NAWM
The National Association of Wetland Managers is a nonprofit membership organization established in 1983 to promote and enhance protection and management of wetland resources, to promote application of sound science to wetland management efforts and to provide training and education for our members and the public. Membership is open to anyone who is involved with wetland resources.
NAWM Webinar Series on Improving Aquatic Resource Protection through §401 Certification of Linear Energy Transmission Project Permits
Project Background:
Energy projects, particularly pipelines, affect a range of aquatic resources, including wetlands. A single pipeline can cross hundreds of wetlands and streams. Disturbance of wetlands during pipeline development may also release greenhouse gasses. State §401 Certification review of energy development projects is a highly complex and time-consuming task, one that challenges most state wetland programs. The use of Section §401 to effectively participate in the FERC, DOE and other permit planning and review process relies on understanding about how energy permitting processes work. Early, upfront coordination between the state wetland program, federal permitting agencies, developers and their consultant intermediaries has been shown to be a key to successful aquatic resource protection.
To support this work, NAWM worked with a national workgroup to develop documents detailing pipeline permitting processes, points of access for wetland managers, key points of consideration for permit reviewers, best practices for mitigation of both permanent and temporary impacts, template energy project review materials to be adapted by state wetland programs and an online resource page with links to guidance, templates, tools, recorded webinars and contacts.
For more information and/or to join our email list for notices about upcoming events, please contact Laura Burchill at laura@nawm.org or (207) 892-3399.
View a List of Past Pipeline Permitting Webinar Recordings Here
As part of this project, NAWM delivered four webinars on topics that have been identified to address specific training needs:
NAWM Pipeline Permitting Webinars:
- July 18, 2018 – Improving the Information Pipeline: Working with Consultants During Oil and Gas Pipeline Permitting Processes – Clifford Brown, West Virginia Department of Natural Resources; Brenda Zollitsch, Association of State Wetland Managers; and Evan Hansen, Downstream Strategies, LLC
- July 24, 2018 – Cumulative Adverse Effects of Pipeline Development on Wetlands and Other Aquatic Resources – Wing Goodale, Biodiversity Research Institute
- October 29, 2018 – Horizontal Directional Drilling: Understanding Context when Reviewing Oil and Gas Pipeline Permit Applications– Richard Dalton, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection; Patrick Ryan, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection; Rick Gitar, Fond du Lac Reservation; Brenda Zollitsch, Association of State Wetland Managers
- November 7, 2018 – Pipeline Permitting 101 – Clifford Brown, West Virginia Department of Natural Resources; Robert Parker, Ollsson Associates; and Brenda Zollitsch, Association of State Wetland Managers
A List of Beaver Restoration Webinars Can Be Found Here. (PDF)
Members’ Wetland Webinar - Held March 20, 2019
Understanding State Agency Opportunities for Third Party Compliance Monitoring on Pipeline Projects
Presenters: Mike Warner, Transcon Environmental, Inc. and Jeff Davis, Transcon Environmental, Inc.
Members’ Wetland Webinar - June 12, 2019 - 3:00p.m.-4:30p.m. ET
Identifying Listed Species and Streamlining Section 7 Consultation for Wetland Permitting (And More): Introduction to the US Fish and Wildlife Service's Online IPaC Tool
Presenter: Victoria Foster, National IPaC Program Coordinator, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
The above NAWM Members’ Wetland Webinars are only available to NAWM Members. This is one of the many benefits available to NAWM members. For more information on the benefits of membership and how to join, click here. If you are a member of NAWM, please log in to the NAWM website to view the webinar held on March 20th and June 12th.
