King County Flood Control District provides $10 million for salmon recovery
Summary
The King County Flood Control District Board on Tuesday approved $10,585,155 in grant funding for salmon recovery and habitat restoration work in King County.
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The King County Flood Control District Board on Tuesday approved $10,585,155 in grant funding for salmon recovery and habitat restoration work in King County.
The grants, known as Cooperative Watershed Management (CWM) Grants, fund critical projects and activities throughout the Snoqualmie, Lake Washington/Cedar/Sammamish, Green/Duwamish and Puyallup-White watersheds. The projects funded were proposed by local Watershed Resource Inventory Areas (WRIA).
Funding for the CWM grants were doubled in 2020 when Flood District Chair Dave Upthegrove led changes to make the Flood District a better environmental partner while still providing essential flood protection along the County’s major rivers.
“Two years ago, the Flood District made the bold move to reorient our work to not only protect people and property from flooding, but also help our threatened Chinook salmon in the process,” Upthegrove said. “These grant dollars are just one example where the Flood District has committed to doing our work in a way that improves the environmental health of our river systems. The increase in funding will ensure an additional $50 million is available for salmon recovery efforts over the next decade.”
More information on the Cooperative Watershed Management grants can be found here.