Urban Waters Federal Partnership

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Green Infrastructure for Clean Water Act of 2009 H.R Becky Hammer – Associate Advocate, Water Program – Natural Resources Defense Council.
Advertisements

Implement Wy-Kan-Ush-Mi Wa-Kish- Wit Watershed Assessment and Restoration Plan Now A Regional Support Program Sponsored by the Columbia River Inter-Tribal.
National Wildlife Refuges in Idaho face a 14.4 million budget shortfall Idaho is home to spectacular natural resources, including 7 national wildlife refuges.
The National Wildlife Refuges in Rhode Island face a $4 million budget shortfall Rhode Island is home to five national wildlife refuges, which provide.
National Wildlife Refuges in Missouri face an $18.4 million budget shortfall Missouri is home to spectacular natural resources including 10 national wildlife.
What is the Lane Livability Consortium? Participating Agencies  City of Eugene  City of Springfield  Lane County  Lane Transit.
National Wildlife Refuges in Louisiana face a $76.1 million budget shortfall Louisiana is home to spectacular natural resources including 25 national wildlife.
A national coalition of over 5,000 organizations working together to prevent wildlife from becoming endangered.
National Wildlife Refuges in Arkansas face a $125.5 million budget shortfall Arkansas is home to spectacular natural resources including 10 national wildlife.
National Wildlife Refuges in West Virginia face a $4.7 million budget shortfall The state of West Virginia is home to two National Wildlife Refuges, which.
The National Wildlife Refuges in Maryland face a $50.6 million budget shortfall Maryland is home to five national wildlife refuges, which provide habitat.
National Wildlife Refuges in Arizona face a 46.8 million budget shortfall Arizona is home to spectacular natural resources including over 11 national wildlife.
The National Wildlife Refuges in Vermont face a $4 million budget shortfall Vermont is home to two national wildlife refuges, which provide habitat for.
Greater Baltimore Wilderness Coalition. Inner Harbor.
A Unique Bi-State Partnership to Improve Jobs, Housing and Transportation BRONX TOWN HALL NEW YORK & CONNECTICUT SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES Fordham University.
The National Aquaculture Policy and The State Shellfish Initiative Perry Lund Shorelands and Environmental Assistance Program 17 November 2011.
Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs Massachusetts Land Information Management System Philip Griffiths, Undersecretary for Environment.
National Wildlife Refuges in North Carolina face a $74.9 million budget shortfall North Carolina is home to spectacular natural resources, including 10.
Drought and the Central Valley Project August 2014.
National Wildlife Refuges in Oregon face a $68 million budget shortfall Oregon is home to spectacular natural resources including over 20 national wildlife.
Bureau of Reclamation Overview Christopher Cutler Deputy Chief Boulder Canyon Operations Office.
National Wildlife Refuges in Wisconsin face a $16.7 million budget shortfall Wisconsin is home to spectacular natural resources including over half a dozen.
New England is one of 10 regions making up the 406 National Water Program, “A partnership of USDA CSREES and the Land Grant System”
Stan Johnson Rang Narayanan College of Agriculture, Biotechnology and Natural Resources University of Nevada, Reno (UNR)
EPA’s Brownfields Program Megan Quinn U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Brownfields and Land Revitalization January 25, 2008.
National Wildlife Refuges in Wyoming face a $4 million budget shortfall Wyoming is home to spectacular natural resources, including six national wildlife.
Chesapeake's Future Forests: Crafting a Forest Restoration Strategy for the Bay Watershed Partners.
1 U RBAN W ATERS Federal Partnership Los Angeles River Pilot.
America’s Great Outdoors and Urban Waters Federal Partnership Urban Ecosystem Services and Decision Making: A Roundtable On A Green Philadelphia The Wharton.
American Heritage Rivers Initiative. BACKGROUND Objective: Recognize and support local efforts to restore and protect America’s rivers and their communities:
National Wildlife Refuges in North Dakota face a $32.12 million budget shortfall North Dakota is home to magnificent natural resources, including over.
National Wildlife Refuges in Minnesota face a $68.37 million budget shortfall Minnesota is home to spectacular natural resources including over a dozen.
The Stewart B. McKinney Wildlife Refuge in Connecticut faces a $1.75 million budget shortfall Connecticut is home to Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife.
Wildlife Refuges in Alaska face a $69.3 million budget shortfall Alaska is home to spectacular natural resources including over 75% of the land area of.
U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey GEER 2008 | Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration Facing Tomorrow’s Challenges: Integrated Science.
