THE
HUNTERDON COUNTY NEWS
- Breaking News - |
07/01/09
TITLE: Commerce Secretary Gary Locke Announces $167 Million in Recovery Act Funding for 50 Coastal Restoration Projects
DESCRIPTION:
Time: 10:42:04
ARTICLE
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke announced today 50 habitat restoration projects
that will restore damaged wetlands, shellfish beds, coral reefs and reopen fish
passages that boost the health and resiliency of our nations coastal and Great
Lakes communities. Under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the Departments National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was provided $167 million for marine and
coastal habitat restoration.
"These Recovery Act projects will put Americans to work while restoring our
coasts and combating climate change, Locke said. They reflect our investment
in sound science and commitment to help strengthen local economies.
Healthy coastal habitats are critical to the recovery and sustainability of
the U.S. economy. Coastal areas generate more than 28 million jobs in the United
States. Commercial and recreational fishing employs 1.5 million people and
contributes $111 billion to the nations economy.
NOAA is investing in green jobs for Americans to restore habitat for
valuable fish and wildlife and strengthen coastal communities, making them more
resilient to storms, sea-level rise and other effects of climate change,
Commerce under secretary of oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator Jane
Lubchenco said. In addition to the immediate jobs created by the projects,
stronger and healthier coastal communities will boost our nations long-term
economic health.
A significant number of these coastal and Great Lakes restoration projects
in 22 states and two territories are in areas with some of the highest
unemployment rates, including the states of California, Oregon, and Michigan.
The projects will employ Americans with a range of skills including laborers,
nursery workers, design engineers, restoration ecologists, landscape architects,
hydrologists, and specialized botanists.
In addition to direct jobs, the projects are estimated to create indirect
jobs in industries that supply materials and administrative, clerical, and
managerial services.
When complete, the projects will have restored more than 8,900 acres of
habitat and removed obsolete and unsafe dams that open more than 700 stream
miles where fish migrate and spawn. The projects also will remove more than 850
metric tons of debris, rebuild oyster and other shellfish habitat, and reduce
threats to 11,750 acres of coral reefs.
The 50 projects were chosen from a pool of 814 proposals totaling more than
$3 billion in requests. The agency worked through a rigorous selection process
to identify and prioritize projects meeting the Recovery Acts criteria.
More than 200 technical reviewers from across NOAA worked in groups to review
all the applications and the top 109 were chosen for panel review. Proposals
were ranked by overall quality and with consideration given to program priority
areas and geography. The determining criteria were that projects meet NOAAs
highest priority mission needs for ecological restoration, be shovel ready and
generate the largest number of jobs in the shortest period of time, and create
lasting value for the American public.
For further information on funded projects nationwide, go to the
NOAA Recovery Act Web site. The
public will be able to follow the progress of each project on the recovery Web
site, which will include an interactive online map that enables the public to
track where and how NOAA recovery funds are spent.
The 50 projects that will receive funding are:
Northeast
- Tingue Dam Bypass and Naugatuck River Restoration (Seymour, Conn.)
$2.5 million Constructs a bypass around the Tingue Dam and
restores 32 miles of historic migratory fish passage for American shad, river
herring, sea-run brown trout, and the American eel on the Naugatuck River.
- New Haven and East Lyme Marsh Restoration (New Haven, Conn.)
$1.5 million Remedies three dysfunctional tide gates and restores 108
acres of tidal marsh and open habitat on the West River and Bride Brook lake.
- Patapsco River Restoration (Baltimore, Md.) $4 million
Removes the Union and Simkins dams on the Patapsco River, opening 8 river
miles for alewife, blueback herring, and American eel. This project is part of
a much larger coastal conservation initiative to restore more than 30 miles in
the Patapsco River Watershed for diadromous and resident fish species.
- Piscataway Park Living Shoreline Restoration (Accokeek, Md.)
$1 million Restores 2 acres as living shorelines along the
Potomac River, providing fish habitat and erosion protection, as well as
protection for 30 acres of freshwater wetland and a threatened Native American
archeological site.
- Great Works Dam Removal (Great Works, Maine) $6.1
million Removes the Great Works Dam, which is part of a greater initiative
to eventually restore and open more than 1,000 miles of river for endangered
Atlantic salmon and other fish species.
- Maine Atlantic Salmon Habitat Restoration (Washington County,
Maine) $1.7 million Removes fish passage barriers throughout the
Machias River watershed, opening 66 miles of habitat for endangered Atlantic
salmon and other migratory fish species.
- Stony Brook Salt Marsh and Fish Passage Restoration (Brewster,
Mass.) $1.3 million Replaces undersized culverts and improves
fish passage to 20 acres of ponds that provide habitat for herring and
American eel, as well as protect the local community from storm surge and
flooding.
- Winnicut River Fish Passage Restoration (Greenland, N.H.)
$500,000 Removes the Winnicut Dam and installs a fish passage structure
under an upstream bridge, restoring passage to more than 39 miles of habitat
for migratory fish.
- Lincoln Park Wetland Restoration (Jersey City, N.J.)
