cincinnati, Ohio. Madison: Industrial Relations Research Association, 1988.

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American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers., ed. ASHRAE 2001 annual meeting cd: Technical and symposium papers presented at the 2001 ASHRAE annual meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio. Atlanta, Ga: ASHRAE, 2001.

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Ohio Year 2000 Competency Center, ed. How ready are you?: Ohio Y2K, meeting the challenge : a guide to preparedness from the Ohio Year 2000 Competency Center. Columbus: Ohio Year 2000 Commpetency Center, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Of Ohio Yearly Meeting"

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Landes, Jordan. "The London Yearly Meeting and Quaker Administrative Innovation in an Atlantic Context." In Puritans and Catholics in the Trans-Atlantic World 1600–1800, 175–94. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137368980_10.

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Cavrini, Giulia, Elisa Cisotto, and Alex Weissensteiner. "Population ageing and sustainability in South Tyrol: measuring the economic implications of an ageing society." In Proceedings e report, 141–44. Florence: Firenze University Press and Genova University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/979-12-215-0106-3.25.

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Meeting the challenge of population ageing requires a better understanding of frailty and disability, and appropriate strategies to ensure the resilience of the health and social care system, without destabilising public finances or over-burdening the economy. An increasing life expectancy will primarily affect the health care and the long-term care spending. Countries will face an ongoing challenge to provide care for a heterogeneous population of older adults. Within this context, the current paper is designed to (a) measure the current needs for social care in South Tyrol, (b) identify the local trajectories of health status, disaggregated by age, sex and severity of illness, (c) forecast the health care needs and the healthcare system’s financial sustainability. Demographic forecast data (up to 2050) on population age and sex structure is provided by ISTAT . Health care data for administrative and billing purposes is from the Autonomous Province of Bozen-Bolzano, which are used to study health care delivery, benefits, harms, and costs. Preliminary results show a decrease in the prevalence of individuals receiving home care allowance from 2009 to 2019 for all levels of severity and both for men and women. Overall, greater prevalence occurs at lower levels of health condition severity (levels 1 and 2 over a four points-scale of severity) and after age 75. Historical payments combined with the demographic forecast allow for an estimate of yearly average costs individual recipients (by age, sex, and health condition) as well as for the whole local social system.
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Revesz, Richard, and Jack Lienke. "Hope for Redemption." In Struggling for Air. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190233112.003.0010.

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The Walter C. Beckjord Generating Station sits on the banks of the Ohio River, less than twenty miles southeast of Cincinnati, in Clermont County, Ohio. Beckjord offers a near-perfect case study of the costs of grandfathering. Construction of the plant was announced in November 1948, and its first 100-megawatt coal unit was operational by June 1952. Five additional units came online between 1953 and 1969. Because the units were constructed prior to 1971, all were exempt from the EPA’s New Source Performance Standards. For most of the 1970s, they also managed to avoid complying with any emission limitation under Ohio’s implementation plan for meeting the sulfur dioxide NAAQS, even though Ohio’s original plan, approved by the EPA in 1972, would have subjected Beckjord to a state emission standard—1.6 pounds of SO2 per million Btus of heat input—that was only 33 percent less stringent than the federal new-source standard of 1.2 lbs/MMBtu. In 1973, Ohio utilities convinced the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit to invalidate the Ohio plan on procedural grounds. The court ordered the EPA to hold an additional hearing at which regulated plants could voice their objections, but before the agency could oblige, the governor of Ohio withdrew the plan from consideration. A year later, Ohio submitted a far less stringent proposal that would have allowed Beckjord to continue emitting at its uncontrolled level: 4.8 lbs/MMBtu. But that plan, too, was struck down on procedural grounds, this time by a state environmental review board. In 1976, after Ohio failed to offer any replacement for its second proposal, the EPA stepped in with a federal plan that would limit Beckjord’s emissions to 2.02 lbs/MMBtu. (This, according to the latest EPA computer modeling, was the level necessary for Ohio to attain the sulfur dioxide NAAQS.) After yet more litigation by Ohio utilities—including Beckjord’s owner, Cincinnati Gas & Electric—the bulk of the federal plan was upheld in 1978. (In rejecting the utilities’ challenge, the Sixth Circuit noted that Ohio was the only state in the country that still lacked an enforceable SO2 implementation plan.)
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Phillips, Douglas E. "The GPL, the Public Domain, and the Web." In The Software License Unveiled, 173–86. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195341874.003.0006.

