West Virginia Conservation Agency
Judith Lyons has a long and diverse work history in the field of environmental conservation. Judith currently serves as the Executive Director of the West Virginia Conservation Agency, a role they assumed in April 2023. Prior to this, they worked at the WVCA for over a decade, starting in January 2010 as the Watershed Manager and later becoming the Assistant Director of Watershed Projects in July 2022. Before joining the WVCA, Judith worked at the WV Department of Environmental Protection as an ERS III from February 1999 to January 2010.
Judith Lyons attended West Virginia State University and obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology.
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West Virginia Conservation Agency
Our Mission To provide for and promote the protection and conservation of West Virginia's soil, land, water and related resources for the health, safety and general welfare of the state's citizens. Our History In the early 1930’s, the nation was experiencing an unparalleled ecological disaster known as the Dust Bowl. Following a severe and sustained drought in the Great Plains, the region’s soil began to erode and blow away. This created enormous black dust storms that blotted out the sun and swallowed the countryside. Thousands known as "dust refugees" fled the area to seek better lives. On Capitol Hill, while testifying about the erosion problem, soil scientist Hugh Hammond Bennett threw back the curtains to reveal a sky blackened by dust. Bennett’s testimony moved Congress to unanimously pass legislation declaring soil and water conservation a national policy and priority. In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt wrote the governors of all the states recommending legislation that would allow local landowners to form soil conservation districts. West Virginia’s Soil Conservation Committee was created in 1939. Its functions and programs were to conserve soil and retard erosion. By referendum, the first conservation district organized in West Virginia was the West Fork Conservation District on February 2, 1940. The Eastern Panhandle and Greenbrier Valley Conservation Districts followed on February 3, 1940. Today, West Virginia has 14 Conservation Districts, each consisting of one to six counties. In 2002, the state Legislature changed the name of the "Soil Conservation Committee" to "State Conservation Committee" to show that the committee’s responsibilities went beyond soil to all natural resources such as air and water. The State Conservation Committee serves as the governing body of the WVCA.