Get Involved in Geography Awareness Week and GIS Day

Geography Awareness Week is quickly approaching, November 10th – 16th, with GIS Day on November 13th. Below you’ll find GeoWeek and GIS Day resources, announcements, and ways to get involved, big and small. Do what you can to promote our wonderful discipline during the week, and also think about how you can support geography year-round!

 

Starting Point: Check out National Geographic’s Geography Awareness Week page to learn the history and mission of the week and discover materials for hosting your own event.

 

Geography.com: Ever need a resource to share with others for a quick intro to geography? Geography.com is designed for students and the general public to learn more about the field and all it has to offer. Share this site to spread the word! Improving geography awareness can be as simple as a conversation with a friend. We challenge you to talk to one person in your social circle about what you study and what you do. They will get to know both you and our discipline better!

 

Geography Career Materials for High School Counselors: As part of our ongoing efforts to tell students about opportunities in geography, the AAG is mailing career information packets to high school guidance counselors! Want us to share career info with schools in your area? Get contact info for high schools in your area and we’ll send career packets to counselors and teachers about opportunities in geography that they can use with students! Request here or share this sign up with others: https://bit.ly/GeoCareerPacket

 

Free GIS Software for K-12 Schools and Youth Groups: Did you know that K-12 schools and youth groups WORLDWIDE are eligible for free ArcGIS software? They can simply sign up online! Share this news with schools in your area and teachers you know. Help students engage with GIS at an early age!

 

GISDay.com: Find local events or add your event to the online map, download GIS Day promotional items, share GIS Day videos, and find hands-on exercises at gisday.com. Also check out the GIS Day in the Classroom Implementation Guide! It’s designed for both volunteers and teachers, so use this for your own outreach efforts and/or share this with people you know in the K-12 community.

 

GeoReads: What’s your favorite geography-related book that you would suggest to students and non-geographers? Spread geographic literacy one book at a time by donating your favorite geo book to a local school, public library, or local little free library to help others discover our discipline!

 

Geographer Profiles: Need another great resource to share with students, friends, and others to help them learn about our field and what it has to offer? Check out our Profiles of Geographers which highlight the wide variety of interesting work we do.

 

Be a GeoMentor: If you don’t have time to get involved in GeoWeek, set yourself up to be involved later by signing up to be a GeoMentor. Help young students discover geography and spatial thinking to better understand the world around them. You can sign up online and check out some of the great work of our volunteers across the country in our case study collection.

 

Guide to Geography Programs: Many students don’t discover geography until undergrad (or even later). To support GeoWeek, consider sharing the AAG’s Guide to Geography Programs in the Americas with high school students and guidance counselors to help students discover our discipline sooner! Available as a PDF and online map.

 

Ask a Geographer: A great way to support geography awareness is to tell people about the AAG’s Ask a Geographer program. AAG members are available to answer questions in 50+ areas of geography. Share this resource and/or volunteer to be part of it!

 

Donate. Help secure the importance of geography and the work of geographers in understanding our world. Consider donating to the AAG to support the next generation of geographers. Choose among different programs to support student travel, dissertation grants, diversity initiatives, and more.

How are you celebrating or participating in GeoWeek? Reach out to us on Twitter @theAAG and let us know!

 

 

    Share

What “real world problems” do our applied geography members help solve?

This word cloud was generated from 134 responses to the question: ‘What kinds of real world problems do you solve (or aspire to solve) using geographic approaches?’

 

    Share

Introducing the “Climate Action Task Force”

In response to the current climate crisis, last spring we circulated a petition among various geography listservs requesting that the AAG Council take significant action “to reduce CO2 emissions related to the Annual Meeting.” The petition asked that the “Council do so in a manner commensurate with what the recent (October 2018) Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) special report asserts is needed to limit global warming to 1.5°C: about a 45 percent cut (from 2010 levels) by 2030, and ‘net zero’ emissions by 2050.”  In light of the strong support that the petition received, the AAG Council responded in April with the creation of a task force charged with redesigning the Annual Meeting so that it is a low-CO2-emitting endeavor. The task force is mandated to transform the Annual Meetings in a manner that is effective in meeting the needs of AAG members and that is also socio-spatially and environmentally just.