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Abstract weaving the web, the story of his invention of the World Wide Web at CERN, Tim Berners-Lee describes how the Web technology came to be dedicated to the public domain. In the year preceding a March 1993 meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in Columbus, Ohio, Berners-Lee “had been trying to get CERN to release the intellectual property rights to the Web code under the General Public License (GPL) so that others could use it.”1 The University of Minnesota had introduced an Internet search tool and protocol—then better known than the Web—called Gopher.2 In early 1993, the University announced that it would require a license to use Gopher and would charge an annual fee for commercial users.3 In response, the industry “dropped gopher like a hot potato.”4
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Temkin, Sefton D. "Queen City of the West." In Creating American Reform Judaism, 104–8. Liverpool University Press, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781874774457.003.0017.

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This chapter shows the good relations cemented immediately upon his arrival at Congregation B’nai Jeshurun. In Cincinnati he remained for the rest of his days. In 1854, Cincinnati was in truth ‘the Queen City of the West’. In view of Cincinnati’s expansive prosperity, in view of its business relations with all parts of the United States, in view of its position as a meeting-place of merchants, it would be only natural for Wise to encounter a broader outlook than would exist in most congregations; for a man who harboured ‘bold plans’, plans which extended far beyond the confines of a single town, his position was ideal. From the start he seems to have impressed himself on the congregation. They accepted his ideas for reforms within the synagogue; they stood by him in the difficulties which his larger schemes involved; in forty-six years there were few disagreements, and only one serious incident — his candidature for the Ohio Senate during the Civil War — marred their relationship, and the speed with which it was passed over confirms that basically there was a happy association which neither party wished to endanger.
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Bronner, Edwin B. "18. Quaker Discipline and Order, 1680–1720: Philadelphia Yearly Meeting and London Yearly Meeting." In The World of William Penn, edited by Richard S. Dunn and Mary Maples Dunn. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9781512801965-022.

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Mungons, Kevin, and Douglas Yeo. "Southern Roots and Early Years." In Homer Rodeheaver and the Rise of the Gospel Music Industry, 38–57. University of Illinois Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043840.003.0003.

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Homer Rodeheaver’s life-long work in song-leading and revivalism started with his family’s roots in West Virginia, Ohio, and Tennessee after the Civil War. His attitudes about gospel music and race were deeply influenced by formative events from his childhood, including family attendance in Methodist churches, racism and lynching near his home, early experiences playing the trombone, and a close relationship with his brothers. While studying at Ohio Wesleyan University he led football cheers and blackface minstrel shows, then led congregational singing at local revival meetings. In 1905 he began traveling as music director for the W. E. Biederwolf revivals, a position that led to national notice
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"Appendix I Queries of the London Yearly Meeting." In Quakers in the British Atlantic World, c.1660-1800, 178–79. Boydell and Brewer, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781800100602-015.

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"CHAPTER 2. Leadership and Control of the Yearly Meeting." In Quakers and Slavery, 32–53. Princeton University Press, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400857777.32.

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Bader, Anne Tobbe, David Pollack, and Justin N. Carlson. "Introduction." In Falls of the Ohio River, 1–20. University Press of Florida, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683402039.003.0001.

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The Falls of the Ohio River was a landmark that would have been readily recognized and easy to locate by Native Americans. As such, it would have been a convenient meeting place. Without this feature, native populations may never have aggregated at this location to the extent that they did. The chapters that make up this volume recognize that humans and the environment are not disconnected but rather are intertwined and mutually affect each other to varying degrees. Societies and ecosystems are not static or unilineal in their trajectory, having long, dynamic histories. These historic accounts can lead to periods of aggregation and dispersal depending on environmental and social circumstances. Likewise, though authors of this volume examine human adaptations to the shifting environmental conditions of the Holocene, they recognize that humans impacted their environments to varying degrees depending on social, economic, and political circumstances. As the Falls region became a persistent place on the landscape, and a part of the social memory of indigenous groups, it was also at times a contested landscape.
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Conference papers on the topic "Of Ohio Yearly Meeting"

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Jimerson, Cole R., Erika J. Freimuth, Meagen Pollock, and Gregory Wiles. "LAND USE CHANGES OVER THE PAST 200 YEARS IN NORTHEAST OHIO RECOGNIZED IN LAKE CORES FROM BROWN’S LAKE BOG, NORTHEAST OHIO." In GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016am-285878.

