Mill Creek watershed program receives $75,000 state grant

Thursday, November 20, 2014

The Putnam County Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD) is part of a four-county partnership that received a $75,000 grant for the Mill Creek Watershed on Thursday.

The SWCDs of Hendricks, Morgan, Owen and Putnam are working together on a program to prevent sedimentation and erosion to improve water quality on the creek. The county organizations are working together to instill practices to improve water quality in the Mill Creek watershed.

The Clean Water Indiana grant will assist in the three-year program.

The award is part of $1,020,900 awarded by the Indiana State Department of Agriculture and the State Soil Conservation Board on Thursday.

The goals of the projects are to seek ways to protect drinking water, improve water quality and assist Hoosiers in gaining knowledge and awareness about the impacts of land use on precious water resources.

"Our land and water are our state's most precious natural resources and conserving what we have is critical to our Hoosier environment and economy," said ISDA Director Ted McKinney. "We are committed to working with our partners to develop more conservation practices and get the necessary funding into the hands of Indiana landowners as quickly as we can."

The CWI Grants Program provides financial assistance to SWCDs to implement conservation practices to reduce non-point sources of water pollution through education, technical assistance, training and cost-sharing programs.

Statewide, this round of CWI Grant recipient projects bring together local organizations, governments and communities, as well as state and federal agencies, to showcase what Hoosier conservationists can do when given the resources to make a difference. Proposals were concentrated on unique partnerships; regional technical assistance; centralized office coordination of state, federal and local agencies; and marketing conservation programs to landowners.

SWCDs were encouraged to work together across county lines and to leverage local, state and federal resources to put more conservation on the land and bring more funds home to Hoosier landowners. Funded projects demonstrated cooperative conservation by connecting their local business plans to the statewide Indiana Conservation Partnership Strategic Plan.

Technical help to implement the grants will come from district staff, the Indiana State Department of Agriculture's Division of Soil Conservation, the United States Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Services and many local businesses and conservation groups. Additionally, the grants will help several SWCDs and local land users accelerate the implementation of federal and state conservation programs in their areas.

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