Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Yuba Water Agency commits $6.5 million to forest restoratio­n projects

- Appeal Staff Report Adnewsroom@appealdemo­crat.com

Yuba Water Agency recently committed $6.5 million to two projects meant to reduce the risk of wildfires and advance landscapes­cale forest restoratio­n in the Yuba River watershed.

The projects that will receive funding are part of an effort by the North Yuba Forest Partnershi­p, which is a group of nine organizati­ons working to plan, finance and implement forest restoratio­n across 275,000 acres of private and public land spanning Sierra and Yuba counties and two national forests.

“The momentum of the North Yuba Forest Partnershi­p is a model for restoratio­n in California and the western United States,” said Randy Fletcher, board director for Yuba Water, in a press release. “This partnershi­p has a proven track record of success and has done a tremendous job at showing what’s possible. We’re proud to be a big part of that.”

Participat­ing organizati­ons in the effort include the Blue Forest Conservati­on,

Yuba Water, Camptonvil­le Community Partnershi­p, National Forest Foundation, the Nature Conservanc­y, Nevada City Rancheria, Sierra County, South Yuba River

Citizens League and the Tahoe National Forest.

Of the dedicated funding, $6 million will be used as a cost-share contributi­on over the next 10 years, or $600,000 annually, for a Forest Resilience Bond meant to advance restoratio­n treatments on nearly 23,000 acres for two projects previously planned by the Tahoe National Forest in Yuba and Sierra counties.

The bond will be used to attract additional capital from public and private investors to initiate restoratio­n at a much faster pace and scale. The new bond is expected to leverage about $25 million in total funding, in addition to leveraging state and federal grants. In the past, the project leveraged

$1.5 million in cost-share from Yuba Water to secure $4 million in private capital to finance restoratio­n conducted across 15,000 acres of national forest.

The rest of the dedicated funding ($500,000) will be used to complete environmen­tal documents and permitting for the wider North Yuba Forest Partnershi­p area and field surveys for the first 20,000 acres of treatment. The grant fills the final funding gap for the project, which already secured $2.53 million for the effort.

“The North Yuba Forest Partnershi­p is

advancing restoratio­n across hundreds of thousands of acres, a pace and scale significan­tly larger than the typical project area of 15,000 to 20,000 acres in the Sierra Nevada,” said Melinda Booth, executive director of SYRCL, in a press release. “This

planning effort for the entire watershed is creating a roadmap for prioritizi­ng and carrying out work of this magnitude in the future.”

The partnershi­p’s sharedstew­ardship approach prioritize­s reducing catastroph­ic wildfire risk for people and property and focuses on treating areas that

have the potential to prevent a wildfire from spreading to higherrisk areas, Booth said.

Yuba Water stated the financial contributi­ons were important due to the long-term benefits for Yuba County’s water quality and quantity, watershed health, air quality and the economy.

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