National Wildlife Refuges in Pennsylvania face a $3.8 million budget shortfall Pennsylvania is home to spectacular natural resources including 2 national.
Source Water Collaborative Online Partnership Tool 1 Collaboration Toolkit: Protecting Drinking Water Sources through Agricultural Conservation Practices.
National Wildlife Refuges in Texas face a $43.6 million budget shortfall Texas is home to spectacular natural resources, including 12 national wildlife.
COMPREHENSIVE FLOODPLAIN MANAGEMENT : Promoting Wise Uses of Floodplains CA Department of Water Resources/ CIFMCG Workshop July 2006.
Coastal Brownfields: At the Water’s Edge Panel: Waterfront Revitalization and Marine Transportation.
National Wildlife Refuges in South Dakota face a $16.2 million budget shortfall South Dakota is home to spectacular natural resources, including six national.
Mission Statements of Some Federal Land Management Agencies U.S. Forest Service The mission of the U.S. Forest Service is to sustain the health, diversity.
National Wildlife Refuges in New Mexico face a $17.8 million budget shortfall New Mexico is home to spectacular natural resources, including seven national.
National Wildlife Refuges in Colorado face a $11.8 million budget shortfall Colorado is home to spectacular natural resources, including 7 national wildlife.
The only National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) located solely within the State of Kentucky faces a budget shortfall of $1.5 million. Clarks River NWR was established.
National Wildlife Refuges in Delaware face a $8.7 million budget shortfall The state of Delaware is home to two National Wildlife Refuges (see map, reverse.
National Wildlife Refuges in Tennessee face a $57 million budget shortfall Tennessee is home to 7 national wildlife refuges encompassing 120,400 acres.
The Environment and America. Early Environmentalism in the US 1850s and 60s: Common interest in pure drinking water and sanitation is spurred by epidemics.
Jim Lopez Department of Housing and Urban Development Senior Advisor to Deputy Secretary Arizona State University October 15, 2010.
Helping You Care for the Land The Natural Resources Conservation Service—
Wildlife Refuges in California face a $53 million budget shortfall California is home to spectacular natural resources including 30 national wildlife refuges.
Wildlife Refuges in Washington face a $44.4 million budget shortfall Washington is home to spectacular natural resources including over 20 national wildlife.
The National Wildlife Refuges in Massachusetts face a $13.6 million budget shortfall Massachusetts is home to 12 national wildlife refuges, which provide.
Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge needs funding to control invasives plants that prevent effective management of migratory birds and other refuge resources.
NGO’s Who is big? Who was a product of the 70s environmental movement? Who was a product of 80s – responding to James Watt Who affects biodiversity the.
1 Office of Travel & Tourism Industries, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce Organization of American States XXI Inter-American.
National Wildlife Refuges in New York face a $11.3 million budget shortfall New York is home to spectacular natural resources including five national wildlife.
For EBTJV meeting October 26, 2010 Executive Order Strategy for Protecting and Restoring the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
Waterways to Revitalization: America's Federal Urban Waters Partnerships Town Hall Session September 2, 2015 Hilton Chicago 1:15: p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Continental.
Brownfields Redevelopment Financing for Small Cities, Rural Communities And Tribes October 27-29, 2003 Sharon Kophs Washington State Department of Community,
Oil and Hazardous Substance Contingency Planning Presented By Jeffery Smith Regional Hazmat Coordinator Bureau of Reclamation Lower Colorado River Region.
Vision for Menomonee River Valley Economically, with strong companies and jobs near workers’ homes; Geographically, with renewed ties to the surrounding.
GALVESTON BAY ESTUARY PROGRAM A CATALYST FOR PARTNERSHIPS AND COLLABORATION Sarah Bernhardt, Ph.D. Lower Rio Grande Valley 18 th Annual Water Quality Management.
United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service NRCS Programs Applicable to Brownfields Natural Resources Conservation Service.
CLINTON PUBLIC LANDS 1 Clinton Plans a Ten-Fold Increased Capacity of Renewable Energy on Public Lands Hillary Clinton’s Plan for Conservation and Stewardship.
What exactly is a Megalopolis? A region in which several major cities and surrounding areas grow together.
The EPA and Susquehanna River
Urban Waters Learning Forum Adele Cardenas Malott, P.E. May 23,2017
Strategic Priorities and Actions:
Oregon’s Investment in a Water Future
Presentation transcript:

Urban Waters Federal Partnership Thank you to Carl, Dianna---USGS has been a leader in the UWFP—receptive to new ideas, willing to forge new partnerships, and encourage some of her sister bureaus in engaging. Thank you to Wharton and Susan for hosting us today—learning a tremendous amount and look forward to discussing more about how the Federal family can better assist cities. Will provide an overview and national perspective of the UWFP—in the audience we have one of our “Ambassadors” Michael Leff of the Delaware River watershed who can chime in about on-the-ground efforts; as well as Dave Lange from NPS Rivers Trails and Conservation Assistance Program who is also extremely active in the May 19, 2015 lisa pelstring Advisor, Urban Environmental issues U.s. Department of the interior

Urban Waters Federal Partnership 14 Federal agencies Vision: Protect and restore America’s urban waters and the lands that surround them. Reconnect communities, especially economically distressed communities, to those waters. Program Components 19 Locations w/ Ambassadors HQ Team 28 NGOs Grants Urbanwaters.gov The program focuses on underserved communities – those who need our support most. Really want to give kudos to EPA—they launched the effort, fed it money from other programs/redirected funds, took it out of the Administrators office and housed it in Office of Water and has been Launched in 2011, since that time grown from 10 to 14 feds, 7 to 19 sites, and in 2014 began concerted effort to work with national NGOs to align resources. Our Goal: WORK COLLECTIVELY ACROSS THE FEDERAL FAMILY TO RESTORE URBAN WATERS, IMPROVE ACCESS, AND REGREEN CITIES HOW? Directly through funding and implementing projects, With Local Ambassadors or leaders who convene community to identify priority projects and convene feds to help meet those needs—Workplans—MAYOR OFFICE Embedding or LOCAL NGO EMBEDDING HQ team that meets monthly—allows us to resolve issues faster INCENTIVES When we coordinate, we deliver more streamlined and integrated support to our local partners—LOCAL COMMUNITIES LOVE IT Why should feds bother? The partnership also provides a powerful tool for advancing an individual agency’s mission, by leveraging the investments of other feds. Example, EPA was able to take a grants program that is focused on water quality (Urban Waters Small Grants), and open it up to applicants working on issues of access to water/RECREATION (of interest to DOI). 28 NGOs EXAMPLE: TCF and APA bringing 500K to Baltimore metro region to develop green corridors from the downtown core to rural fields •Map existing green infrastructure contributing to coastal storm resilience •Prioritize and map green infrastructure enhancement opportunities •Evaluate best governance mechanisms for managing and protecting green infrastructure •Build a better regional green infrastructure network 

DOI Urban Waters—Four Bureaus Interior has multiple bureaus bringing resources and expertise to pilot sites—USGS, FWS, NPS, and Reclamation DOI lead/co-lead at 3 pilots: Washington, DC; Grand Rapids; NYC Address climate resilience, GI, economic development, recreation and access, restoration, public health, contaminants, water quality, urban habitat DOI is an urban agency 101 urban refuges across the country within 25 miles of cities with a population of 250,000 or more More than 75 urban National Parks featuring both historic and natural areas 245 million acres of Recreational lands that serve millions of urban residents USGS already working in cities across the country providing water quality and quantity research, addressing contaminants, land-use data, flooding and hazards research, and more. MAIN POINTS 1. DOI is an urban agency—strong footprint in cities across the country—through programs and parks 2. UWFP has provided a foundation for Interior to better unite and strengthen its collective urban activities. Best known for its management of wild national parks in the West, the Department of the Interior has a strong footprint in cities across the country. The trails running through local parks established by NPS The greenstreet that Reclamation installed raised home property values Public lands in and near cities are managed by BLM Historic buildings restored with NPS funding Urban stream and wetlands restored by FWS Science on water supply and urban wildlife and habitat provided by USGS

Early Wins Interior awarded ~$5M for New York city for restoration projects along the Bronx and Harlem Rivers; recently successful in persuading state to devote $8M for park access project DOI providing VISTAs to five pilot sites (college graduates helping alleviate poverty; work with Ambassadors) Interior LOS helped secure ~$25M in TIGER funds for 2 pilots—Washington, DC, and Boston FWS funding environmental assessment for dam removal on the Grand River; USGS $100K for mapping; NPS RTCA technical assistance grants Not just financial assistance though. Technical assistance and leveraging—UWFP can take credit for shaking loose a report stuck in bureaucratic review for two years Also share major credit an agency selecting a restoration alternative that was advocated by local Los Angeles community. As well as getting state and Amtrak back to the negotiating table when talks stalled and funding disappeared for a park access project.