Webinar #4: Pipeline Permitting 101
Held Wednesday, November 7, 2018 – 3-5 pm ET
INTRODUCTION
- Brenda Zollitsch, Policy Analyst, Association of State Wetland Managers [PowerPoint Presentation]
PRESENTERS
- Clifford Brown, West Virginia Division of Natural Resources [Presentation #1: PowerPoint Presentation] [Presentation #2: PowerPoint Presentation]
- Robert Parker, Consultant [Presentation #1: PowerPoint Presentation] [Presentation #2: PowerPoint Presentation]
- Brenda Zollitsch, Association of State Wetland Managers [PowerPoint Presentation]
ABSTRACT
This webinar has been designed to help provide a basic overview for regulators that are new to oil and natural gas pipeline permitting and provide a review for others who already are engaged in this work. The webinar began with an overview of the expansion of oil and especially gas pipeline development in recent years and the associated growing need for review of pipeline permit applications by state and tribal aquatic resource regulators. The webinar covered pipeline basics – how pipeline projects are planned, the general steps in construction, and the potential to participate in a pre-application phase during which many key planning decisions are made. The webinar discussed the different processes involved in oil and gas permitting. Next, the webinar providef an overview of §401 Water Quality Certification and where this review process fits into overall planning and permitting. The webinar discussed examples of how states and tribes have dealt with conditioning §401 certifications and share lessons learned. The webinar concluded by describing new resources designed for those working on pipeline permitting that will soon be available on the Association of State Wetland Managers’ website.
BIOS
Clifford Brown has worked for West Virginia Division of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resources Section, since 1989 and currently serves in the DNR Environmental Coordination Unit as the lead for oil and gas related activities. Responsibilities include review of Section 401 applications, coordination with WVDEP and USEPA for mitigation and restoration associated with administrative orders and consent decrees, coordination with USFWS related to the National Wildlife Refuge System, Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program, coordination with the USFS for oil and gas projects on the Monongahela, George Washington and Jefferson National Forests in West Virginia, and serves on the AFWA Energy and Wildlife Policy Committee and the agency coordinator for review of FERC projects in West Virginia. He holds a B.S. in Biology and a M.S. in Wildlife and Fisheries Science from the Pennsylvania State University.
Robert Parker has worked in state government, nonprofits and consulting firms, developing a critical breadth of knowledge about the regulatory process from many perspectives. He is the former Section 401 Coordinator at Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality (NDEQ) and currently works as a independent consultant. While at NDEQ Robert also coordinated the state’s Storm Water Management Plan Grants Program and served as project manager for Watershed Management Plans in development by Nebraska Natural Resources Districts under the state's Nonpoint Source Management Plan. Before relocating to the Great Plains, Robert worked in the Great Basin region with threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout. He has a B.S. in Fisheries Biology from Humboldt State University, where he completed undergraduate research in genetic and morphologic differentiation in isolated populations of rough sculpin (Cottus asperrimus) in California’s Pit and Fall Rivers. Prior to his career in science and policy Robert spent nearly two decades working as a professional whitewater and fly fishing guide in Alaska, California, Montana, and Chile.
Brenda Zollitsch, PhD is Policy Analyst at the Association of State Wetland Managers, leading ASWM’s research on wetland and stream issues. She has been the PI on an ongoing multi-year project exploring ways to increase the effectiveness and efficiency of state and tribal permitting of oil and gas pipeline projects. In addition to her work for ASWM, Brenda serves as adjunct faculty at the University of Southern Maine’s Muskie School of Public Service teaching courses in public policy. She also assists water resource collaborations as a strategic planner and professional facilitator. Brenda holds her PhD in Public Policy from the University of Southern Maine’s Muskie School of Public Service and a double Masters’ degree in International Relations and Environmental Resource Management from Boston University.
Webinar #3: Horizontal Directional Drilling: Understanding Context when Reviewing Oil and Gas Pipeline Permit Applications
Held Monday, October 29, 2018 – 3-5 pm ET
INTRODUCTION
- Brenda Zollitsch, Policy Analyst, Association of State Wetland Managers [PowerPoint Presentation]
PRESENTERS
- Richard Dalton, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection [PowerPoint Presentation]
- Patrick Ryan, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection [PowerPoint Presentation]
- Rick Gitar, Fond du Lac Reservation [PowerPoint Presentation]
- Brenda Zollitsch, Association of State Wetland Managers [PowerPoint Presentation]
ABSTRACT
Horizontal Directional Drilling (HDD) is often considered a best practice for pipeline construction. However, in practice, HDD is only appropriate in certain contexts. This webinar started with a geology primer identifying contexts where HDD both commonly works and does not work well and why. Next, the state and tribal regulators shared their perspectives on reviewing permits that include HDD and some of their lessons learned. They shared the kinds of information that it is beneficial for reviewers to request and common considerations when reviewing and conditioning permit applications that include proposed HDD. Alternatives to HDD and their strengths and weaknesses also was discussed. The webinar concluded with information about new resources for those working on pipeline permitting efforts that will soon be available on the Association of State Wetland Managers’ website.