Since that time, the Annual Meeting Climate Action Task Force, under the leadership of Wendy Jepson, professor of geography at Texas A&M University and member of the AAG Council, has recruited a diverse group of geographers from across the United States and Canada to serve as members.  Through various working groups, task force members are currently focused on three areas: 1) conducting research into qualitative and quantitative dimensions of the carbon regime that underpins the AAG’s conference model; 2) exploring how information and communication technologies can be best mobilized to offer rewarding virtual experiences for conference participants; and 3) organizing a first round of special initiatives at the AAG annual meeting  in Denver in 2020.

 

Climate Action Task Force Members
Kafui Attoh, City University of New York Elizabeth Olson, UNC Chapel Hill
Daniel Bedford, Weber State University Aparna Parikh, Dartmouth College
Tianna Bruno, University of Oregon Paul Robbins, University of Wisconsin–Madison
John Hayes, Salem State University Sue Ruddick, University of Toronto
Wendy Jepson, Texas A&M, task force chair Sarah Stindard-Kiel, Temple University
Oscar Larson, AAG Elin Thorlund, AAG
Patricia Martin, Université de Montréal Jayme Walenta, University of Texas at Austin
Joseph Nevins, Vassar College

 

Smaller academic associations have already experimented with low carbon conferencing (e.g. the Society of Cultural Anthropology’s 2018 Conference, Displacements, a hybrid of a virtual conference and in-person gatherings at sites across the world linked via the internet). However, no large learned society has directly engaged with an attempt to transition to a low-carbon conference model.  Thus, this initiative has the potential to place the AAG at the cutting edge in the struggle against climate change.

To ensure the wellbeing of the AAG, while seeking to provide a stimulating and inclusive environment for the diverse community of geographers, we envision proposing and experimenting with a series of initiatives aimed at implementing change in an incremental way over the next five years. Accordingly, we are working on a series of special initiatives for Denver 2020 that will also serve as a means for charting future pathways.  While the plans are still preliminary, these initiatives include a virtual plenary session with Kevin Anderson, professor of energy and climate change at the University of Manchester and the former Director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research.  We also are organizing a series of “blended” sessions related to the taskforce’s major themes, in which there will be a combination of virtual and on-site participation. These panels and paper sessions will explore a range of issues, including emerging models for academic conferences, the promises and pitfalls of carbon offsetting, and the dilemmas of knowledge production in an era of climate disruption. We hope as well to have a room dedicated to a variety of virtual experiments that will bridge research, activism and performance to highlight the importance of this initiative. Another innovative initiative will seek to match senior geographers with emerging scholars in a virtual “conversation over coffee.” Finally, we will organize a special poster session with the purpose of helping us to reimagine the AAG annual conference in 2025.  Through these diverse initiatives, we seek to understand the impact virtual conferencing might have on participants’ experiences, while testing the limits and possibilities of different technological infrastructures that could be mobilized to support low-CO2 conferencing.

We understand that changing our professional behaviors is difficult. Our discipline and our careers are often based in large part on in-person connections with physically distant places and people throughout the world.  In our professional and personal lives we are immersed in social practices in which air travel is profoundly normalized, and viewed as both a necessity and an unquestioned right.  Yet we also know that climate disruption is already here and that air travel is a significant source of CO2 emissions.  If we take seriously the gravity of a situation so clearly spelled out by climate science, then we must collectively create new ways of being in the world, which means weaving new kinds of relationships between individuals and communities, both near and far.  In this sense, rethinking the dominant modes of academic conferencing presents the possibility of creating new forms of academic relationships and exchange that remain fully engaged in the world. We may “lose” some things; but we will gain as well. In this sense, the goal of the Annual Meeting Climate Action Task Force is in no way to undo the AAG or question its relevance, but rather position both our discipline and our association at the forefront of progressive change.

If you are interested in learning more about the initiative or engaging with the Task Force, please contact Wendy Jepson at: wjepson [at] tamu [dot] edu.

