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Bosque volunteers outline monitoring, trash removal and invasive-species work
Summary
Joan Hashimoto, chair of the Bosque Advisory Commission, told the Corrales governing body that volunteers and partners carried out monthly monitoring, removed fallen wood and trash, restocked eight dog‑bag stations (about 8,500 bags last year) and will participate in U.S. Army Corps-sponsored ecological monitoring.
Joan Hashimoto, chair of the Bosque Advisory Commission, told the Village of Corrales governing body that volunteers divide the Bosque into seven monitoring sections and check them monthly for fallen limbs, litter and other hazards. “We divvy up the Bosque into 7 sections and monitor them monthly for fallen tree limbs, litter, dog poop, and the unusual,” Hashimoto said, noting the commission’s reliance on volunteers and cooperation with village departments.
Hashimoto credited Roadrunner Waste with regular free pickups for collected trash and said Sandoval County has allowed green‑waste disposal at no charge. She described coordinated wood‑removal events with the fire department and public works, and said a…
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