All Projects

2804 Results for
Recipient
Benton SWCD
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$198,250
Fund Source
Benton
Stearns
Recipient
Benton Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$163,639
Fund Source

Little Rock Lake,in Benton County, is negatively impacted for nutrients. Little Rock Lake is a significant regional recreational lake. Toxins released by blue green algae blooms have been the highest ever measured by the Minnesota Department of Health. Given the importance of this resource and the severity of the water quality problems, obtaining tangible water quality improvements is a high priority in the Benton and Morrison County local water management plans.

Benton
Recipient
Benton Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$55,410
Fund Source

The water quality and recretional value of Little Rock is negatively impacted by phosphorus. One important strategy involves reducing the quantity of phosphorus imported to the watershed through animal feeding operations. Farm management strategis coupled with traditional conservation practices will reduce surface runoff and phosphorus transport from feedlots and fields. This project will assist corporate poultry industry and local farmers to put into practice animal feed management strategies that reduce the amount of phosphorus contained in chicken feed rations.

Benton
Recipient
Benton SWCD
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$79,400
Fund Source

Little Rock Creek, a cold-water trout stream in central Minnesota, is impaired due to the lack of trout and other cold water fish. The trout are absent because of high water temperatures, low dissolved oxygen and high nitrate levels, stressors caused from a lack of base flow and overuse of groundwater. This project continues a 2011 initiative to assist irrigators in the Little Rock Creek groundwater recharge area with managing the timing and amount of irrigation applied to their crops.

Benton
Morrison
Recipient
Benton SWCD
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$227,500
Fund Source

The Little Rock Lake Total Maximum Daily Load study has identified areas in the watershed where phosphorus reduction is needed and what best management practices need to be applied. This is a coordinated implementation effort with Benton and Morrison Soil and Water Conservation Districts and Natural Resources Conservation Service, the Little Rock Lake Association, the livestock industry and other partners to install best management practices at numerous sites to continue cleaning up Little Rock Lake.

Benton
Morrison
Recipient
Comfort Lake-Forest Lake WD
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$354,600
Fund Source
Chisago
Recipient
Heron Lake WD
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$264,535
Fund Source

A Level III Feedlot Inventory in the West Fork Des Moines River Watershed identified the need for a new manure storage basin. The Heron Lake Watershed District will be partnering with Murray County, Murray Soil and Water Conservation District, and Southwest Prairie Technical Service Area to construct the basin to ensure that manure and milk house wastewater will be properly stored. In addition, the project will decrease the size and usage of open lots using buffer strip and pasture to significantly reduce nutrient loading.

Murray
Recipient
Lower Mississippi River WMO
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$196,000
Fund Source

Lake Augusta and Sunfish Lake are deep lakes located in the Lower Mississippi River Watershed Management Organization. Both lakes are approximately 40 acres in size and surrounded by watersheds with moderate to low imperviousness. Both lakes are included on the MPCA's 303(d) list as impaired for aquatic recreation due to excessive nutrients. Lake Augusta and Sunfish Lake were included in a watershed restoration and protection strategies (WRAPS) study and total maximum daily load (TMDL) performed from 2012 to 2014.

Dakota
Recipient
Minnehaha Creek WD
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$112,000
Fund Source

The goal of this project is to identify watershed and in-lake best management practices (BMPs) to improve water quality for impaired water bodies within the Upper Long Lake Creek subwatershed. The existing P8 watershed model and BATHTUB lake response models will be updated and refined to identify BMPs, develop project costs, and estimate nutrient load reductions. A feasibility report will be developed that outlines prioritized projects, estimated load reductions, and project costs to accelerate implementation.

Hennepin
Recipient
Todd SWCD
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$714,854
Fund Source
Douglas
Morrison
Otter Tail
Todd
Wadena
Recipient
Browns Creek WD
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$57,000
Fund Source

Brown's Creek Watershed District (BCWD) has identified two neighborhoods that drain untreated stormwater directly to Long Lake, a recreational lake in Stillwater that has been listed as impaired for excess nutrients. By working with targeted residential landowners in the high priority neighborhoods, BCWD will install 10-15 best management practices to achieve measurable outcomes of 5 acre-feet of nutrient-rich stormwater infiltration,1 ton of total sediment and 6 pounds of total phosphorus removed from Long Lake per year.

Washington
Recipient
Browns Creek WD
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$32,250
Fund Source

The Watershed District is partnering with the City of Oak Park Heights to retrofit an existing stormwater pond to improve water quality in Long Lake.

Washington
Recipient
Isanti SWCD
2017 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$30,405
Fund Source

This project will result in the installation of give water quality practices totaling 350 linear feet of restored lakeshore and 6,000 square feet of native plant stormwater management. By targeting properties that are eroding and/or with concentrated overland flow to the lake, pollutant discharge to the lake will be reduced.