BIOS
Richard Dalton is a Geologist and Manager for the Office of the State Geologist in the Division of Water Supply and Geoscience at the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. He started with the Bureau of Geology and Topography in spring of 1967 where he was involved mapping the limestone and dolomite geology of northwestern New Jersey. He spent six years doing spill response of oil and hazardous chemicals, then was moved back to the New Jersey Geological Survey where he works in the Office of the State Geologist today. He is also a member of the New Jersey Well Drilled and Pump Installers Licensing Board. He holds a BA in geology from Rutgers University.
Patrick Ryan is an Environmental Supervisor within the Division of Land Use Regulation at the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. He supervises a permitting staff responsible for environmental reviews of wetlands, highlands, waterfront, and flood hazard area permit applications for northern New Jersey. Mr. Ryan has a M.S. in Ecology from Penn State University and a B.S. in Natural Resource Management from Cook College, Rutgers University.
Rick Gitar is the Water Regulatory Specialist and Tribal Inspector for the Fond du Lac Reservation – Office of Water Protection, located in northeast Minnesota, where he has worked for over 20 years. He is the administer of Fond du Lac’s Wetlands Protection and Management Ordinance, their Clean Water Act 401 Water Quality Certification program, and provides CWA Section 402 oversight for projects on the Reservation. Rick is also a credentialed inspector for EPA, conducting compliance inspections in the areas of wetlands and storm water. He conducts Fond du Lac’s environmental reviews under NEPA and the tribe’s Tribal Environmental Policy Act Ordinance. Rick received a double major B.S. in Biology (Botany Focus) and Journalism from the University of Wisconsin – Superior and a M.S. in Environmental Biology (Botany Focus) from the University of Minnesota – Duluth. Rick is also a Master Herbalist and teaches adult extension classes. He is currently enrolled in the online Doctorate of Herbal Medicine Program with AMNAH College.
Brenda Zollitsch, PhD is Policy Analyst at the Association of State Wetland Managers, leading ASWM’s research on wetland and stream issues. She has been the PI on an ongoing multi-year project exploring ways to increase the effectiveness and efficiency of state and tribal permitting of oil and gas pipeline projects. In addition to her work for ASWM, Brenda serves as adjunct faculty at the University of Southern Maine’s Muskie School of Public Service teaching courses in public policy. She also assists water resource collaborations as a strategic planner and professional facilitator. Brenda holds her PhD in Public Policy from the University of Southern Maine’s Muskie School of Public Service and a double Masters’ degree in International Relations and Environmental Resource Management from Boston University.

Webinar #2: Cumulative Adverse Effects of Pipeline Development on Wetlands and Other Aquatic Resources
Held Tuesday, July 24, 2018 at 3 pm ET
INTRODUCTION
- Brenda Zollitsch, Policy Analyst, Association of State Wetland Managers [PowerPoint Presentation]
- Webinar Series Information [PowerPoint Presentation]
PRESENTER
- Wing Goodale, Biodiversity Research Institute [PowerPoint Presentation]
ABSTRACT
Energy projects, particularly pipelines, affect a range of aquatic resources, including wetlands. Impacts to wetlands from pipeline activities range from both short- and long-term destruction and disruption of wetlands and other aquatic resources to water quality impacts, habitat loss, increasing invasive species and compromised quality of critical areas. The adverse effects of a pipeline on a single wetland are important, but of equal or greater concern is the effect of pipelines that cross multiple watersheds and multiple wetlands. A single pipeline can cross hundreds of wetlands and streams, which can lead to cumulative adverse effects (CAE).
