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USDA Announces Projects to Protect Natural Resources In the Mississippi
River Basin
USDA Announces Six Arkansas Projects Selected for Funding to Protect Natural
Resources In the Mississippi River Basin
Little Rock, AR - Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack recently announced the
selection of six projects in Arkansas that will help landowners and producers
within the Mississippi River Basin voluntarily implement conservation and
management practices that prevent, control and trap nutrient runoff from
agricultural land.
"USDA is working aggressively to improve the health of the Mississippi River
Basin," said Vilsack. "The funding will help producers implement a system of
conservation practices that will control soil erosion, improve soil quality, and
provide wildlife habitat."
Under the Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watersheds Initiative (MRBI),
USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) will provide technical
assistance and a total of $30 million of financial assistance during federal
fiscal year 2010 for 76 projects in Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.
“The projects selected in Arkansas will be implemented working with our
conservation partners to accelerate conservation treatment to improve water
quality, maintain productivity and enhance wildlife habitat,” said NRCS State
Conservationist Michael Sullivan. “Additional funding for the six Arkansas
projects could exceed $30 million over the 5-year project’s life.”
Overall, more than $22 million in Cooperative Conservation Partnership
Initiative (CCPI) funds will be administered through the Conservation
Stewardship Program, Environmental Quality Incentives Program and the Wildlife
Habitat Incentive Program.
Five CCPI projects were chosen in Arkansas. The projects and funding for FY10
are:
- L’Anguille River Watershed Coalition, $540,000 – The L’Anguille River
has been designated as an impaired watershed by the Environmental Protection
Agency due to excessive siltation and turbidity from agricultural sources.
The project will use practices ranging from conservation cover and nutrient
management to filter strips and riparian forest buffers to mitigate the
amount of nutrients currently reaching the water course through soil
erosion. The plan should benefit at least 110 farmers in the watershed with
funding through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP),
Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP), and the Conservation Stewardship
Program (CSP);
- Point Remove Wetlands Reclamation and Irrigation District, $1,025,000 -
The project area lies within portions of Conway, Pope and Yell counties.
The project partners will assist agricultural producers in 15 sub-watersheds
of the Lake Conway-Point Remove basin to adopt a systems approach with a
variety of core and supporting conservation practices to address natural
resource concern of water quality pertaining to nutrient runoff and water
management. They will focus on avoiding excess application of nutrients and
water on fields; controlling the amount of nutrient and water runoff from
fields into the watershed; and trapping nutrients before they leave the
field. The project will utilize EQIP funding to assist with practice
installation. The partners estimate producer participation at 75 percent;
- St. Francis County and Lee County Conservation Districts, Outlet Larkin
Creek, $224,000 - The project in the L’Anguille River basin in St. Francis
and Lee counties is designed to reduce sediment and nutrients entering the
impaired waters from agricultural lands. The project will assist
agricultural producers in the area in managing runoff from agricultural
fields by helping them to install core conservation practices that will
ensure proper application of nutrients and irrigation water, reduce the
amount of excessive runoff from fields, and use filter strips to trap
sediment and nutrients before they leave the field. The partners plan to
contact 100 percent of agricultural producers in the project area to ensure
good participation in the project;
- Northeast Arkansas Association of Conservation Districts, Little River
Ditches (funding begins in Fiscal Year 2011) - The goal of the five-year
project is to reduce the nutrient loss from agricultural land (primarily
cotton) through improved nutrient use efficiency and reduced runoff from
agricultural fields. The focus of the conservation efforts will be
utilization of variable rate fertilizer application rate technology and
improved irrigation water management. The partners will directly contact
the 900 area farmers and hope to achieve a 75 percent participation rate for
conservation practices installed with funding from EQIP; and
- Northeast Arkansas Association of Conservation Districts, Lower St.
Francis (funding begins in Fiscal Year 2011) – The goal of the project is to
reduce the nutrient loss from agricultural land (primarily rice and
soybeans) through improved nutrient use efficiency and reduced runoff from
agricultural fields. The focus of the conservation efforts will be
utilization of variable rate fertilizer application rate technology and
improved irrigation water management. The partners will directly contact
the 175 area farmers and hope to achieve a 75 percent participation rate for
conservation practices installed with funding from EQIP.
Nearly $8 million also will be provided in Wetland Reserve Enhancement
Program funds. Partner organizations will contribute additional financial
resources. A project by The Nature Conservancy was selected to receive
$3,150,000 the first year within Arkansas.
- Wetlands Restoration in the Cache River Watershed – Project partners
will work in three sub-watersheds of the Cache River in Clay, Greene,
Lawrence, Craighead, Jackson, Poinsett, Woodruff, Cross, Prairie, and Monroe
counties. The goal of the project is to reduce nutrient and sediment loads
entering the Mississippi River by managing non-point pollution in the Cache
River. The partners will focus on reforestation of riparian areas
associated with croplands.
These multi-year watershed projects were selected through a competitive
process. A listing of the projects by state, and additional information about
the MRBI, are available at
www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/mrbi/mrbi_overview.html.
The MRBI will help NRCS and its partners expand their capacity to improve
water quality throughout the basin. CCPI will use a conservation systems
approach to manage nitrogen and phosphorous, which will minimize runoff and
reduce downstream nutrient loading. WREP will encourage strategic placement of
wetland restoration projects.
NRCS is celebrating 75 years of helping people help the land in 2010. Since
1935, the NRCS conservation delivery system has advanced a unique partnership
with state and local governments and private landowners delivering conservation
based on specific, local conservation needs, while accommodating state and
national interests. For additional information, go to
www.ar.nrcs.usda.gov.
Approved Projects and Funding
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