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"Ohio AgrAbility Design Solutions Developed in a First-Year Engineering Innovation Course." In 2014 ASABE Annual International Meeting. American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/aim.20141896708.

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Hannibal, Joseph T. "BEREA SANDSTONE: A HERITAGE STONE QUARRIED FOR MORE THAN 200 YEARS IN OHIO, USA." In GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019am-340124.

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Myers, R. R., and R. H. Jacot. "Class II Saltwater Disposal Well Completions in Open and Cased Hole: Which is Better and why?" In SPE Eastern Regional Meeting. SPE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/215910-ms.

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Abstract The scope of this paper is to use publicly and privately sourced data to compare openhole versus cased hole completion techniques and injection results in select Ohio Class II saltwater injection wells (SWIW). The vast majority of the SWIWs drilled in Ohio the past 10 years have been completed openhole, typically by drilling to total depth and then carefully selecting a large diameter greater than 7-inch casing shoe depth and cementing casing above the Cambrian-Ordovician age reservoirs. That allows for 1,000 feet plus of openhole and multiple targets for injection. There have been successful cased hole completions. Cased hole completions open the door to an operator’s ability to stimulate multiple injection zones more effectively than in an openhole using a non-selective stimulation of a long interval. A large public oil & gas well database was used to gather data for an ‘area of interest’. A private company offered greater operational details and testing information to assist in the evaluation of which completion technique is most effective for large volume fluid injection. Hall Plots were generated to compare openhole and cased hole SWIWs, but will not be the focus of this paper. A review of physical reservoir properties and fracture modeling were used to estimate three-dimensional stimulation or frac geometries and to approximate radial or linear saltwater travel over the life of a disposal well. This paper will attempt to answer several questions. Was the result of the cased hole completion better than previous offset well’s openhole completion. How could results be improved over what procedures were done? What was the pressure response of the openhole and cased hole injections following stimulation? Finally, a comparison of well costs and economics was done to evaluate and make recommendations about improving injectivity, and when to consider remedial treatments.
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Downey, Robert, Kiran Venepalli, and Jim Erdle. "Two Superior Shale Oil Enhanced Recovery Methods for the Utica Shale." In SPE Eastern Regional Meeting. SPE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/211887-ms.

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Abstract The Utica Shale is a very large, important oil and gas resource in the eastern United States. While gas production dominates, oil production from horizontal shale oil wells in the Utica has grown from 15 BOPD in June 2011 to a peak of 50,000 BOPD in September, 2019 with 2,485 horizontal shale oil wells in production. The Utica shale dips to the east, shallow in east-central Ohio to deep in western Pennsylvania. Likewise, hydrocarbons in the Utica trend from light oil with low GOR in eastern Ohio to dry gas in western Pennsylvania. Liquid hydrocarbons are produced from the shale via solution gas drive. The shallow, black oil area of the play has to date been noncommercial. A recent enhanced oil recovery test in the shallow black oil area of the Utica has provided encouraging results. Our objective is to introduce two novel EOR processes that can greatly increase the production and recovery of oil and gas from the Utica shale, while reducing the cost per barrel of recovered oil, and reducing GHG emissions and water consumption/production/disposal. Two superior shale oil EOR methods are proposed that utilize a triplex pump to inject a solvent liquid into the shale oil reservoir, and an efficient method to recover the injectant at the surface, for storage and reinjection. One of the methods also incorporates the application of rock mechanics to further enhance oil and gas recovery. The processes are designed and integrated during operation using compositional reservoir simulation in order to optimize oil recovery. Compositional simulation model of a Utica shale horizontal well producing rich gas condensate was conducted to obtain a history match on oil, gas, and water production. The matched model was then utilized to evaluate two novel shale oil EOR methods under a variety of operating conditions. The modeling indicates that for this particular well, incremental oil production of 500% over primary EUR may be achieved in the first five years of EOR operation via the SuperEOR method. A further enhanced EOR method, UltraEOR, is shown to potentially increase oil recovery by 850% in the first five years of EOR operation, and as much as 1100% after 12 years. These methods, which are patent-pending, have numerous advantages over cyclic gas injection, such as much greater oil recovery, much better economics/lower cost per barrel, reduced gas containment issues, use of far less horsepower and fuel, shorter injection time, longer production time, smaller injection volumes, scalability, faster implementation, precludes the need for artificial lift, elimination of the need to buy and sell injectant during each cycle, ability to optimize each cycle by integration with compositional reservoir simulation modeling, and lower emissions. These superior shale oil EOR methods have been modeled in seven major US shale oil plays, indicating large incremental oil recovery potential. Core tests have confirmed the SuperEOR modeling results and demonstrated high oil recovery, and field tests have been successfully completed that confirm reservoir simulation modelling projections. If implemented early in the life of a shale oil well, application of these processes can slow the production decline rate, recover far more oil earlier and at lower cost, greatly improve profitability and extend the life of the well by several years, while precluding the need for artificial lift.
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6

