All Projects

5185 Results for
Recipient
Nashwauk, City of
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$214,283
Fund Source

Construct wastewater treatment improvements to meet more stingent discharge requirements

Itasca
Recipient
Scott SWCD
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$155,883
Fund Source

This project is a continuation and expansion of two historically successful ecological programs operated by the Scott Soil and Water Conservation District and Scott County Watershed Management Organization partnership, including the Native Grass Program (NGP) and Filter Strip Program (FSP). This continues work begun with FY2010 and 2012 CWF.

Scott
Recipient
Scott Watershed Management Organization
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$80,553
Fund Source

This project will reduce runoff by establishing at least 75 acres of native grass on private lands in priority subwatersheds of the Sand Creek Watershed by offering incentives and establishment of cost assistance to landowners to convert row crops to native vegetation above resources available from existing programs used to establish vegetation.

Scott
2025 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$300,000
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$300,000
Fund Source

The DNR will use its expertise to hatch and grow native freshwater mussels and to restore populations in Minnesota rivers. This project is part of a long-term, collaborative effort that will lead to cleaner water through targeted restoration of native mussel populations. The foundation of the effort is comprehensive assessments of water pollution within the state’s 80 major surface watersheds and prioritized to address these problems.

Statewide
Recipient
University of Minnesota: Sponsored Projects Administration
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$56,002
Fund Source

The project goal is to assist the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) with meeting the objectives of the Surface Water Assessment Grant (SWAG) to conduct field and water chemistry monitoring at MPCA specified lake sampling locations and stream locations. This will be accomplished by collecting water samples at seven lake sites and eight streams in the Kettle and Upper St. Croix Watersheds, as well as compiling and submitting the required data, information and reports.

Aitkin
Carlton
Pine
Recipient
Carlton SWCD
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$250,000
Fund Source
Carlton
Pine
Recipient
Emmons & Olivier Resources
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$53,465
Fund Source

This project will define the major factors causing harm to fish and other river and stream life within the Nemadji watershed. Stressor identification is a formal and rigorous process to identify these factors, explain the linkages between the results of biological monitoring and water quality assessments, and organize this information into a structure of scientific evidence that supports the conclusions of the process. Stressor identification is a component of the Watershed Restoration and protection (WRAP) approach.

Carlton
Pine
St. Louis
Recipient
Pine County Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD)
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$10,895
Fund Source

This project is to identify and prioritize targeted restoration and protection areas where there are data gaps within the Nemadji River Watershed. The purpose is to maintain and enhance water quality. This contract will support research, monitoring, analysis, and planning activities to develop strategic implementation and protection best management practices in targeted locations of the watershed.

Pine
Recipient
Carlton SWCD
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$250,000
Fund Source
Carlton
Recipient
Carlton Soil & Water Conservation District
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$24,000
Fund Source

This project is to identify and prioritize targeted restoration and protection areas where there are data gaps within the Nemadji River Watershed to maintain and enhance water quality. Through an increased technical agency partnership, this contract will support research, monitoring, analysis, and planning activities to develop strategic implementation and protection management practices in targeted locations of the watershed.

Carlton
Recipient
Tetra Tech
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$160,000
Fund Source

This project is to complete the Watershed Restoration and Protection (WRAP) process, complete Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) reports and calculations, develop and discuss Hydrological Simulation Program FORTRAN (HSPF) model scenarios, set restoration and protection priorities, and integrate all of this information in the final WRAPS report.

Carlton
Pine
Recipient
Emmons & Olivier Resources (EOR)
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$99,973
Fund Source
The goal of this workplan is to define the major factors causing harm to fish and other river and stream life within the Nemadji Watershed. The work will complete the strength of evidence tables, will explain the linkages between biological monitoring results and water quality assessments, and will organize this information into a scientific evidence structure that supports the conclusions of the overall process. Multiple lines of evidence are reviewed and evaluated to produce a final evaluative report. This work order, the second of two, begins in 2013 and will be completed in year 2014.
Carlton
Recipient
Carlton Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD)
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$26,900
Fund Source

This project is to identify and prioritize targeted restoration and protection areas where there are data gaps within the Nemadji River Watershed. The purpose is to maintain and enhance water quality. This contract will support research, monitoring, analysis, and planning activities to develop strategic implementation and protection best management practices in targeted locations of the watershed.

Carlton
Recipient
Middle Fork Crow River WD
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$65,000
Fund Source

The Nest and Diamond Lake Subwatershed Assessment and Internal Load Control project proposes to identify detailed approaches to address internal loading in both Nest and Diamond lakes and to identify field-level BMPs upstream of Nest Lake. These activities will be conducted as a part of efforts to get both lakes to meet water quality standards.

Kandiyohi
Recipient
Carlton SWCD
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$596,300
Fund Source
Carlton
Recipient
Martin SWCD
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$314,750
Fund Source

The objective of this project is to manage streambanks and floodplains along Elm Creek in Martin County in order to improve water quality and reduce erosion. Elm Creek flows into the Blue Earth River, which flows into the Minnesota River. Elm Creek is currently listed as impaired for fish bioassessments, turbidity, and fecal coliform.

