WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Sen. Brown (D-OH) announced that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has awarded $178,479 to Chagrin River Watershed Partners through the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI), an interagency effort to protect the Great Lakes. The grant will fund a project to restore streams and wetlands in the Deer Creek/Gully Brook watershed. This project – made possible through a partnership between Chagrin River Watershed Partners, the City of Wickliffe, and Cleveland Metroparks – will reduce soil erosion and the quantity of nutrients and streambed sediment entering the Chagrin River and Lake Erie.
“These federal resources will help support the proactive role we’ve seen northeast Ohio take in protecting our lake,” said Brown. “The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative is critical in our fight to keep Lake Erie healthy and we must ensure its continued funding.”
According to the State of Ohio, more than $10 billion of the state’s nearly $40 billion tourism industry is derived from counties along the Lake Erie shoreline. Restoration efforts in the region are essential to maintaining a strong economy along the Ohio coast. The EPA awarded a total of $5,313,721 for invasive plant species control projects across Ohio. Below is a full list of awardees:
Award Recipient |
Award Amount |
Project Area |
Chagrin River Watershed Partners, Inc. |
$178,479 |
Deer Creek/Gully Brook Watershed |
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency |
$3,696,182 |
Maumee River Watershed |
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency |
$689,060 |
Sandusky River Watershed |
Western Reserve Land Conservancy |
$750,000 |
Grand River Watershed |
Brown recognizes the importance of preserving our Great Lakes. Last month, Brown cosponsored the Great Lakes Ecological and Economic Protection Act (GLEEPA), bipartisan legislation that would protect the Great Lakes – and the millions of jobs they support – by formally authorizing the GLRI. Last year, Brown helped secure more than $300 million in bipartisan Omnibus Bill funds for the GLRI. After the release of President Obama’s budget proposal which recommends a reduction in GLRI funding from $300 million to $250 million, Brown again highlighted the importance of the program.
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