Isanti
Recipient
Isanti SWCD
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$25,000
Fund Source

This project will install practices to improve water quality in Long Lake, Isanti Co. We will install at least 350 linear feet of restored lakeshore and 3,000 sq ft of native plant stormwater treatment with an emphasis on bioengineering techniques, native plants and locating buffers/swales/rain gardens at points of concentrated overland flow into the lake. By targeting properties that are eroding and/or with concentrated overland flow to the lake we will reduce suspended solids discharge by 6,300 lbs/yr and phosphorus by 0.6 lbs/yr.

Isanti
Recipient
Todd SWCD
2025 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,032,278
Fund Source

This funding will be used to help fulfill the goals established in the Long Prairie CWMP. Approximate goals addressed are listed with the activities addressing them. Anticipated projects to be implemented include agricultural waste management facilities, agricultural land management, exclusion fencing, rain gardens, subsurface sewage treatment upgrades, shoreline restorations, and forestry. Other projects will be considered as opportunities arise.

Douglas
Morrison
Otter Tail
Todd
Wadena
Recipient
Jackson County
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$390,000
Fund Source

Loon Lake, the receiving waterbody for Jackson Judicial Ditch 8 (JD8), is impaired for nutrients - with phosphorus being a primary concern, along with a delta of sediment forming where JD8 flows into Loon Lake. JD8 is impaired for benthic macroinvertebrates and fish bioassessments, which indicates that the long-term health of the system is poor. The project proposed in this application will construct a 4.6-acre constructed wetland along the JD8 open ditch, providing water storage and allowing sediment and nutrients to settle out before entering the lake.

Jackson
Recipient
City of Medina
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$334,450
Fund Source

Lake Sarah is a regionally significant lake and currently suffers from excess phosphprus levels. Loretto Creek, located partially within the Cities of Medina and Loretto, is Lake Sarah's east tributary carrying approximately 269 pounds of phosphorus to the lake each year. This is a joint project between the Cities of Loretto and Medina developed for the Loretto ballfields to address this problem.

Hennepin
Recipient
Clearwater Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$32,260
Fund Source

The Lost River requires ongoing protection efforts to reduce harmful runoff entering the watershed. A primary element of this project involves providing project development and technical assistance to a producer who owns approximately 1/3 mile of Lost River frontage. Severe erosion and feedlot conditions compromise water quality in this area. The restoration of this jeopardized area will be accomplished through buffers, streambank restoration and livestock exclusion.

Clearwater
Recipient
St Louis, South SWCD
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$2,228,654
Fund Source
Carlton
Lake
St. Louis
Recipient
St. Louis County
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$200,000
Fund Source

St. Louis County's Comprehensive Water Management Plan Update 2010-2020 identifies providing financial assistance to qualifying homeowners to upgrade or replace failing septic systems as a Priority 2 action. Funds from the FY-16 Clean Water Fund Projects and Practices Grant will be used to provide funding to low-income homeowners to repair or replace SSTS identified as Imminent Threat to Public Health (ITPH) within the following watersheds: Lake Superior South, St.

St. Louis
Recipient
Rice Creek WD
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$568,104
Fund Source

The Rice Creek Watershed District is proposing to improve water quality and habitat in Locke Lake and Lower Rice Creek by stabilizing stream banks and bluffs on Lower Rice Creek, reducing in-stream erosion and sediment delivery to Locke Lake, and improving in-stream habitat complexity for fish and invertebrates. Eleven bank stabilization practices would be installed over a continuous 5,400-foot reach in Lower Rice Creek. The anticipated outcome of this project is the prevention of 2,874 tons per year of sediment, which is 58% of the sediment reduction goals for Lower Rice Creek.

Anoka
Ramsey
Recipient
Sherburne SWCD
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$106,800
Fund Source
Sherburne
Recipient
Coon Creek WD
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$195,158
Fund Source
Anoka
Recipient
BWSR; Buffalo Red River WD
2022 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$2,335,000
Fund Source

Channelization of the Lower Otter Tail River in the early 1950s converted 18 miles of sinuous river channel to 11 miles of straight channel and resulted in the loss of several thousand acres of wetland, and prairie habitat within the river's corridor. Through a partnership between the Buffalo-Red River Watershed District, the Wilkin Soil & Water Conservation District, and the Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources, this proposal will permanently protect 410 acres (est.) of private lands in easements.