Martin
Recipient
Shingle Creek Watershed Management Organization
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$160,000
Fund Source

This project will consist of retrofitting a dry storm water basin, constructing a new pre-treatment cell, creating new wetland, and reconfiguring the existing inlets and the outlet for better water quality treatment. This project is specifically identified in the Twin-Ryan Lakes TMDL.

Hennepin
Recipient
North Fork Crow River WD
2017 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$48,500
Fund Source

The District is seeking to further its goals of meeting multipurpose drainage management requirements under its obligations as a 103E drainage authority. Judicial Ditch 1 is the largest system in the District, and proportionally one of the largest contributors of sediment and nutrients to the downstream reaches of the North Fork Crow River.

Pope
Stearns
Recipient
North Fork Crow River WD
2017 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$50,000
Fund Source

There is one lake and three streams in the North Fork Crow River Watershed District impaired by excess nutrients and impaired biotic communities. The Watershed Restoration and Protection Strategies have identified large areas and subwatersheds that have the potential to contribute high pollutant loads to the streams and lakes throughout the watershed. This Subwatershed Assessment study will evaluate three high loading subwatershed catchments in the North Fork Crow River Watershed.

Stearns
Recipient
Great River Greening/Nicollet County SWCD
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$39,280
Fund Source

This grant will allow Nicollet SWCD and partners the means to establish local and regional volunteer monitors for this and future monitoring activities in the Middle Minnesota River Watershed Basin. It also enhances past water quality studies by providing present data for water quality assessment in the Seven Mile Creek Watershed, which has and is receiving support by numerous entities to increase the water quality of that watershed.

Blue Earth
Brown
Cottonwood
Le Sueur
Nicollet
Redwood
Renville
Sibley
Watonwan
Recipient
Nicollet County
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$84,152
Fund Source

Nicollet County is located in south central Minnesota and is bordered on two sides by the Minnesota River. A line of forested bluffs separate the river valley from land that is relatively flat and historically used for agricultural purposes. Approximately 245,000 acres of the County are actively farmed. The 2012 impaired waters list for water bodies located in Nicollet County include the Minnesota River, Seven Mile Creek, Rogers Creek and tributaries to the Rush River.

Nicollet
Recipient
Nicollet Soil and Water Conservation District
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$14,305
Fund Source

This project will fund two years of condition monitoring, data management, and oversight for two locations within the Minnesota River Mankato watershed.

Nicollet
Recipient
Nine Mile Creek Watershed District
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$136,000
Fund Source

The Nine Mile Creek watershed is a highly developed, urbanized watershed located in southern Hennepin County. The natural infiltration capacity of soils in the watershed has been diminished by significant coverage with hard surfaces such as streets, parking lots, and buildings. This leads to more rainfall making its way more quickly to Nine Mile Creek. As a result, Nine Mile Creek has experienced stream bank erosion and instream habitat loss due to increases in storm water runoff resulting in the creek to be listed on the State of Minnesota impaired waters list for biotic integrity.

Hennepin
Recipient
Sherburne SWCD
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$180,000
Fund Source
Sherburne
Recipient
Sherburne SWCD
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$150,400
Fund Source

This project combines the use of automated soil moisture probes for irrigation scheduling with diverse cover crop planting to reduce or eliminate leaching of nitrogen and other nutrients on cropland with an early season harvested crop in the rotation. The more efficient use of irrigation waters provides a secondary benefit: less withdrawal from the aquifers that provide recharge for the Mt. Simon-Hinckley aquifer.

Sherburne
Recipient
United States Geological Survey (USGS)
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$44,998
Fund Source

This project will provide an interpretive assessment of nitrogen concentrations in Minnesota rivers and streams, including spatial and temporal trends based on historical data sets. The trends analyses will provide information useful for evaluating nitrogen reduction efforts in the past couple of decades.

Statewide
Recipient
Nobles County - Reading
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$11,700
Fund Source

TA grant amendment to further evaluate alternatives to fix failing septic systems in unsewered area

Recipient
Nobles Soil and Water Conservation District
2022 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$26,230
Fund Source

Nobles County has five stream sites and three lake sites that need monitoring. These sites have had some testing in the past
and it is important to continue to monitor these for changes. Soil and Water Conservation District staff will gather the water samples in the most accurate manner possible and track the funds spent to do so. The samples will be taken monthly and sent to the labs in a timely manner.

Nobles
Recipient
Nobles SWCD
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$285,508
Fund Source

Over the last 5 years, Nobles County has identified and targeted waters that have impairments for excess sediment. This project continues this effort by implementing projects that have been identified by the Nobles Soil and Water Conservation District as having the highest benefit for sediment reduction to these impaired waters in the county. The inventory and identification of projects as well as their ranking was based on sediment load reductions. Utilizing a ranking method developed by the Nobles County Local Work Group, sixty-nine projects have been ranked and eighteen selected.

