Lodi News-Sentinel

Drought projects to get $225M

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

The federal government has allocated $225 million to droughtrel­ated projects across the country, from the Central Valley to New Mexico and Maine.

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — The federal government will spend nearly a quarter-billion dollars to finance several dozen projects aimed at easing the effects of drought in the western U.S. and restoring watersheds that provide drinking water to communitie­s around the nation, officials announced Wednesday.

The $225 million in funding will be shared among 88 projects, from California’s Central Valley to centuries-old irrigation systems in northern New Mexico and thousands of square miles of fragmented streams in Maine. More than half of the projects specifical­ly address drought and water quality.

Jason Weller, head of the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Natural Resources Conservati­on Service, said the federal funding will also generate $500 million more in spending for the projects that will be provided by state, local and private partners.

“That’s important for us because no one organizati­on has the boots on the ground, the financial resources, the technical expertise needed to deal with drought, invasive species, invasive weeds, be more energy efficient and improve the health of their forests,” he said. “It’s really incumbent upon us all to work smarter and more effectivel­y together.”

Weller pointed to the tens of millions of trees that have died in California due to the epic drought there and other challenges faced by communitie­s bordering public and private forests that are overgrown and unhealthy. He said the dry conditions are putting pressure on watersheds and their ability to provide abundant and clean water.

The funding also is aimed at tackling flooding problems in places such as Merced County, where storm runoff in recent years has forced road closures and damaged prime agricultur­al land.

Officials say $10 million will go toward the design and constructi­on of a system that will better capture and use snowmelt and precipitat­ion from foothills while protecting infrastruc­ture in the county.

Local partners are expected to triple the federal investment in the project.

Nearly $18 million is dedicated to projects in New Mexico, where Hispanic families have been using acequias, or earthen canals, for centuries to water their crops.

Acequias are located in 12 of the most impoverish­ed counties in New Mexico and many need repairs. Supporters say revitaliza­tion of the historic irrigation systems are a matter of social and environmen­tal justice because of their cultural and spiritual importance for the region.

In Maine, $6 million is being invested in a restoratio­n project that spans 25,000 square miles. The goal is to reconnect some of the state’s high-value aquatic networks that have been damaged by roads and vehicles. The Nature Conservanc­y group and 18 other partners will be working on that project.

In all, the regional conservati­on program has invested $825 million in nearly 300 projects around the country over the last three years. The program was created by the 2014 Farm Bill.

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