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Working to Protect the James

Riverkeeper David Sligh (Col ’82) monitors health of a mighty river



David Sligh (Col ’82) is likely to be wading in the slimy gunk of a shallow stream one day, then sitting in a courtroom the next, observing the proceedings of an environmental case he helped prepare.

Some might call that an unusual way to go through life.

Sligh calls it his “dream job.”

Sligh is a Riverkeeper, an advocate for and protector of the upper James River and all its tributaries. He is the second one to be hired by the James River Association, the Richmond-based non-profit organization whose mission is to serve as the guardian of the James.

“We’re thrilled to bring Dave to the Riverkeeper job,” says William H. Street (Com ’87), executive director of the JRA. “His technical and legal knowledge, his familiarity with the river and his family history of involvement with the river make him the complete package for the job.”

Sligh’s office is in Charlottesville, but you won’t find him there often. He stays busy exploring and studying the 6,000- to 7,000-square-mile watershed of the James that stretches from the Allegheny Mountains in Bath and Highland counties to the rapids around Richmond.

Sligh gets around by canoe, kayak or john boat. Sometimes, he is slogging through weeds and thick undergrowth, searching for a small stream that feeds into the James.

“This is a job I’ve been preparing for my whole career,” Sligh said one recent afternoon as he explored several streams in Goochland and Powhatan counties. “It’s kind of neat to get here.” 

Sligh, 47, grew up in Botetourt County. Both sides of his family have had a long, loving interest in the outdoors.

“By the time I was in my early teens, I was an environmental nerd,” he says, laughing. “I applied to U.Va. largely because of the environmental science program. I never considered majoring in anything else.”

Since graduation, he has worked for the state Department of Environmental Quality, the state Water Control Board, as executive director of the Soque River Watershed Association in Clarkesville, Ga., and for American Rivers, a national conservation group.

In 1995, Sligh re-entered the classroom, this time at the University of Vermont law school.

“I decided that knowing the science and how things worked technically was a great thing,” Sligh says. “But it also is important to learn how to work the levers that make policy and the laws.

“That’s part of what I like to do—make science and the law work together.”

Since June, Sligh has been working on the James River and the land that surrounds it. When he is in the field, he does not hesitate to step into a stream, measure the water temperature and get hands-on with the, well, the muck that impedes too many creeks and streams.

“The river is incredibly valuable, but so are these streams,” he says. “These streams are the capillaries to the main artery.”

Sligh has the perfect temperament to connect with the people who live along those streams. He’s personable, outgoing and quickly puts people at ease.

“I’m sure that’s a result of the good liberal arts education he received at U.Va.,” Street says, laughing. “The job Dave is doing is a critical component for a healthy James River.”



Comments:
Anonymous @ 10/15/2008 6:35:17 AM 
Dear Sir
Why dont you float the cowpasture river down to where the jackson river meets to form the james, take a picture, place it on the front page or the Richmond Times and send a copy to Westvaco paper mill in Covington,Virginia. It should make you sick.
Sincerly
George H. Beckwith, M.D.
gbeckwith@cchealthcare.com
Anonymous @ 10/15/2008 6:58:38 AM 
I own property that has Craigs Creek frontage in Botetourt Co.
I am interested in the water quality here. as well as my duty to protect the James,

Shirley Gordon, RN
118 Blueberry Rd
Charlottesville, VA 22902
shsugordon@aol.com
Anonymous @ 10/15/2008 9:38:53 AM 
Conoeing and fishing the Tye and James river is how I like to spend my summer days (when there is enough water). This summer included catching a shad for the first time at the Lynchburg dam, seeing more bald eagles and osprey, and exploring more of the James. lower water levels have sent me fishing the large pools between the many dams, from Snowden to Lynchburg.

Paul Whitehead III
UVA EVSC 98
Lovingston, VA 22949
paulwhitehead3@hotmail.com
Anonymous @ 10/16/2008 5:21:42 AM 
Mr. Woody:

While this is a good, chatty article about a man, please try to obtain more depth in your interview by finding out what his more real thoughts are about the state of VA waters, what should be done and why...as it is you present coffee-table information only.

Stuart Turille
CLAS 1983
Anonymous @ 10/17/2008 3:51:36 AM 
It's great to see and hear what's being done to preserve and protect the James River. Congratulations to both Dave Sligh and Bill Street for their part in this work. Plaudits also to UVa Magazine for featuring this work by two UVa alumni in environmental preservation -- it's entirely possible that many UVa alumni don't know what other graduates are contributing in the nonprofit sector: environment, education, social sciences, and so on. Thanks for UVa Magazine's new emphasis in those areas.

Gerald Cooper
CLAS 1958, Curry 1969
Anonymous @ 10/20/2008 8:30:35 AM 
How can area school children get involved? Children need to experience first-hand what happens when we are irresponsible citizens and discover ways to serve their communities.
Anonymous @ 10/21/2008 6:40:11 AM 
Thanks for doing the article on David Sligh, the new James River River Keeper. The email announcement arrived just in the nick of time.
Today, one of the topics in my Introduction to Environmental Sciences classes is follow up on a James River watershed land use homework assignment. I will be able to use to video to bring a concrete example of someone working on these issues into the classroom.

Linda Blum
Research Associate Professor
Department of Environmental Sciences
University of Virginia
Anonymous @ 10/24/2008 8:22:38 AM 
Amen to getting school children involved. There are many environmental groups interested in education: The Virginia Master Naturalists, Rivannna Conservation Society, TNC....
Dorothy Tompkins, MD
UVA school of Medicine, '66
Anonymous @ 12/4/2008 1:39:40 PM 
Are you still with the DEQ? After the fish kills in the Shenandoah and now the upper James I am appalled with the run around and never getting a striaght answer from the DEQ. Most people don't know but the James and Shenandoah are so bad that it is recomended that if you get the water on you, hand sanitizer should be used. God forbid children playing in it... Yet instead of putting up warnings was told by the DEQ, people need to use common sense..??? Common sense to me is dont drink it! Not to even touch it. With all the human waste from the treatment plants now being dumped on farmers fields next to the river our Shenandoah is now the Sewerdoah. Spring before last I reported to the DGIF that I was seeing a lot of fish on the upper James with the same sores on them the dieing fish on the Shenandoah had. Was reading that the dumping on the upper James watershead had increased greatly. Yet no one knows why this is happening.....I am Glad you have taken on this mission but if your still


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