Nobles
Recipient
Minneapolis, City of
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$399,425
Fund Source

This project engages private property owners in a neighborhood scale effort to install up to 180 stormwater Best Management Practice (BMPs) to protect Lake Nokomis, a water body in Minneapolis impaired for excess nutrients. An analysis of the Lake Nokomis subwatershed identified priority areas for BMP installations based on drainage pattern, land uses and presence of previously-constructed BMPs. The project will install 160-180 BMPs adjacent to alleyways to disconnect residential backyards, rooftops and driveways on 15 residential blocks.

Hennepin
2025 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,600,000
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,600,000
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,250,000
2022 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,250,000
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,000,000
2020 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,000,000
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$950,000
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$950,000
2017 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,000,000
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,000,000
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,000,000
2014 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,000,000
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,220,000
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,220,000
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$250,000
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$250,000
Fund Source

DNR regional clean water specialists and area hydrologists work with local partners to provide technical assistance on implementation projects and related outreach, resulting in cleaner water through healthier watersheds, shorelands and floodplains. We help partners identify, develop, target, design and/or implement on-the-ground projects that improve water quality, enhance habitat and protect infrastructure. We help design restorations that provide lasting benefits by mimicking features of healthy ecosystems.

Statewide
Recipient
Middle Fork Crow River Watershed Dist
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$230,000
Fund Source

The State of Minnesota has adopted a ten year cycle for managing water quality for each of the 80 major watersheds in the state. Every ten years, each major watershed will undergo a surface water assessment and a Watershed Restoration and Protection Strategy (WRAPS) project. The North Fork Crow River WRAPS process is entering its second round which will focus both on addressing data gaps identified in the approved NFCRW Comprehensive Watershed Plan and on addressing additional required Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) studies required by the United States Environmental Protection Agency.

Carver
Hennepin
Kandiyohi
McLeod
Meeker
Renville
Sibley
Wright
Recipient
North St. Louis River Soil and Water Conservation District
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$83,141
Fund Source

This St. Louis River Watershed assessment will include the waters of Dempsey Creek, West Two River, St. Louis River, Mud Hen Creek, Embarrass River, West Swan River, Partridge River, Barber Creek, East Swan River, Helen Lake, Pine Lake, Cadotte Lake, Colby Lake, Loon Lake, St. James Pit, Strand Lake, Nichols Lake, Ely Lake, Silver Lake, Elbow Lake, Mashkenode Lake, Carey Lake and Island Lake. These lakes and streams are found throughout the St. Louis River Watershed, which spans parts of St. Louis and Itasca Counties.

Itasca
St. Louis
Recipient
Stantec Consulting Services
2022 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$85,858
Fund Source

The goal of this project is to produce a subwatershed assessment report for two subwatersheds in the Lake Pepin major watershed. The subwatersheds included are East Lake and the upper North Creek that drains from Lakeville, both will be studied for total phosphorus and total suspended solids. The report will include two distinct lists of potential best management practice (BMP) location, cost, feasibility, estimated reductions and 30% specifications of top projects.

Dakota
Goodhue
Scott
Recipient
North Fork Crow River Watershed District
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$149,543
Fund Source

The North Fork Crow River Watershed (NFCRWD) is mainly agricultural and has numerous public and private drainage ditches. Sub-surface drainage are major contributors to the sediment and nutrient loading into the North Fork Crow River and area Lakes. This project help reach the Rice Lake phosphorous reductions goals. Local landowners are willing to contribute land on public drainage systems to retain water and restore wetlands at three locations with total anticipated yearly pollutant removals of 200 tons of total suspended sediment and 235 pounds of phosphorus.

Kandiyohi
Meeker
Pope
Stearns
Recipient
North Fork Crow River Watershed District
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$65,810
Fund Source

The primary land use within the North Fork Crow River Watershed District is mainly row crop agriculture with extensive public and private drainage systems. A large portion of existing tile lines have open intakes that directly transport sediment and nutrients to open ditches leading to the North Fork Crow River (NFCR). The NFCR flows into Rice Lake that is impaired for aquatic recreation due to excessive nutrients.

Kandiyohi
Meeker
Pope
Stearns
Recipient
Wenck Associates, Inc.
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$4,826
Fund Source

This project will support the review of all public comments submitted for the North Fork Crow River TMDL and make appropriate edits and changes to the draft TMDL based on MPCA guidance.

Carver
Hennepin
Kandiyohi
McLeod
Meeker
Pope
Stearns
Wright
Recipient
Wright SWCD
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,120,477
Fund Source

The North Fork Crow River Watershed planning workgroup has based its comprehensive watershed management plan on seven planning regions. Each planning region has a list of prioritized resource concerns, measurable goals and implementation actions. Implementation actions are targeted in locations within each planning region, prioritized based on local concerns, programs, etc.

Kandiyohi
Meeker
Pope
Stearns
Wright
Recipient
Wright SWCD
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,518,486
Fund Source
Kandiyohi
Kittson
McLeod
Meeker
Morrison
Mower
Pope
Renville
Stearns
Traverse
Wright
Recipient
Middle Fork Crow River WD
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$642,377
Fund Source
Wright