This webinar provided an introduction about how CAE can be conceptualized, the language used to discuss CAE, and the legal basis for CAE. The presentation discussed a framework for considering adverse effects, including a review of general approaches for CAE assessments and ways to address these effects. The webinar concluded with the presentation of a thought-provoking approach to conducting simple assessment of CAE that could be adapted for use by wetland professionals as they work to identify and address CAE for projects they are planning and/or permits they are reviewing. The webinar ended with information about the Association of State Wetland Managers’ recent pipeline permitting project and forthcoming resources on CAE that will be available on ASWM’s website.
BIO
Wing Goodale is Senior Deputy Director for the Center for Ecology & Conservation Research and Director for the Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI) in Maine. He is a NSF IGERT fellow in the UMass Offshore Wind Energy Program. Goodale has worked at BRI since 2000 and is now the deputy director. At BRI, he has raised or helped manage over $7.5 million of funds for more than 60 conservation biology projects. Goodale has served on municipal committees, environmental nonprofit boards, professional boards, and college boards, including the governor appointed Maine Board of Environmental Protection. Wing is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Environmental Conservation at University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He also has his Master of Philosophy in Human Ecology from the College of the Atlantic and his Bachelor of Arts in Biology from Colorado College.

Webinar #1: Improving the Information Pipeline: Working with Consultants During Oil and Gas Pipeline Permitting Processes
Held Wednesday, July 18, 2018 at 3 pm ET
INTRODUCTION
- Brenda Zollitsch, Policy Analyst, Association of State Wetland Managers [PowerPoint Presentation]
PRESENTERS
- Clifford Brown, West Virginia Department of Natural Resources [PowerPoint Presentation]
- Brenda Zollitsch, Association of State Wetland Managers [PowerPoint Presentation]
- Evan Hansen, Downstream Strategies, LLC [PowerPoint Presentation]
ABSTRACT
This webinar provided insights about how wetland and other aquatic resource regulators can improve working relationships with consultants who serve as intermediaries for energy companies working on oil and gas pipeline development projects. This webinar shared insights from state permit reviewers on some of the common challenges, ranging from different understandings of permitting processes, points of access, pipeline terms and use of language. The webinar discussed helpful ways of working together to establish common understanding, share key concerns about impacts to aquatic resources and incorporate best practices to address those impacts. The webinar presented a new resource developed by ASWM to help guide more productive conversations and relationships between regulators and consultants, focusing on creating transparency, common understandings, and strong relationships that facilitate both efficient permit review processes and protection of aquatic resources.
BIOS
Evan Hansen is Principal of Water and Energy Programs for Downstream Strategies, LLC a consulting firm in West Virginia. Evan’s work focuses on resource and environmental problems and solutions in three areas: water, energy, and land. He manages interdisciplinary research teams, performs quantitative and qualitative policy and scientific analyses, provides litigation support and expert testimony, develops computer tools, provides training, and performs field monitoring. He is engaged in ongoing source water protection activities and works with watershed organizations and agencies on Clean Water Act and Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act issues such as permits, TMDLs, antidegradation, and watershed-based plans. Evan has his M.S. in Energy and Resources from the University of California, Berkeley and his B.S. in Computer Science and Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Evan is a Switzer Environmental Fellow and has worked with ASWM on this project through a Network Innovation Grant from the Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation.
Clifford Brown has worked for West Virginia Division of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resources Section, since 1989 and currently serves in the DNR Environmental Coordination Unit as the lead for oil and gas related activities. Responsibilities include review of Section 401 applications, coordination with WVDEP and USEPA for mitigation and restoration associated with administrative orders and consent decrees, coordination with USFWS related to the National Wildlife Refuge System, Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program, coordination with the USFS for oil and gas projects on the Monongahela, George Washington and Jefferson National Forests in West Virginia, and serves on the AFWA Energy and Wildlife Policy Committee and the agency coordinator for review of FERC projects in West Virginia. He holds a B.S. in Biology and a M.S. in Wildlife and Fisheries Science from the Pennsylvania State University.
