Catawba County Soil & Water Conservation District receives award
The Catawba County Soil & Water Conservation District received the Outstanding Conservation District Award for Fiscal Year 2022/2023 from the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), a division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The award was presented by Jim Propst, NRCS Team 5 Supervisory Soil Conservationist, during the Catawba County Board of Commissioners’ February 5 meeting.
The Outstanding Conservation District Award recognizes a conservation district that has made significant contributions to conservation and the proper management of the nation’s natural resources. The Catawba County district was recognized for its high level of customer service, innovative problem-solving, and above-and-beyond efforts to assist local landowners and colleagues in other districts with a variety of complex projects.
The nomination cited several specific examples of excellence, including the district’s recent involvement in the North Carolina Department of Agriculture’s Streamside Rehabilitation Assistance Program (StRAP). This program removes debris blockages from streams to prevent floodwaters from damaging land and property and posing a threat to life.
To implement this project locally, the Catawba County district utilized its drone over various streams to identify blockages and developed a priority list based on assessed damage. The district received an allocation of $282,400 to address these areas and has begun working with contractors to remove the blockages.
Other examples included the district’s procurement of a grant to help protect an eroding stream bank at the Hickory Foundation YMCA, and assistance with local dairy management system project that allowed the landowner to expand and almost double his herd while also protecting the environment and nearby stream system.
“There are many things that make the Catawba Soil and Water Conservation District an outstanding district, but the one thing that stands out is the excellence in customer service that they deliver, both to private individual landowners and customers as well as internal and other agency partners,” Propst said. “By exemplifying excellence in customer service, outreach, and educational programs, a wide range