DOI: 10.14433/2017.0064


On the topic of the ecological footprint of academic travel, there is a rapidly growing body of literature. Here are two recent articles that we recommend:

Julien Arsenault, Julie Talbot, Lama Boustani, Rodolphe Gonzalès and Kevin Manaugh,  “The environmental footprint of academic and student mobility in a large research-oriented university,” Environmental Research Letters, Vol. 14, No. 9, 2019

Seth Wynes, Simon D. Donner, Steuart Tannason, Noni Nabors, “Academic air travel has a limited influence on professional success,” Journal of Cleaner Production, Vol. 226, No. 20, 2019: 959-967

Other resources are listed atwww.flyingless.org

 

    Share

New Books: October 2019

Every month the AAG compiles a list of newly-published books in geography and related areas. Some are selected for review in the AAG Review of Books.

Publishers are welcome to send new volumes to the Editor-in-Chief (Kent Mathewson, Editor-in-Chief, AAG Review of BooksDepartment of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803).

Anyone interested in reviewing these or other titles should also contact the Editor-in-Chief.

PLEASE NOTE: Due to current public health policies which have prompted the closing of most offices, we are unable to access incoming books at this time. We are working on a solution during this transition and will continue our new books processing as soon as we can. In the meantime, please feel free to peruse previous books from our archived lists.

October 2019

The Atlas of Boston History by Nancy S. Seasholes. eds. (University of Chicago Press 2019)

Borderless Empire: Dutch Guiana in the Atlantic World, 1750–1800 by Bram Hoonhout (University of Georgia Press 2020)

Building Nazi Germany: Place, Space, Architecture, and Ideology by Joshua Hagen and Robert C. Ostergren (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2020)

The City as Power: Urban Space, Place, and National Identity by Alexander C. Diener and Joshua Hagen, eds. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2018)

The Confounding Island: Jamaica and the Postcolonial Predicament by Orlando Patterson (Harvard University Press 2019)

Detours: Travels and the Ethics of Research in the Global South by M. Bianet Castellanos (University of Arizona Press 2019)

Franz Boas: The Emergence of the Anthropologist by Rosemary Lévy Zumwalt (University of Nebraska Press 2019)

The Freedom Of Speech: Talk And Slavery In The Anglo-Caribbean World by Miles Ogborn (University of Chicago Press 2019)

The Global PR Revolution: How Thought Leaders Succeed in the Transformed World of PR by Maxim Behar (Allworth Press 2019)

How Nature Works: Rethinking Labor on a Troubled Planet by Sarah Besky and Alex

Blanchette, eds. (University of New Mexico Press 2019)

Limits: Why Malthus Was Wrong and Why Environmentalists Should Care by Giorgos Kallis (Stanford University Press 2019)

Manufacturing Decline: How Racism and the Conservative Movement Crushed the American Rust Belt by Jason Hackworth (Columbia University Press 2019)

Mapping Populism: Taking Politics to the People by John Agnew and Michael Shin (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2019)

Necropolitics by Achille Mbembe (Duke University Press 2019)

Pepper: A Guide to the World’s Favorite Spice by Joe Barth (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2019)

Postcards from the Chihuahua Border: Revisiting a Pictorial Past, 1900s–1950s by Daniel D. Arreola (University of Arizona Press 2019)

Racial Alterity, Wixarika Youth Activism, and the Right to the Mexican City by Diana Negrín (University of Arizona Press 2019)

Settler City Limits: Indigenous Resurgence and Colonial Violence in the Urban Prairie West by Heather Dorries, Robert Henry, David Hugill, Tyler McCreary, and Julie Tomiak, eds. (University of Manirova Press 2019)

Silk Roads: Peoples, Cultures, Landscapes by Susan Whitfield, eds. (University of California Press 2019)

Stranger Things and Philosophy: Thus Spake the Demogoron by Jeffrey A. Ewing and Andrew M. Winters, eds. (Open Court Publishing Company 2019)

Transforming Rural Water Governance: The Road from Resource Management to Political Activism in Nicaragua by Sarah T. Romano (University of Arizona Press 2019)

Undocumented Migration by Roberto G. Gonzalez, Nando Sigona, Martha C. Franco, Anna Papoutsi (Polity 2019)

Water Politics: Governance, Justice and the Right to Water by Farhana Sultana and Alex Loftus, eds. (Routledge 2020)

    Share

Rob Kraft – Program Manager, California

Photo of Rob KraftPosition: Program Manager at BAE Systems, Inc.

What was your favorite class in K-12? Economics in junior high, followed closely by Social Studies and then by recess in K-6th! [No, we did not have a dedicated Geography class in K-12!]

