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LOCAL WATERSHED PROJECT TO GET $810,000 GRANT TO IMPROVE WATER QUALITY
Release Date: 11/10/2005
Contact Information:
Environmental News
Martin Kessler
(913) 551-7236
[email protected]
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 10, 2005
LOCAL WATERSHED PROJECT TO GET $810,000 GRANT TO IMPROVE WATER QUALITY
A watershed project that will address water quality issues in southeast Nebraska and northeast Kansas was selected to receive an $810,000 grant from EPA, one of 12 award recipients of the national 2005 Targeted Watershed Grants program announced today.
The Tuttle Creek Lake Watershed Partners’ project is a collaborative effort between 16 organizations in Nebraska and Kansas to use partnerships and market-based incentives to reduce herbicides, sediment, nutrients, and bacteria in a large agricultural watershed.
The watershed covers about 9,600 square miles with three-fourths of the drainage area in Nebraska and one-fourth in Kansas. (See map below.) The Big Blue River, Little Blue River, and Black Vermillion River are the primary tributaries to Tuttle Creek Lake.
The lake, north of Manhattan, Kan., was originally built in 1962 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The lake is a major source of water for the Kansas River, which supplies drinking water for Topeka, Lawrence, and Kansas City. The lake is also on the Kansas impaired waters list.
The project will improve water quality by using best management practices (BMPs) in critical sub-watersheds. The EPA grant will be used to implement existing watershed management plans, install no-till systems, establish riparian “buffer strips” and other conservation measures, and enhance educational efforts. Market-based incentives will be used to encourage and support landowner adoption of BMPs.
This project joins 34 others selected over the past two years to share nearly $39 million in EPA grants. This year’s grants total $9 million, targeting watersheds from northern Maine to the California coast.
The 2005 grantees were recognized for setting clear goals and comprehensive watershed plans. Projects across the nation include stream stabilization, culvert replacement, storm water management, and habitat enhancement. Many projects will benefit spawning fish species and natural fisheries.
The Targeted Watershed Grants program fosters community-based initiatives to help protect, preserve, and restore local or regional watersheds. The goal of the program is to build on the successes of partners who have completed all of the watershed assessments and are ready to carry out their plans. Visit https://www.epa.gov/owow/watershed/initiative for more information about the program.
List of Tuttle Creek Lake Watershed Partners
Nebraska | Kansas |
Natural Resource Conservation Service | Kansas Cooperative Council |
Natural Resource Districts | Kansas Corn Growers Association |
Nebraska Department of Agriculture | Kansas Farm Bureau |
Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality | Kansas Grain Sorghum Producers Assoc. |
Nebraska Department of Natural Resources | Kansas Natural Resources Sub-cabinet |
Nebraska Game & Parks Commission | Kansas State University |
Nebraska Grain Sorghum Board | Kansas Water Office |
The Groundwater Foundation | |
University of Nebraska-Lincoln |
(The lighter shaded portion is where
most of the nonpoint-source pollution runoff occurs)
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