Office of the Secretary |
Contact: Hugh Vickery-202-501-4633
|
For Immediate Release: Feb. 25, 2003 |
Contact: Pat Fisher- 202-208-5634
|
SECRETARY NORTON ANNOUNCES
$34.8 MILLION IN GRANTS TO SUPPORT HABITAT CONSERVATION FOR IMPERILED SPECIES
ON PRIVATE LANDS
Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton today announced $34.8 million in grants to states under a new partnership program to assist private landowners in conserving and restoring the habitat of endangered species and other at-risk plants and animals.
The cost-share grants, part of the administration’s new Landowner Incentive Program, will support innovative partnerships in 42 states. State fish and wildlife agencies, landowners or non-profit groups must put up at least 25 percent of the cost of projects. With these grants, states will be able to provide financial and technical assistance to interested landowners.
“For wildlife
conservation to be successful, it must be a partnership between the government
and the people,” Norton said. “This is especially true with
threatened and endangered species, half of which depend on private lands for
the majority of their habitat. These grants will enable states to work with
landowners and to defray the costs of habitat improvements for imperiled
species on their land.”
The Landowner Incentive Program supports the administration’s overall Cooperative Conservation Initiative, which
includes a number of conservation grant programs to assist states, tribes,
conservation organizations, private landowners and others in conservation
projects and programs. President Bush proposed $113.2 million for the
Cooperative Conservation Initiative in his Fiscal Year 2004 budget.
“If conservation is going to be successful in the 21st
century, we must empower citizen stewards to conserve and protect natural
resources while also achieving important community and economic goals,” Norton said. “We must provide new and expanded opportunities for
landowners, land managers, and others to participate in projects that foster
innovation and create incentives for stewardship. The Landowner Incentive
Program accomplishes this.”
The
LIP grant program is two-tiered. Grants
awarded to states under Tier 1 focus on administrative program needs and may
not exceed $180,000 in federal money. U.S. Territories and the District of
Columbia may apply for Tier 1 grants of up to $75,000.
Tier 2
grants support project implementation. All
grants require at least a 25 percent match from non-federal sources.
Many states already have a landowner incentive program. For
states that currently do not have a landowner program, the grants will allow
them to create one. “We are providing seed money to many states to get their
landowner programs off the ground,” Norton said.
For example, the Colorado Division of Wildlife plans to use
its LIP funds to focus on Front Range habitat for the Preble’s meadow jumping
mouse, for Eastern short-grass prairie habitat for the black-tailed prairie dog
and several bird species, and on Gunnison Basin habitat for the Gunnison sage
grouse. Colorado will establish management agreements and seek conservation
easements with private landowners to protect and restore these habitats.
The Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources will
fund a total of 15 landowner projects on 105,140 acres across five islands.
More than 60 wildlife species and 248 plant species of concern will benefit
from management actions including the creation of barrier fences, the removal
of feral pigs and goats from critical habitat areas, the creation of onsite
seed sources for endangered plant species, and the operation of a rotational
grazing program to benefit the endangered Hawaiian goose (nene).
Tribes also are eligible for an additional $5 million in
grants under the program. Further guidance specific to tribes is currently out
for public comment, and grants will be announced in the future.
“These grants are the catalysts to support
efforts of local partners to come up with new and better ways to conserve
at-risk fish and wildlife species,” said FWS Director Steve Williams. “Through this program, the Service is pooling its resources with
private landowners and state wildlife agencies to ensure these species have
sufficient habitat.”
A state-by-state list for the Landowner Incentive Program
grants follows. For more information on the Landowner Incentive Program,
please contact: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Division of Federal Aid, 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Room 140, Arlington, VA 22203;
phone (703) 358‑2156 or visit the FWS Grants-at- a-Glance web site:
www.grants.fws.gov/.
U.S. FISH AND
WILDLIFE SERVICE
GRANT AWARDS FOR
THE LANDOWNER INCENTIVE PROGRAM
STATE |
TIER 1 |
TIER 2 |
TOTAL |
ALASKA |
$142,500 |
$1,500,000 |
$1,642,500 |
ARIZONA |
$180,000 |
$1,560,000 |
$1,740,000 |
ARKANSAS |
$158,512 |
|
$158,512 |
CALIFORNIA |
$180,000 |
$1,560,000 |
$1,740,000 |
COLORADO |
|
$1,740,000 |
$1,740,000 |
CONNECTICUT |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
DELAWARE |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
FLORIDA |
$180,000 |
$840,000 |
$1,020,000 |
GEORGIA |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
HAWAII |
$180,000 |
$1,551,750 |
$1,731,750 |
IDAHO |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
INDIANA |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
IOWA |
$180,000 |
$900,000 |
$1,080,000 |
KENTUCKY |
$180,000 |
$1,315,000 |
$1,495,000 |
MAINE |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
MARYLAND |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
MASSACHUSETTS |
$180,000 |
$900,000 |
$1,080,000 |
MICHIGAN |
$180,000 |
$1,351,718 |
$1,531,718 |
MINNESOTA |
$180,000 |
$1,334,542 |
$1,514,542 |
MISSOURI |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
MONTANA |
$174,639 |
$1,315,000 |
$1,489,639 |
NEBRASKA |
$180,000 |
$1,560,000 |
$1,740,000 |
NEVADA |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
NEW HAMPSHIRE |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
NEW JERSEY |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
NEW MEXICO |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
NEW YORK |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
NORTH CAROLINA |
|
$165,000 |
$165,000 |
NORTH DAKOTA |
$180,000 |
$710,500 |
$890,500 |
OHIO |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
OKLAHOMA |
$180,000 |
$1,315,000 |
$1,495,000 |
OREGON |
$180,000 |
$1,533,900 |
$1,713,900 |
PENNSYLVANIA |
$180,000 |
$1,315,000 |
$1,495,000 |
SOUTH CAROLINA |
$75,000 |
$900,000 |
$975,000 |
TENNESSEE |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
TEXAS |
|
$1,465,000 |
$1,465,000 |
VERMONT |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
VIRGINIA |
$178,593 |
$1,555,500 |
$1,734,093 |
WASHINGTON |
$180,000 |
$1,560,000 |
$1,740,000 |
WEST VIRGINIA |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
WISCONSIN |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
WYOMING |
$180,000 |
|
$180,000 |
TOTAL |
$6,849,244 |
$27,947,910 |
$34,797,154 |