Roberts, Audrey. "Predicting Ohio School Levy Success." In 2021 AERA Annual Meeting. Washington DC: AERA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1686993.

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7

Thatcher, M. A. "Weather Normalization of Yearly Reliability Targets." In 2007 IEEE Power Engineering Society General Meeting. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pes.2007.385797.

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8

Scholl, Nathan C. "OHIO RIVER FLOODPLAIN DEVELOPMENT IN OHIO AND WEST VIRGINIA NEAR WELLS BOTTOM: GEOARCHAEOLOGICAL LANDSCAPE EVOLUTION MODELING." In GSA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA - 2018. Geological Society of America, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2018am-321011.

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Fakhari, Mohammad D. "REVISITING THE STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY OF NORTHWESTERN OHIO." In 50th Annual GSA North-Central Section Meeting. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016nc-275634.

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10

McDonald, James. "HISTORY OF COOPERATIVE TOPOGRAPHIC MAPPING IN OHIO." In GSA Connects 2023 Meeting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Geological Society of America, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2023am-395899.

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Reports on the topic "Of Ohio Yearly Meeting"

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Kress, Marin, Patricia DiJoseph, Morgan Johnston, Brian Tetreault, James Kilroy, Brady Towne, Andrew Smith, David Sathiaraj, and Andy Van Pelt. A method for evaluating Automatic Identification System (AIS) coverage on select inland waterways in 2020 and 2021 : Upper Mississippi River, Illinois River, and Ohio River. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), November 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/47839.

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The Automatic Identification System (AIS) shares vessel position information for navigational safety purposes. AIS broadcasts are received by other ships and terrestrial stations; however, in some areas there is no, or low, terrestrial station coverage to receive broadcasts. The US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) developed an Online Travel Time Atlas (OTTA) to process AIS data and derive a transit count. This study examined OTTA output from 2020 and 2021 to identify areas of high or low AIS coverage along the Upper Mississippi, Illinois, and Ohio Rivers. Segments with a yearly average of two or more transit per day were classified as high coverage, those with less than a yearly average of two transits per day were classified as low coverage. Rivers were segmented using the USACE National Channel Framework reach boundaries. Results based on calculated vessel transits were as follows: Upper Mississippi River: 837.4 miles (98%) had high coverage, with 17.4 miles (2%) of low coverage; Illinois River: 190.5 miles (59%) had high AIS coverage, and 133 miles (41%) had low AIS coverage; Ohio River: 644 miles (66%) had high coverage, and 337 miles (34%) had low coverage. AIS coverage could be improved by raising antennae heights, installing repeater equipment, or adding towers.
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2

Bingham, Sonia, Craig Young, and Tanni Hubbard. Sentinel wetlands in Cuyahoga Valley National Park: II. Condition trends for wetlands of management concern, 2008?2018. National Park Service, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/2301705.