Brenda Zollitsch, PhD is a Policy Analyst at the Association of State Wetland Managers. Brenda conducts research and policy analysis on wetland and stream issues. Brenda has recently completed a national status and trends/state summaries project analyzing 50 state wetland programs across the United States and a national stream identification, delineation and mitigation study, a communications case study project and a wetland training needs assessment and enhancement project. She currently leads projects focused on increasing access to high quality wetland training and improving energy permitting to protect wetlands. In addition to her work for ASWM, Brenda is a Switzer Environmental Fellow, serves as adjunct faculty at the University of Southern Maine teaching courses in public policy and sustainable communities and assists water resource collaborations as a professional facilitator. Brenda holds her PhD in Public Policy from the University of Southern Maine’s Muskie School of Public Service and a double Master’s degree in International Relations and Environmental Resource Management from Boston University.
View a List of Past Pipeline Permitting Webinar Recordings Here
The National Association of Wetland Managers (NAWM) holds eight webinars per year for members. NAWM Member webinars cover a variety of topics encompassing wetland science, policy, program implementation, and legal issues. These webinars, including recordings for past webinars are available to NAWM members.
Not a NAWM Member? Join or Renew
For more information about this webinar series, please contact Laura Burchill at laura@nawm.org or
(207) 892-3399. Learn more about sponsorship opportunities.
If you haven’t used Go To Webinar before or you just need a refresher, please view our guide prior to the webinar.
View Past NAWM Members' Webinar Series Here
View a List of Past NAWM Members' Webinar Series Recordings Here
Geographically isolated wetlands on the Southeastern Coastal Plain: Managing landscapes to maintain and enhance ecosystem services
Wednesday, October 22, 2025 - 3:00-4:00 p.m. EDT PRESENTERS
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ABSTRACT
Geographically Isolated Wetlands, or GIWs, are often defined as wetlands that lack a consistent surface water connection to other water bodies. Despite the apparent lack of connectivity, GIWs provide ecosystem services that greatly exceed their spatial extent, and are important functional components of the broader landscape. At local scales, GIWs provide critical habitat for wildlife, including threatened and endangered species. At regional scales, GIWs improve water quality by removing sediments and nutrients. GIWs also store large amounts of water, helping buffer watersheds from both floods and droughts. Lastly, they are hotspots for carbon storage and may contribute to climate change mitigation. Here, we provide an overview of GIWs on the Dougherty Plain, a karst region of southwestern Georgia with >11,000 individual wetlands, and discuss GIWs through the lens of ecosystem services and nature-based solutions. We review long-term hydrologic monitoring of diverse wetlands with a focus on the role of hydrology as a master variable in driving provision of ecosystem services. We also highlight long-term trends in hydroperiod and review ongoing projects that leverage these long-term data. Finally, we discuss how GIWs respond to land management practices that affect hydrology. Our results emphasize the need for more effective protection of wetlands and suggest the need for creative conservation solutions at local, state, and federal levels.
BIOS
Steven Brantley, The Jones Center at Ichauway
Steven received his B.S. and M.S. in Biology and his Ph.D. (2009) in Integrative Life Sciences, all from Virginia Commonwealth University. His research at VCU focused on the consequences of shrub expansion on the Virginia barrier islands and was supported by the Virginia Coast Reserve LTER program. He subsequently worked as a post-doc at the U.S. Forest Service Coweeta Hydrologic Lab where he studied the effects of forest species composition on forest water use, the hydrologic effects of the hemlock woolly adelgid infestation, and strategies to conserve surviving hemlock trees. Steven has been at Ichauway since 2014 where he has engaged in diverse interdisciplinary work related to interactions between land and water. When he’s not doing science, Steven enjoys spending time with family, cooking, and watching football at all levels.
Katy Perkins, The Jones Center at Ichauway
Katy received her B.S. in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering with a minor in Earth and Atmospheric Sciences from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Co-advised by Dr. Frances O’Donnell, Katy’s thesis focuses on the links between the hydrological function of geographically isolated wetlands and surrounding landscape variables. Specifically, her work addresses how longleaf pine cover and restoration affect wetland hydrology using a watershed modeling framework. Katy’s academic interests include restoration ecology, biogeochemistry, and remote sensing. When she is not wading in a wetland, Katy can be found hiking, reading, and listening to podcasts.