How did you first learn about and/or use GIS? Before it was widely called “GIS”, I learned about GIS in Penn State’s Geography Department in 1988 when they offered it as one of the four Geography specializations. Embarrassingly enough for this forum, I eschewed that track in favor of Planning & Applied Geography (aka Urban Planning and Regional Development), which is still my hobby.

Name one thing you love about GIS and/or geography: The foremost thing I love about geography (and what I always mention) is how applicable and pervasive geography is in today’s world. The field of Geography is so malleable that is can be applied to many, many, fields of study in the physical & social sciences, business, government & policy and anywhere folks apply ‘data science’. Global Navigation Satellite Systems, the open data movement and smart devices have really driven a resurgence in Geography in today’s world. The Internet of Things, Smart Cities, Data Science, Autonomous Vehicles and many societal issues & policies, all rely heavily on Geography, GIS, spatial and temporal data alignment and geospatial standards (go OGC!).

Why did you want to volunteer as a GeoMentor? I truly believe in the Geography Week & GIS Day program so I have been volunteering in my kids’ classrooms each year to be a guest speaker since 2012. Every year at our initial parent teacher meetings, I always ask if I can present during Geography week. I use a Geography topic or GIS to reinforce a current curriculum topic, which helps the teacher… I have never been turned away! We also have an analogous effort at work called “Partners in Education”, which is our geospatially-focused STEM outreach program. So, for me, it is a way to share my love of Geography, connect with my kids and their friends AND facilitate our agency’s STEM outreach mission.

If someone asked you why they should learn about GIS and/or geography, how would you respond in one sentence? GIS and Geography are foundational and pervasive throughout society and business today with the ubiquity of Global Navigation Satellite Systems, smart devices, open data and data science: Geographers and GIS experts are needed everywhere!

Websites:

Twitter@rwspacekraft

    Share

Newsletter – October 2019

PRESIDENT’S COLUMN

A Golden Opportunity for Geography or How Can we Harness the Growth in AP Human Geography?

 

By David Kaplan

Geography was not taught in my high school and I expect that was true in much of the United States… The foresight of a few geographers and the extraordinary assistance of the AAG enabled us to develop an exam for AP Human Geography in the 1990s. Today AP Human Geography is the fastest growing AP course, increasing five-fold over the past 10 years. It is one of the 10 highest enrolled of all AP subjects. No longer folded into “social studies” or “earth science,” geography—at least human geography—finally has a place of its own in the secondary school curriculum.

Continue Reading.

Call for chapter proposals: New AAG Book on Rocky Mountain West

For the first time since 2001, the AAG will be producing an edited book entitled Denver and the Rocky Mountain West as a companion to the AAG Annual Meeting.  It will be edited by Michael Keables, with an editorial board of local experts. Papers are currently being solicited to this publication which will be available as a pdf to every conference attendee or be purchased as a spiral-bound copy for a small fee.

Read the call.

AAG BIDS FAREWELL

Doug Richardson Leaves a Legacy of Success for AAG

As the tenure of retiring AAG Executive Director Doug Richardson transitions to a new era and directorship, we would like to acknowledge our deep appreciation for his outstanding contributions to the AAG. Here we celebrate his legacy and far-reaching accomplishments, which have been transformative both for the Association and for geography.

Read more.

ANNUAL MEETING

Upcoming Deadlines for #aagDENVER

Several important dates are forthcoming for registering and submitting abstracts to the 2020 AAG Annual Meeting. Registration rates will be increasing in all categories after the first registration deadline on October 9, 2019. Attendees wishing to submit an abstract for a paper presentation must do so before the deadline on October 30, 2019. Abstracts can be edited until February 21, 2020. As a reminder, the AAG accepts all submitted abstracts and organized sessions for presentation.

Register and submit your abstract today.

Explore Denver during the 2020 AAG Annual Meeting

Focus-on-Denver-graphic-2Denver, a multicultural city home to more than 600,000 people, is the 19th largest city in the United States and the site of the 2020 AAG Annual Meeting. Situated at the base of the Rocky Mountains, Denver has also served as a bridge between the east and the west coasts historically, culturally, and economically. Between sessions at the AAG Annual Meeting, there is a variety of things to do to explore the Mile High City. The AAG has compiled some suggestions of places of interest on our Annual Meeting website to help plan your trip.