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Twenty important management areas (wetlands of management concern) and reference wetlands compose the sentinel wetlands at Cuyahoga Valley National Park. These wetlands are monitored more intensively than other wetlands in the program. This is the second report in a two-part series, designed to summarize the results from intensive vegetation surveys completed at sentinel wetlands from 2008 to 2018. The first report (Bingham and Young 2023) characterized the conditions in each wetland and provided baseline reference information for other reports and site-specific projects. In this report, we examine results from five selected metrics more closely within and across three natural wetlands of management concern groups (restoration wetlands, mitigation wetlands, and rare habitat wetlands) using the reference wetlands as overall benchmarks. We used the Ohio Rapid Assessment Method (ORAM) to evaluate habitat in the sentinel wetlands. In addition, a total of 37 long-term sample plots were established within these wetlands to monitor biological conditions over time using vegetation as an indicator. Multiple plots were located in larger wetland complexes to capture spatial differences in condition. Vegetation was intensively surveyed within the plots using the Vegetation Index of Biotic Integrity (VIBI), where all plant species are identified to the lowest taxonomic level possible (genus or species). The sample plots were surveyed twice, and the five evaluation metrics included the VIBI score, Floristic Quality Assessment Index (FQAI), percent sensitive plant species, percent invasive graminoids, and species richness. For the analysis, VIBI plot locations were rank ordered based on their 2018 scores, the range and average for each metric was examined across the wetlands of management concern groups and plotted against reference wetlands for comparison, and the two survey years (pre-2015 and 2018) were plotted against each other for substantial changes from the established baseline. Across the sample plot locations, VIBI scores ranged from a low of 7 (Stanford Run SF1) to a high of 91 (Columbia Run 554). The top scoring plots were at four reference wetlands (Stumpy Basin 526, Virginia Kendall Lake 241K, Columbia Run 554, and Boston Mills 683) and one rare habitat wetland (Beaver Marsh BM3). All of these plots fell within an excellent condition range in one or both survey years. They each have unique habitats with some specialized plant species. The majority (24) of the sentinel wetlands plots ranked within the poor or fair ranges. These include the three mitigation wetlands: Brookside 968, Rockside RS2, and Krejci, as well as all plots within the Pleasant Valley and Stanford Run wetlands. Most of the large wetlands had dramatic condition differences within their boundaries? effected by pollution sources, land-use modifications, and/or invasive species in some areas more than others. We documented these wide condition ranges at Fawn Pond, Virginia Kendall Lake, Beaver Marsh and Stumpy Basin, but the most pronounced within-wetland differences were at Virginia Kendall Lake, which had a 58-point difference between the highest and lowest scoring plot. Fawn Pond is in good condition at most plots and scored very high in comparison to other wetlands within the riverine mainstem hydrogeomorphic class. The average and range of most metric scores were notably different across the four different wetlands groups. Average values at rare habitat wetlands plots were similar to reference plots for VIBI and FQAI scores, percent invasive graminoids, and percent sensitive metrics. Krejci KR1 and Fawn Pond FP3 had unusually high percent cover of sensitive species (31.0% and 27.9%, respectively) for the mitigation and restoration groupings. However, average overall metric scores across the restoration and mitigation wetlands were generally very low, with Stanford Run being the lowest scoring restoration wetland and Brookside being the lowest scoring mitigation wetland. With restoration efforts completed, the expectation is that mitigation wetlands should be performing much higher. Two of the three mitigation wetlands sites are not meeting the mitigation benchmarks that were created for them by the US Army Corp of Engineers and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. Contractor reports state that the wetlands met the criteria within the first five years of establishment. However, upon release from monitoring and maintenance, invasive species have gradually re-established, which has led to condition deterioration over time, and lower metric scores. VIBI scores stayed the same or improved (only slightly in many cases) in the majority of plots (67.6%) between survey years. The Krecji mitigation wetlands had the largest improvement in VIBI scoring. Scores at six plots decreased by at least 10 points from the baseline survey. Two of the park?s most beloved wetlands, Beaver Marsh (at one location) and the Stumpy Basin reference plot, had the two most notable declines in VIBI scores. In 2018, 11 plots (29.7%) had greater than 25% invasive graminoid cover (e.g. cattail, common reed grass, reed canary grass) and 18 plots (48.7%) experienced an increase in invasive graminoid cover between survey years. A marked increase (>10% cover) in invasive graminoids was documented at eight locations (Rockside 1079RS2, Beaver Marsh BM5, Fawn Pond FP3 and FP4, Brookside 968, Stumpy Basin SB1, and two other Pleasant Valley plots: 1049 and 969). These trends are likely to continue, and biological conditions are expected to deteriorate at these wetlands in response. Regardless of invasive species increases, many of the wetlands showed remarkable resilience over the last decade with fairly stable VIBI categories.
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3

Enlow, Holly, Nathaniel Wetzel, David Biedenharn, Christopher Haring, J. Lamport, Kyle Raburn, and Sarah Girdner. Geomorphic assessment of the St. Francis River : between Wappapello Lake and Lake City. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), July 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/47280.