Registration will be open soon. Please check back.
A Certificate of Attendance to be used toward Continuing Education Credits is available when participating in NAWM's live webinars. All Certificates must be claimed no later than 60 days from the live presentation. Certificates are not available for viewing recorded webinars. More Information.
Strategies and Tools for Peatland Restoration
Wednesday, November 12, 2025 - 3:00-4:30 p.m. EST PRESENTERS
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ABSTRACTS
Erik Lilleskov
PeatRestore: providing the knowledge and tools needed to make informed decisions about peatland restoration in the United States.
The PeatRestore collaboration seeks to provide the knowledge and resources needed to manage peatland ecosystems sustainably. This includes developing map resources, restoration guides, and decision support/planning tools for managers and policy-makers. Peatland conservation and restoration are globally important goals because of peatlands’ potential to sequester and store carbon for millennia, provide habitat for plants and wildlife, regulate hydrology, and emit greenhouse gases (GHGs) when degraded. To provide information that can be used to identify possible targets for restoration, we have developed a peatland condition map for the conterminous US and Hawaii using existing GIS-based information. Of the 94,750 km2 of histosols and 13,533 km2 of histic epipedons (HE) analyzed, 7 % (7709 km2) were under agricultural use. Of 100,415 km2 of histosols and HE not in agricultural use, 19 % were within 150 m of ditches, roads, or railroads. Of mapped histosols, 38 % (36,042 km2) were legally protected from extractive use, and 635 km2 were in NRCS wetland easements. Based on IPCC tier 1 emission factors, the greatest reduction of CO2-e emissions per unit area and nationally would be from rewetting of peatlands under agriculture. In non-agricultural areas, rewetting peatlands affected by ditching alone is likely more cost-effective than if they are also affected by roads and railroads.
Dominic Uhelski
Strategies and Challenges for Restoring Post-agricultural Peatlands
In post-glaciated landscapes along the temperate-boreal climatic tension zone, peatland and agricultural extents overlap and large areas of former peatland have been drained and converted to agriculture. The landscape homogenization caused by mass agricultural conversion depauperates biodiversity, habitat availability, and landscape resilience. In addition, peat soils under agriculture are large sources of greenhouse gas emissions, making them a priority for restoration actions to slow or reverse those emissions. These facts have seen some recognition and made agricultural peatland restoration a notable feature of green policy moves in Europe and North America. However, restoration of peat soils in post-agricultural settings is made more difficult because of the legacy effects of extensive alteration and need to accommodate ongoing agricultural activities in the surrounding areas. Due to these conditions, many early attempts at restoration have had limited success. How do existing methods of peat restoration work in post-agricultural sites, and what can be done to improve restoration outcomes in these challenging situations? This talk will review the challenges facing peatland restoration in post-agricultural areas, case studies of successful and failed peatland restorations, and describe existing and emerging methods to improve restoration success.
BIOS
Erik Lilleskov is a research ecologist and project leader with the USDA Forest Service, Research and Development, based in Houghton, MI. His work spans the gamut from understanding how global change affects the fungal and microbial communities that regulate soil processes, to developing actionable science to facilitate informed ecosystem management. Over the past 15 years much of his work has been on developing the scientific knowledge, capacity, and science delivery products relevant to peatland ecosystem degradation and restoration. This work has been focused at local, regional and global scales, and includes mapping, microbial community studies, ecosystem carbon cycling studies, and management practices, including restoration. He believes strongly that collaboration and building communities of practice will enhance our ability to maintain healthy ecosystems and local economies, and seeks opportunities for scientists, managers, and policy makers to work together to achieve these goals.
Dominic Uhelski is an applied wetland ecologist who uses biogeochemistry to understand how ecosystem properties - and restoration design - drive carbon and nutrient cycles, which in turn shape successional trajectories and restoration outcomes. His favorite scientific topics include restoration design, greenhouse gas flux, water quality impacts, and disturbance ecology, particularly fire. In his free time Dominic enjoys getting outdoors for hiking, biking, and climbing, or cozying up indoors to cook, brew, blast virtual aliens, or enjoy quality television.