$10.5 million Restores 30 acres of a larger 80-acre coastal wetland in the
urban industrialized area of the Hackensack River basin.
- Rhode Island River Ecosystem Restoration (Providence, R.I.)
$3 million Opens fish passage at six high-priority places
throughout Rhode Island, including four fish and eel ladders and two dam
removals.
- Virginia Seaside Bays Restoration (Hog Island, Va.) $2
million Restores 124 acres of native oysters and seagrass, and re-introduces
two million juvenile bay scallops from the Chincoteague inlet to the
Chesapeake Bay.
Southeast
- Coastal Alabama Restoration (Bayou la Batre, Ala.) $2.9
million Rebuilds oyster reef and natural breakwater structures along 1.5
miles of shoreline. 19 acres of property will be protected by this project.
- Lost River Preserve Restoration (St. Petersburg, Fla.)
$750,000 Rebuilds 43 acres of estuarine,
freshwater wetlands and restore native vegetation, also reconnecting to the
Cockroach Bay Preserve.
- Northeast Florida Wetland Restoration (Merritt Island/Cape
Canaveral, Fla.) $2.7 million Removes hydrological barriers and
restores 1,002 acres of intertidal coastal wetlands, salt marsh and mangrove
stands, which serve as nursery habitat for a number of commercially and
recreationally important fish.
- Indian River Lagoon Restoration (Stuart, Fla.) $4
million Surveys and enhances oyster reefs in the nationally significant
Indian River Lagoon.
- Grande Isle Shoreline Restoration (Grande Isle, La.) $4
million Bio-engineers 5 acres of living shoreline along the Louisiana
coastline, resulting in the restoration and protection of 300 acres of
vulnerable marsh habitat.
- Mississippi River Tidal Marsh Restoration (Myrtle Grove, La.)
$3 million Hydraulically dredges sediment from the Mississippi River to
create 50 acres of intertidal marsh to support recreationally and commercially
important fisheries as well as help to reduce storm surge and flooding.
- Coastal Carolina Restoration (Cape Hatteras, N.C.) $5
million Rebuilds 49 acres of oyster reefs across coastal North Carolina,
restoring the productivity of naturally occurring oysters in nearby estuaries.
- City of Charleston Shoreline Restoration (Charleston, S.C.)
$750,000 Creates or restores Charleston area estuarine marshes including
nearly 200 acres of degraded salt march by stabilizing shorelines and
increasing tidal exchange.
- West Galveston Bay Estuary Restoration (Galveston, Texas)
$5.1 million Restores 329 acres of intertidal wetlands in Galveston Bay,
which serve as a nursery for recreational and commercial fish species in the
Gulf of Mexico.
- USVI Watershed Stabilization (St. John/St. Croix, V.I.)
$2.7 million Reduces sediment runoff through road stabilization, native
plantings, beach access restrictions, and monitoring on St. Croix and St.
John.
- Threatened Coral Recovery and Restoration (Fla. and V.I.)
$3.3 million Recovers one acre of coral reefs in eight distinct areas of
the Caribbean by growing coral in seafloor nurseries and transplanting them to
depleted reef sites, tripling their natural recovery rate.
Great Lakes
- Milwaukee River and Watershed Restoration (Port Washington, Wisc.)
$4.7 million Removes a number of fish passage barriers and a dam, enhance
watershed habitat and reconnect 158 stream miles to Lake Michigan.
- Dunes Creek Watershed Restoration (Hammond, Ind.) $1.4
million Restores and reconnects Lake Michigan to nearly six miles of stream
spawning habitat for migratory fish.
- Muskegon Lake Restoration (Muskegon, Mich.) $10 million
Restores 24 acres of wetland and stabilizes shoreline at 10 separate
locations for this Great Lakes Area of Concern.
Northwest
- Southeast Alaska Salmon Habitat Restoration $992,000
Remedies a barrier on the Klawock River, restoring passage for migrating
juvenile salmon to 460 acres of estuarine eelgrass habitat.
- Eyak Lake Restoration (Cordova, Alaska) $973,900
Opens 1.5 miles of upstream river habitat, as well as restores 2,400 acres of
Eyak Lake salmon spawning, rearing and wintering habitat. This also includes
restoring 20 percent of the lakes fresh water circulation.
- Kenai Peninsula Salmon Habitat Restoration (Moose Pass, Alaska)
$1.5 million Restores 10.7 miles of river and 11.4 acres of a manmade
channel into a natural stream to benefit Chinook, coho, pink, and sockeye
salmon.
- Alaska Marine Debris Removal and Restoration $1 million
Conducts a statewide coastal marine debris removal of a total of 466 metric
tons at multiple locations throughout rural coastal Alaska. A large derelict
vessel removal will be implemented through this award.
- Gold Ray Dam Removal (Medford, Ore.) $5 million
Removes the Gold Ray Dam and opens more than 333 miles of the Rogue River to
steelhead, Chinook, and endangered coho salmon.
- Delta Ponds Restoration (Eugene, Ore.) $1.6 million
Restores and enhances 21 acres and two miles of the Willamette River riparian
and wetland habitat by removing invasive plants and constructing channels
between seven ponds, providing access to important refuge habitat for juvenile
Chinook salmon.