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The St. Francis River is a complex system that lies in the historic floodplain of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. The basin has undergone extensive anthropogenic modifications, including reservoir construction, large-scale channelization, and construction of leveed floodways. Several analyses of available gage data, lidar data, and historical research have provided a picture of geomorphic trends and an overall understanding of the river’s stability. The types of analysis used to determine trends included yearly low stage plots, stage-duration curves, specific gage analysis, water surface slopes, and stream power changes. The results from these analyses were synthesized to develop an overall assessment of the reach. Channel cutoffs resulted in a significant decrease in channel length and sinuosity and triggered geomorphic change throughout the river. Immediately following channelization, dramatic decreasing trends in stage were observed for Fisk and Dekyn’s Store, while St. Francis and Holly Island began to aggrade. Slopes and stream power were significantly increased for the upper portion of the study area and showed a decreasing trend for the lower reach.
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4

Bingham, Sonia, and Craig Young. Sentinel wetlands in Cuyahoga Valley National Park: I. Ecological characterization and management insights, 2008–2018. Edited by Tani Hubbard. National Park Service, February 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/2296885.

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Sentinel wetlands at Cuyahoga Valley National Park (NP) comprise a set of twenty important management areas and reference sites. These wetlands are monitored more closely than other wetlands in the wetlands monitoring program and are the focus of the volunteer monitoring program for water levels. We used the Ohio Rapid Assessment Method (ORAM) to evaluate habitat in the sentinel wetlands. A total of 37 long-term sample plots have been established within these wetlands to monitor biological condition over time using vegetation as an indicator. Vegetation is intensively surveyed using the Vegetation Index of Biotic Integrity (VIBI), where all plant species within the plot are identified to the lowest taxonomic level possible (genus or species). Sample plots were surveyed twice from 2008 to 2018 and the vegetation data were evaluated using five metrics: VIBI, Floristic Quality Assessment Index (FQAI), percent sensitive plant species, percent invasive graminoids, and species richness. These metrics are discussed for each location. This report also highlights relevant land use histories, common native plant species, and invasive species of concern at each wetland. This is the first report in a two-part series, designed to summarize the results from intensive vegetation surveys completed at sentinel wetlands in 2008–2018. Boston Mills, Virginia Kendall Lake, Stumpy Basin, Columbia, and Beaver Marsh are all in excellent condition at one or more plots. They have unique habitats with some specialized plant species. Fawn Pond is in good condition at most plots and scores very high in comparison to other wetlands within the riverine mainstem hydrogeomorphic class. Metric scores across mitigation wetlands were low. Two of the three wetlands (Brookside and Rockside) are not meeting the benchmarks originally established by the United States Army Corps of Engineers and Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. Krejci is still a young mitigation site and success will be determined over time. Park-supported invasive species control efforts will be crucial for long-term success of these sites and future mitigation/restoration projects. The wetlands monitored because of proposed ecological restoration projects (Pleasant Valley, Stanford, and Fawn Pond) have extensive invasive plant communities. These restoration sites should be re-evaluated for their feasibility and potential success and given an order of prioritization relative to the newer list of restoration sites. Cuyahoga Valley NP has added many new areas to their list of potential wetland restoration sites after these areas were selected, and there may be better opportunities available based on restoration objectives. Restoration goals should be based on the park's desired future conditions, and mitigation goals of outside partners may not always be in line with those. The multiple VIBI plots dispersed throughout the large wetlands at Cuyahoga Valley NP detected and illuminated spatial patterns in condition. Many individual wetlands had a wide range of VIBI scores within their boundaries, sometimes reflecting localized disturbances, past modifications, and management actions. Most often, these large fluctuations in condition were linked to local invasive plant infestations. These infestations appear to be the most obvious and widespread threat to wetland ecosystems within the park, but also the most controllable threat. Some sensitive species are still present in some of the lowest scoring plots, which indicates that invasive plant species control efforts may pay off immediately with a resurgence of native communities. Invasive plant control at rare habitat sites would have large payoffs over time by protecting some of the park's most unique wetlands. Reference wetlands would also be good demonstration sites for park managers to try to maintain exemplary conditions through active management. Through this work, park managers can evaluate the feasibility, effectiveness, and scalability of management practices required to maintain wetland condition.
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