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News Releases - 2003

Five Grants To Improve Water Quality In Southwestern And Central Illinois Announced By Illinois EPA On Barge:

Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, Lake Shelbyville, Kaskaskia River, Lake Taylorville and Big and Long Creek Watersheds to Benefit

For Immediate Release
Nov. 17, 2003
Contact: Dennis McMurray
217-785-1871
TDD: 217-782-9143

Springfield, Ill. -- Five organizations that are working to improve the quality of streams and lakes in Southwestern and Central Illinois will be awarded $50,000 grants from an environmental enforcement case settlement, Illinois Environmental Protection Agency Director Renee Cipriano announced today.

The announcements were made on a barge moored in the Mississippi River that is operated by the nationally-known "Living Lands and Waters" organization, that received one of the grants. The barge goes up and down the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers and, working with local citizens, picks up trash along the shore, plants trees and provides environmental education.

"These grants will fund important watershed protection and enhancement efforts that are a priority of Governor Rod Blagojevich and the Illinois EPA," said Director Cipriano.

The funds are a "Supplemental Environmental Project" (SEP) that was a part of a large enforcement settlement case that provided support for environmental projects in the Southwestern and Central portions of the state, she noted.

"With the current fiscal crisis facing state government, more than ever we will be looking to SEPs as a source of funding for important efforts like the ones we are announcing today," Director Cipriano said.

Illinois EPA recently launched a "SEP Idea Bank" seeking suggestions from citizens and interested groups for projects that could potentially be incorporated into future enforcement case settlements. Suggestions may be "deposited" through the Illinois EPA web site (www.epa.state.il.us).

After announcing the grants to representatives of the five organizations, Director Cipriano, Living Lands and Waters founder and President Chad Pregracke and other guests participated in a tree planting in Alton's Riverfront Park.

The grant award to Living Lands and Waters will be used to help facilitate river cleanups and the River Bottom Forest Restoration Project, which will protect the watersheds by reducing nonpoint source pollution that enters the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers. The river cleanups are community-based and involve local volunteer participation from diverse communities. Through direct, hands-on experience, volunteers observe the effects that litter, erosion and siltation have on water quality.

The other grant awards are for:

  • Lake Shelbyville Wastewater Treatment Feasibility Study to be conducted by the Kaskaskia Watershed Association. It will fund a feasibility and design study for a regional waste treatment facility.
  • The benefit to water quality would include decreasing the delivery of nutrients to the lake and surrounding streams through a reduction of septic systems in the watershed.
  • Kaskaskia River Water Quality Databank project will be developed by the Southwestern Illinois Resource Conservation and Development Council. It will be used to develop a GIS-based water quality database that captures water quality information for the entire Kaskaskia River watershed. The data will be combined with other information sources to create maps to help implement protection and restoration strategies in the watershed.
  • Big and Long Creek Watershed Planning initiative will be carried out by the Macon County Soil and Water Conservation District. The District and its partners, including the Upper Sangamon River Watershed Committee and the City of Decatur, will use data from a monitoring station to assist in watershed protection and restoration planning.
  • Lake Tayorville Water Quality and Quantity Planning Project will be carried out by the Lake Taylorville Resource Planning Committee. It will look at a variety of issues including land use and zoning, lake development planning and infrastructure and community and economic development in the lake's 84,000 acre watershed.

 In a ceremony at the Notebaert Nature Museum in Chicago, IEPA Director Renee Cipriano presents a Green Youth Award to students from the Rhodes School in River Grove for their recycling project.
Patricia Watkins, Chair of the Southwestern Illinois Resource Conservation and DEvelopment Council, IEPA Director Renee Cipriano and Chad Pregracke, President of Living Lands and Waters, plant an oak tree in Alton's Riverfront park

 In a ceremony at the Notebaert Nature Museum in Chicago, IEPA Director Renee Cipriano presents a Green Youth Award to students from the Rhodes School in River Grove for their recycling project.
Living Lands and Waters, which received a watershed grant from IEPA, uses this barge to collect trash and debris along the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, such as the pile of waste tires on deck

 

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