AML Network Rollout

Getting Started — AML-Connect
1

Create a free individual account

Registration is free and takes about two minutes. Sign up as an individual — your organization affiliation can be noted in your profile, but accounts are personal to you. Once you are in, the Using AML-Connect section of the Knowledge Base is the best place to get oriented. A platform orientation guide is also available if you prefer a structured walkthrough.

2

Explore the Knowledge Base and Resource Library

The Knowledge Base has more than 180 articles across eight categories — AMD treatment and O&M, watershed assessment, AML reclamation, organizational development, policy and governance, environmental education, community development, and more. The Resource Library holds curated reports, templates, fact sheets, and datasets alongside it.

Start wherever your work pulls you. Search for a specific topic, browse a category, or follow a link from one article to the next. Both are also publicly accessible to anyone without an account.

3

Join the conversation

The forums and member community are where the network connects — asking questions, sharing what you know, and working through problems together. Post in Technical Help if you have a specific question. Browse General Discussion to see what others are bringing to the platform. Rough questions are as welcome as polished ones. The value is in the exchange.

If you notice something missing from the Knowledge Base, a resource that belongs in the library, or anything that could be better — the Site Feedback forum is the right place to say so.

The Knowledge Base will keep growing. The resource library will keep expanding. The forums will get more useful as more of the network participates. If you find something that should be there and isn’t — a treatment reference, a project case study, a dataset, a contact — there are ways to contribute, and we’d genuinely like to hear from you. The platform was built with input from network partners across Pennsylvania. It belongs to the network. The more it reflects what the network actually knows and needs, the more useful it becomes for everyone.

Questions about the platform, or something you think should be here?

Get in Touch →
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