- Oregon Fishing Industry Restoration Partnership (Seal Rock, Ore.)
$699,000 Employs crab fisherman to help remove derelict Dungeness crab
pots and other fishing gear for a total of 180 metric tons of marine debris
removal.
- Elwha River Floodplain Restoration (Port Angeles, Wash.)
$2 million In conjunction with the Elwha Dam removal, this project
restores 82 acres of the floodplain of the lower Elwha River through the
removal of dikes and culverts, re-vegetation and invasive species control.
- Removal of Derelict Fishing Gear in Puget Sound (Seattle, Wash.)
$4.5 million Removes over 200 metric tons of marine debris, including over
3,000 net removals, and restore 600 acres of habitat.
- Smugglers Slough Nooksack River Restoration (Bellingham, Wash.)
$1.7 million Raises a roadway and reconnects tidal exchange for 493 acres
of Smugglers Slough channel that will flow to restored salt marsh and
eelgrass habitat in Lummi Bay. Seven miles of slough habitat will also be
opened as a result of this project.
- Qwuloolt Estuary Restoration (Marysville, Wash.) $2
million Restores 350 acres of wetland and 16 stream miles of fish passage
for several species of salmon on the lower Snohomish River and its surrounding
tidal floodplain by removing levees, excavating channels and planting native
vegetation and trees.
- Fisher Slough Marsh Restoration (Burlington, Wash.)
$5.2 million Restores 60 acres of the Skagit River floodplain by replacing
antiquated agriculture floodgates and restoring 15 miles of high quality
habitat for chum, coho, threatened Chinook salmon, and other important
species.
- Hansen Creek Floodplain Restoration (Milltown, Wash.)
$988,000 Excavates and reconnects 140 acres of forested floodplain habitat
and install woody debris for chum, coho , threatened Chinook salmon, and other
important species.
Southwest
- South San Diego Bay Restoration (San Diego, Calif.)
$2.9 million Restores tidal circulation to former salt ponds, restore 120
acres of intertidal wetlands, as well as removes non-native vegetation and
replaces it with native estuarine plants.
- California Coastal Fisheries Restoration Partnership
$1.5 million Employs California Conservation Corps members to complete more
than 20 identified coastal restoration activities that benefit threatened and
endangered salmon throughout coastal California.
- Elkhorn Slough Restoration (Watsonville, Calif.) $3.9
million Restores tidal flow, reduces erosion, and creates long-term
protection and erosion control for more than seven acres of wetland directly
and 450 acres overall. This project also prevents seawater intrusion into the
coastal aquifer, which supports more than $100 million annually in
agricultural production.
- San Francisco South Salt Pond Restoration (San Francisco, Calif.)
$7.6 million Opens and restores more than 1,990 acres of three former salt
ponds to tidal flow, as well as reinitiating the removal of Spartina
alterniflora, an invasive wetland plant on the U.S. West Coast.
- American Canyon Salt Pond Restoration (San Francisco, Calif.)
$8.5 million Restores wetlands and re-create tidal flow to improve 1,135
acres of habitat for threatened Chinook salmon, steelhead trout, and green
sturgeon by removing levees around former salt ponds.
- Salmon Creek Restoration (Bodega, Calif.) $1.5 million
Restores four acres of a streamside corridor and in-stream habitat for
endangered coho salmon and threatened steelhead trout by installing rain
catchment tanks to improve instream flow, planting native vegetation, and
implementing other stream-related restoration activities to benefit fisheries
resources.
- Lower Klamath Riparian Restoration and Tribal Plant Nursery
(Bodega, Calif.) $527,000 Restores nine acres of in-stream and
streamside river habitat of the lower Klamath River to benefit threatened coho
salmon as well as Chinook salmon and steelhead trout.
- Big Springs Shasta River Restoration (Big Springs, Calif.)
$1.6 million Restores habitat for chinook, steelhead, and threatened coho
salmon by planting 20 acres of native vegetation and incorporating new
agriculture conservation measures to enhance water quality, including a fence
to exclude cattle from 70 acres of the riparian habitat.
- Magnolia Marsh Restoration (Huntington Beach, Calif.)
$3.3 million Restores more than 41 acres of an urban tidal marsh by
expanding rearing habitat for many species of marine and coastal fish.
Pacific Islands
- Maunalua Bay Reef Restoration (Maunalua Bay, Hawaii)
$3.4 million Restores 23 acres of coral reefs through manual removal of
invasive algae.
- Laolao Bay Coastal Restoration (LaoLao Beach/Saipan, CNMI)
$2.9 million In coordination with the grantee, NOAA will directly invest
Recovery Act funds to restore Saipans coral reefs by removing and addressing
sources of upland sediment. This will include restoring 15 acres of upland
habitat , road upgrades, drainage improvements, and elimination of
unsustainable beach activities.
- Pelekane Bay Watershed Restoration (Pelekane Bay, Hawaii)
$2.7 million Restores more than 1,463 acres of coastal and marine habitat
by reducing sediment and runoff impacts to coral reefs through erosion control
and replanting native upland vegetation.