Read the list of suggested places to visit.

Register today for the 2020 AAG Annual Meeting

Registration is now open for the 2020 AAG Annual Meeting to be held April 6-10 in Denver, Colorado. The Early Bird registration rates offer the lowest rates across all levels of meeting participation. But hurry, Early Bird rates expire on October 9th!

PUBLICATIONS

New Books in Geography — August Available

New-books1Read the latest titles in geography and related disciplines as found on the New Books in Geography list. Some of these books will be reviewed in The AAG Review of Books. The editors of The AAG Review of Books are happy to receive suggestions for potential reviews and potential reviewers. Reviews are commissioned by the editors, based on the appropriateness and qualifications of the reviewer, observing the usual avoidances of conflict of interest. Persons wishing to volunteer their reviewing services should have the requisite qualifications and demonstrable prior knowledge and engagement with the subject area, preferably through publications. Please contact the editors at aagrb [at] lsu [dot] edu.

Browse the full list of new books.

In addition to the most recently published journal, read the latest issue of the other AAG journals online:

• Annals of the American Association of Geographers
• The Professional Geographer
• GeoHumanities
• The AAG Review of Books

ASSOCIATION NEWS

Call to Action to Halt Execution of Detained Geographer

The AAG respectfully asks the scientific community to support Dr. Tashpolat Tiyip, former president of Xinjiang University and geography professor, who is at risk of execution in China. The two-year reprieve of his death sentence fast approaches and urgent intervention is needed. Please consider adding your signature to our sign-on letter and sharing it widely with your colleagues. Together, we can strengthen the voice of the scientific community and speak up for academic freedom and human rights.

Add your signature.

2019 AAG Regional Meetings Get Underway

The nine regional divisions of the AAG will host their annual meetings throughout the U.S. during October and November. For those who have not recently attended a regional division meeting, they provide an excellent way to connect with geographers in your area in a more intimate setting than the AAG Annual Meeting. The regional division meetings also promote a supportive environment for student presentations of geographic research. Students are encouraged to apply for the AAG Council Award for Outstanding Graduate Student Paper at a Regional Meeting which awards students with travel funding to the AAG Annual Meeting.

Learn more about AAG Regions.

AAG Welcomes Gavin Derleth for Fall 2019 Internship

The AAG is excited to have Gavin Derleth joining our staff as an intern for the fall semester. Gavin is a senior at The George Washington University. He is currently pursuing a B.A. in Geography and Political Science with a minor in Geographic Information Systems with hopes of becoming an urban planner. The AAG accepts applications from those interested in interning at the association on a year round basis.

Meet Gavin.

Volunteer for the AAG Jobs and Careers Center

The AAG seeks volunteer panelists, career mentors, workshop leaders and session organizers for careers and professional development activities at the 2020 AAG Annual Meeting in Denver, CO. Individuals representing a broad range of employment sectors, organizations, academic and professional backgrounds, and racial/ethnic/gender perspectives are encouraged to apply. If interested, email careers [at] aag [dot] org, specifying topic(s) and activity(s) of interest, and attach a current C.V. or resume. For best consideration, please submit your information by November 9, 2019.

Learn more about the Jobs and Careers Center.

POLICY CORNER

Climate Change in the Spotlight

September saw a month of protests, marches and other activities aiming to pressure global leaders and bring international attention to the dangerous effects of climate change. These actions were organized in concert with the UN Climate Action Summit in which participating countries met to strategize on reducing greenhouse gas emissions and sought to impose standards of accountability. While the formal UN meetings were held at the highest levels of international leadership, the widespread protests that followed were notably led by students and young adult activists. The message sent to lawmakers seemed clear – the next generation is demanding action now to mitigate the climate change consequences they will inherit.

The AAG considers climate change a matter of high national concern and supports the community of scholars conducting research in the field, both geographers and non-geographers alike. At all levels of government we applaud efforts that recognize the urgency of anthropogenic climate change and policy initiatives that attempt to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in a timely fashion. Furthermore, our organization is constantly reevaluating how we can be better stewards of the environment through our Annual Meetings and beyond. We will continue to seek opportunities to elevate this policy issue with decision-makers and offer the diverse breadth of our academic and professional community as a resource.