Growing the Partnership Grants NFWF—~$6M to 160 local groups EPA Small UW Grants--$6M to 140 groups National Invitee Workshop in 2016 Open-to-all conference in 2017 Private sector interest Organizations representing communities of color Office of Management and Budget = national metrics Local NGOs signatory effort Growing interest on Capitol Hill 28 National NGOs = New Partners The Sierra Club Trust for Public Land The Conservation Fund The Nature Conservancy American Planning Associations The Chesapeake Conservancy  US Water Alliance American Rivers National Assoc. of Clean Water Agencies Izaak Walton League Society of Municipal Arborists Wilderness Inquiry ….more Our biggest strengths— Working collectively we can accomplish MORE—IDYING PARTNERS WE WOULD HAVE NEVER CONSIDERED—Art Institutions, Federal Reserve –urban farm and aquaponics project in ward 7 in DC working w/ DC Comm. on Arts == RFP for functional public art that captures stormwater Focus in underserved areas where need is greatest For a very modest investment, the federal family has been nimble and accomplished a great deal through UWFP CEOs from 28 organizations became “New Partners for Urban Waters” in December 2014 – American Forest, The Conservation Fund examples The Conservation Fund, APA working with partners on developing a regional GI plan having looked at over 300 types of GI plans at the regional, state, local, county, city levels. Few of the jurisdictions have taken an explicit comprehensive, systems approach and very few have considered through the lense of resilience. SO JURISDICTIONS ARE BASICALLY IMPLEMENTING GI WHERE AND WHEN THEY CAN American Forests support for 3 new cities--$100K each; also working on unique DC urban Farm project GROWING demand from communities, despite the fact that there are no dedicated resources at this time. Five cities have expressed interest in applying—Minneapolis and St. Paul have already developed an application. Meeting soon with Green Latinos—recognize that these 28 NGOs reflect small percentage of who we need to engage at national level.

Powerful Inter-Agency Platform supported by WH CEQ and DPC Collaborative Federalism can work End with a question: What do metropolitan areas need most from the feds? Related to GI, regreening cities, creating hyperfunctional parks and greenspaces, addressing long-standing issue of contaminants, etc? A shortage of scientific research on the needs of urban wildlife. Like conservationists, many biologists have treated cities and suburbs as lost causes unworthy of their attention. ____________________________ These are the descriptions of how each agency’s mission and programs align with the Partnership: US Department of Interior: Assist in building trails; increase public access to river resources; help restore and protect habitat and wildlife; educate and employ urban youth; and assess and help safeguard water quality. Army Corps of Engineers: Offer engineering services, research and technical support to stakeholders during the planning, design, construction and operation of water resources and associated environmental infrastructure. Corporation for National and Community Service: Recruiting, organizing and maximizing the impact of community volunteers. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: CDC/ATSDR will serve to offer guidance and technical assistance to local health officials and community members in conducting community-based environmental health assessments and creating an accurate and verifiable profile of communities' environmental health status. Environmental Protection Agency: Use statutory authority to protect and preserve water quality and provide assistance in assessing and addressing legacy contamination. Federal Emergency Management Agency [from Nancy: rebuild strong, resilient communities following disasters] National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences: Assist with health studies related to community environmental conditions. US Department of Agriculture: Help communities to plan, manage, and sustain farm and forest landscapes on public and private ownership along a complex rural to urban gradient to promote watershed health and protect water resources, from the source to the faucet US Department of Commerce/Economic Development Administration: Foster the creation of high-skill jobs and the generation of private capital investment in distressed communities. US Department of Commerce/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration: Provide unique scientific products and services designed to boost economic vitality, restore habitat, and mitigate hazards and contamination in coastal, Great Lakes, and other locations. US Department of Education: Department of Education Joins the Urban Waters Federal Partnership. School communities connect to their local waters. Science and civic engagement skills prepare students for jobs of the future. US Department of Energy: U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy joins the Urban Waters Federal Partnership. DOE helps communities accelerate the adoption of clean energy technologies that strengthen the economy, protect the environment, and reduce dependence on foreign oil. US Department of Housing and Urban Development: Help the community improve access to affordable housing. US Department of Transportation: Help the community in designing improved transportation corridors, bikeways, walkways

Urban Waters Federal Partnership Locations SAN ANTONIO JUST JOINED AS NEW PILOT CITY AS OF DECEMBER 2014 18 Current Locations for Federal Partnerships Anacostia River in Washington, DC Bronx and Harlem Rivers in New York, New York Lake Pontchartrain in New Orleans, Louisiana Los Angeles River in Los Angeles, California Lake Michigan/Little Calumet River in Northwest Indiana Patapsco River in Baltimore, Maryland South Platte River in Denver, Colorado May 2013 eleven additional partnership locations The Middle Rio Grande in Albuquerque, New Mexico (PDF) Proctor Creek Watershed in Atlanta, Georgia (PDF) The Mystic River Watershed in Chelsea/Everett/North of Boston (PDF) The Grand River in Grand Rapids, Michigan (PDF) The Middle Blue River in Kansas City, Missouri (PDF) The Passaic River in Passaic, New Jersey (PDF) The Delaware River Watershed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (PDF) The Martín Peña in San Juan, Puerto Rico (PDF) The Green-Duwamish Watershed in Seattle, Washington (PDF) The Meramec and Big River Watershed in St. Louis, Missouri (PDF) The Western Lake Erie Basin in Toledo, Ohio (PDF) Original UWFP Location UWFP Location Announced in 2013