Alex Moya (Pew) works to incorporate conservation and restoration of coastal blue carbon and peatland habitats in state and national climate policies for Pew’s U.S. conservation project. She leads efforts to engage primarily with state agencies as they seek to incorporate wetlands into their climate change planning, helping to connect science and research to the policy choices of decision-makers. Before joining Pew, Moya worked for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on nonpoint source pollution and Columbia River salmon issues in the Pacific Northwest.
Registration will be open soon. Please check back.
A Certificate of Attendance to be used toward Continuing Education Credits is available when participating in NAWM's live webinars. All Certificates must be claimed no later than 60 days from the live presentation. Certificates are not available for viewing recorded webinars. More Information.
To view Past Members' Wetland Webinars:
Members You must be logged in.
Nonmembers To view recent Members' Webinars, please join NAWM.
View Past Member' Webinar Series Here
View a List of Past Members' Webinar Series Recordings Here
The National Association of Wetland Managers (NAWM) formerly the Association of State Wetland Managers (ASWM), and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) collaborated to develop a series of webinars introducing the topic of restoration of aquatic ecosystems through the reintroduction of beavers, the use of beaver dam analogues (BDAs) or restoration designed to attract beavers to an area to contribute to changing hydrology and restoring ecosystem services. The webinar series was planned by a national workgroup of beaver restoration experts and webinars are presented by expert practitioners, managers and researchers working in the field. In 2020-2021, the six-part webinar series covered the basics of beaver restoration and continuing through implementation challenges and ways to encourage beaver restoration projects. The series has been added to our Online Trainings library, available here.
If you haven’t used Go To Webinar before or you just need a refresher, please view our guide prior to the webinar here.
View Past Beaver-related Restoration Webinars
Please check back for future Beaver-related Restoration Webinars.
The Association conducts research and publishes reports, guidebooks, news articles, brochures, white papers, and summaries of findings of symposia and workshops. These are available electronically to all interested individuals and organizations.
Wetland News (Members' Only)
Weekly News of Interest
Listed below are links to news articles that may be of interest to the wetland community. Readers are encouraged to send links to recent articles, publications, and other resources pertaining to wetlands in their local area to Marla Stelk, Executive Director at news@nawm.org and reference “In the News” in the subject.
- The Famosa Slough — an inland wetland gem in urban San Diego
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Badger Creek Ranch takes innovative approach to preserving wetlands with virtual fencing
- Smoke rises in west Phoenix as crews work on prescribed burn
- Lake Jesup floodplain bursts with native ‘swamp sunflower’ bloom
August 6, 2025 –
NAWM Comments on EPA Request for Input on Clean Water Act Section 401
NAWM submitted comments in response to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) request for input on regulatory uncertainty or implementation challenges associated with the Clean Water Act (CWA) section 401 certification process as defined in the 2023 Water Quality Certification Improvement Rule. NAWM believes that CWA section 401 has worked well for over 50 years and has found no evidence to support claims that the certification process is broken. NAWM does believe EPA needs to revise the certification regulations from 2023. Read letter here.
MISSION
The mission of the National Association of Wetland Managers (NAWM) is to build capacity for state and tribal members and foster collaboration among the wetland community of practice by encouraging the application of sound science to wetland management and policy, promoting the protection and restoration of wetlands and related aquatic resources, and providing training and education for members and the general public.
VISION
As a result of NAWM’s work, the wetland community has access to and effectively uses sound science, policy, and private/public partnerships to preserve, protect, and restore the nation’s precious and limited wetlands and related aquatic resources.
HISTORY
The National Association of Wetland Managers (NAWM) was founded by Jon A. Kusler, Esq., Ph.D., and Scott Hausmann in 1983 with two goals — to support state wetland programs and to support national wetland policy reflecting sound wetland science. NAWM has tried to stay true to these goals throughout the years, during the ups and downs of funding and politics. Read more.
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Publications
The Association conducts research and publishes reports, guidebooks, news articles, brochures, white papers, and summaries of findings of symposia and workshops. These are available electronically to all interested individuals and organizations.