In the News:

  • With the September 30th end of fiscal year deadline fast approaching, several crucial funding bills in Congress are still not out of committees, nor prepared for floor votes. Last week, legislators passed a continuing resolution to postpone the deadline and extend current funding levels through November 21st, thus giving more time to mark up and pass all remaining appropriations bills.
  • Congress is now on a two week recess but the House continues to actively work through the break on the presidential impeachment inquiry called for by Speaker Pelosi.
MEMBER NEWS

Profiles of Professional Geographers

Angeline Johnson was recently selected as a 2019-2020 FUSE Fellow assigned to a project entitled “Forging Multi-Stakeholder Collaboration for Community Economic Development.” After finding geography as a college freshman, Angeline believes core principles like scale and Tobler’s First Law have given her an invaluable perspective throughout her career. For geographers looking towards a future career path she recommends students “recognize the strength [they] bring as both a geographer and a broad thinker.”

Learn more about Geography Careers.

October Member Updates

The latest news about AAG Members.

Dr. Soe Myint, a professor of geography in the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning at Arizona State University, has been appointed as a Fulbright Canada Research Chair in Environmental Studies. As the only geographer to receive a Fulbright Canada Research Chair position for 2019-2020, Myint will spend the fall semester at the University of Regina researching water use policy on the plains. Learn more.

Dr. Glen MacDonald, geography professor at UCLA and AAG past president, was elected a Fellow of the Division of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences in the Royal Society of Canada. MacDonald is an international leader in developing long records of climatic change to address questions of forcing factors, teleconnections, and the impacts of climate change on ecosystems, evolutionary and extinction dynamics, and societal vulnerability. His studies, ranging from Arctic warming, the hydroclimatology of western North America, and sea level rise and the fate of coastal marshes, have included work in North America, Europe, Asia and Africa. Learn more.

Dr. William Moseley, a geography professor at Macalester University, has been appointed to the International Steering Committee of the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition of the UN Committee on World Food Security, a committee of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. Moseley will serve on the 15 person committee through 2021. Learn more.

RESOURCES AND OPPORTUNITIES

Upcoming AAG Grants and Awards Deadlines – October 15 and November 1

Please consider submitting applications or nominations to four AAG grants and awards with approaching deadlines, three for students and one for career geographers. The AAG Marble-Boyle Undergraduate Achievement Awards aim to recognize excellence in academic performance by undergraduate students from the U.S. and Canada who are putting forth a strong effort to bridge geographic science and computer science. The biennial William L. Garrison Award for Best Dissertation in Computational Geography supports innovative research into the computational aspects of geographic science. The AAG Harold M. Rose Award for Anti-Racism in Research and Practice honors geographers who have served to advance the discipline through their research, and who have also had an impact on anti-racist practice. Lastly, the AAG Community College Travel Grants support outstanding students from community colleges, junior colleges, city colleges, or similar two-year educational institutions to attend the next AAG Annual Meeting. Community College Travel Grant applications are due November 1, 2019 while nominations and applications for the three awards are due October 15, 2019.

See all grants and awards deadlines.

CFP: AAG 2020 Geography Education Research Track

For the 2020 AAG Annual Meeting in Denver, CO, the National Center for Research in Geography Education (NCRGE) is welcoming abstracts and organized session proposals for a track of research-oriented sessions in geography education. This track aims to raise the visibility of research in geography education, grow the NCRGE research coordination network, and provide productive spaces for discussion about geography education research and the notion of what makes research in the field potentially transformative.

Download the full Call for Participation and submission guidelines.

IN MEMORIAM

Michael Bradford

The AAG is saddened to hear of the passing of Michael Bradford, a geographer and Professor at Manchester University. Central to Bradford’s career was his dedication to geography education, having served as President of the Geographical Association in the UK from 1999-2000 as well as having received numerous teaching awards and fellowships. He is survived by his wife of 50 years, Sheila Kaplan, who is organizing a celebration of life for Bradford on October 19, 2019.

Read more.

GEOGRAPHERS IN THE NEWS
EVENTS CALENDAR
    Share

Tiyip generic letterhead

    Share

Council Meeting Minutes Fall 2019

    Share