Land Trusts and Water Quality Restoration

Post on 14-Jan-2015

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Land trusts from Minnesota to New York are using their expertise in private, voluntary land conservation and stewardship to restore and enhance Great Lakes water quality. This workshop highlights specific efforts in Milwaukee area watersheds while offering perspective from other states. This presentation was given by Kimberly Gleffe, Executive Director, River Revitalization Foundation.

Transcript of Land Trusts and Water Quality Restoration

 

Milwaukee’s    urban  rivers  land  trust    

Healing  Our  Waters  September  11,  2013  

�  Founded  in  1994  as  a  nonprofit  conservation  organization  to  implement  the  Riverway  Plan  

�  Kiwanis,  Rotary  Club  and  community  board  members  

�  Focused  on  the  Milwaukee  River  basin  within  Milwaukee  County  

 �  Photo  credit:  Mark  Williams            Milwaukee  River  in  Glendale  WI  

� Our  mission  is  to  establish  an  urban  parkway  for  public  access,  walkways,  recreation  and  education,  bordering  the  Milwaukee,  Menomonee  and  Kinnickinnic  Rivers;  to  use  the  rivers  to  revitalize  surrounding  neighborhoods;  and  to  improve  water  quality.  

� The  Riverway  Plan  is  our  guiding  document  (1991)  

� Main  objectives:  Create  a  greenway,  Build  trails,        Increase  public  access,                                          Habitat  restoration.  

� Land  Protection  Plan  area  –  estuary  (AOC)  upstream    to  County  Line  

� Lake  Michigan  Basin  drainage  area  

� Land  acquisition  16  acres  protected  

Milwaukee  River  Greenway  � Overlay  approach  to  conservation  

� Allows  for  sweeping  protections  of  entire  river  corridor  

� Zoning  ordinance  passed  May  25,  2010  

�  800  acres  protected  within  city  limits  

Challenges  We  Face  � Rising  land  values  � Density  �  Landowner  non-­‐attachment  

�  Limited  resources  � Parcel  size  � Development  threat  

Wheelhouse    �  $1,400,000  for  2.8  acres  �  Funding:  $700,000  (50%)  from  DNR  stewardship  program;  $400,000  from  MMSD  Greenseams  program;  Fund  for  Lake  Michigan  –  shoreline  restoration  $248,000  

� Blighted  site  restored  to  riverfront  park  

Southbranch  Creek  

Granville  County  Park-­‐Planning,  Outreach,  and  Feasibility  for    Streambank  and  Habitat  Restoration  

ü 26-acre off leash dog park on the upper Menomonee River; ü  950 feet river frontage ü Severe erosion, total loss of top soil