Wilkin
Recipient
Sibley SWCD
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$596,617
Fund Source
McLeod
Nicollet
Renville
Sibley
Recipient
Coon Creek WD
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$445,000
Fund Source
Anoka
Recipient
Buffalo-Red River WD
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$400,000
Fund Source
Wilkin
Recipient
Wild Rice Watershed District
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$175,000
Fund Source

This project is designed to reduce sediment in the Wild River River based on a state approved plan (TMDL). The estimated water quality benefits completed by this project are 12,980 (120 truckloads) tons of soil saved per year, which will assist in reducing turbidity impairments downstream on the LWRR.

Clearwater
Mahnomen
Norman
Recipient
Wilkin SWCD
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$185,000
Fund Source
Wilkin
Recipient
Dakota County
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$452,277
Fund Source
Dakota
Recipient
Scott SWCD
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$126,400
Fund Source

This project will reduce sediment and nutrient loading to the main stem and local tributaries of the Lower Minnesota River (LMR) by providing cost share for practices that treat ravine headcut and channel erosion, streambank/shoreline erosion, ephemeral gully erosion, and direct-discharging open inlet drainage systems. Targeted Best Management Practices (BMPs) will include but not be limited to grade control structures, grassed/lined waterways, water & sediment control basins, shoreline/streambank stabilization and alternative tile inlets.

Scott
Recipient
Southeast SWCD Technical Support Joint Powers Board
2017 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$0
Fund Source

The Lower Mississippi River Feedlot Management in MN project will be leveraging State funding from BWSR to provide match for a United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service (USDA-NRCS) Regional Conservations Partners Program (RCPP). BWSR will provide technical and financial assistance to plan and design projects to mitigate feedlot runoff from smaller (less than 300 animal units or AUs*), open lot feedlots in southeastern Minnesota.

Dodge
Fillmore
Freeborn
Goodhue
Houston
Mower
Olmsted
Rice
Steele
Wabasha
Winona
Recipient
Scott SWCD
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$125,000
Fund Source

This project builds on the momentum of previous Clean Water Fund grants in making significant and quantifiable sediment, nutrient and runoff volume reductions to address the turbidity, dissolved oxygen and other impairments of the Lower Minnesota River (LMR). These water quality improvements will be achieved by constructing on-the-ground conservation best management practices (BMPs) in the targeted watersheds -including specifically Sand and Roberts Creek - and near channel sources.

Scott
Recipient
Wild Rice Watershed District/BWSR
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,888,000
Fund Source

This Corridor Habitat Restoration Project is a cooperative effort between the District (WRWD), MN Board of Soil
and Water Resources (MNBWSR), MN DNR, and Red River Watershed Management Board (RRWMB). This is a
voluntary program with the long-term goal to restore a natural corridor area along the Lower Reach of the Wild
Rice River. When completed, the project will restore 23 channelized river miles to 50 miles of natural stream
channel. The funding from this allocation was used to protect and restore approximately 151 acres of floodplain

Norman
Recipient
Lac qui Parle-Yellow Bank WD
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$623,429
Fund Source
Lac qui Parle
Lincoln
Yellow Medicine
Recipient
Lac qui Parle-Yellow Bank WD
2025 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,228,526
Fund Source

The LqP-YB Watershed Plan FY 2025, will be used to implement projects in the Watershed to help enhance ground water, surface water, land
stewardship, & habitat. The plan is broken into high, medium, & low priority regions and the local partners will work with
landowners to implement projects to help meet the goals of the plan. Funding will be geared towards projects located in the high

Lac qui Parle
Lincoln
Yellow Medicine
Recipient
Mahnomen SWCD
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$22,550
Fund Source

This project will complete an inventory of drainage systems to prioritize locations for structural erosion control practices and buffer strips that will reduce sediment loading into Marsh Creek and Lower Wild Rice River downstream, which are both impaired by turbidity. An inspection plan and database will also be developed to enhance the county drainage ditch inspection program.

Mahnomen
Recipient
Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$625,000
Fund Source

The Kohlman Lake nutrient reduction study identified a major source of phosphorus loading from the impervious areas like roads, roofs and parking lots within the watershed.. Within this area, one major land use feature stands out - Maplewood Mall. Retrofitting the Mall parking areas to infiltrate at least one inch of stormwater runoff will result in a large reduction in phosphorus to Kohlman Creek and the lake.

Ramsey
Recipient
Ramsey Washington Metro Watershed District
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$500,000
Fund Source

The Kohlman Lake TMDL calls for the reduction of nutrients from watershed and in-lake loading. A major source of phosphorus loading is from the impervious areas in the District (roads, interstates, roofs, and parking lots). In the analysis of the Kohlman Lake watershed, one major land use feature stands out - Maplewood Mall. The District identified that retrofitting the Mall parking areas to infiltrate at least one inch of runoff would result in a large reduction in phosphorus to Kohlman Creek and the lake.

Ramsey
Recipient
Carnelian-Marine-St. Croix WD
2020 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$97,600
Fund Source
Washington